Fawvor v. US Oil of Louisiana, Inc.

162 So. 2d 602, 20 Oil & Gas Rep. 731, 1964 La. App. LEXIS 1502
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 24, 1964
Docket1085
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 162 So. 2d 602 (Fawvor v. US Oil of Louisiana, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fawvor v. US Oil of Louisiana, Inc., 162 So. 2d 602, 20 Oil & Gas Rep. 731, 1964 La. App. LEXIS 1502 (La. Ct. App. 1964).

Opinion

162 So.2d 602 (1964)

James H. FAWVOR, Jr., et al., Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
U. S. OIL OF LOUISIANA, INC., et al., Defendants-Appellees.

No. 1085.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.

March 24, 1964.
Rehearing Denied April 21, 1964.

*603 Jones & Jones, by J. B. Jones, Jr., Cameron, for plaintiffs-appellants.

Plauché & Plauche, by S. W. Plauché, Jr., Lake Charles, Blanchard, Goldstein, Walker & O'Quin, by Leon O'Quin, Shreveport, Hall, Raggio & Farrar, by Thomas C. Hall, and Fred W. Ellis, Lake Charles, for defendants-appellees.

Before FRUGÉ, SAVOY and CULPEPPER, JJ.

FRUGÉ, Judge.

This is a suit to cancel a mineral lease on certain land in Cameron Parish.

The facts are not in dispute. Most of them were stipulated as a result of a pretrial conference. They are as follows:

1. Plaintiffs, joined by their father, who was then living, granted an oil, gas and mineral lease on the land to H. C. Reichert on July 27, 1959. The lease, Exhibit "A" attached to plaintiffs' petition, was on a "commercial" form, but contained a number of special provisions. The original consideration, or lease bonus, was paid in the sum of $47,471.00 by Charlton H. Lyons, Sr., to whom the land was subleased by instrument dated September 4, 1959, with Reichert retaining certain overriding royalties.

2. The first annual drilling delay rental (about which there is no dispute) was paid to the lessors, on or before July 27, 1960, in the sum of $23,735.00.

3. Others became interested in the lease with Mr. Lyons and, in the latter part of 1960, U. S. Oil acquired an undivided two-thirds working interest therein.

4. Mr. Lyons, who had acquired a title opinion from the firm of Liskow & Lewis under date of August 12, 1959, made a copy thereof available to U. S. Oil, which obtained a drilling permit on March 10, 1961, for a well to be designated as Fawvor No. 1.

5. Fawvor No. 1 was completed as a gas well on August 7, 1961, at a total cost of $432,561.51, and said well was immediately shut in, for lack of a market for gas, as authorized by the lease, particularly paragraph 6 thereof.

6. On April 20, 1961, the Commissioner of Conservation held a hearing, initiated by an application of Forest Oil Corporation, an operator of a well on the lands of D. Y. Doland, adjacent to the Fawvor lands. The application proposed the creation of certain units, with respect to a particular sand, and one of the units proposed would include a portion of the lands covered by the Fawvor lease held by U. S. Oil. U. S. Oil, through Mr. G. E. Gotschall, manager of its New Orleans office, attended the hearing.

7. Effective May 15, 1961, the Commissioner of Conservation issued Order No. 548 unitizing the Ehni-Darling sand in the Doland well and included in a unit a portion of the Fawvor lease.

8. On June 28, 1961, the Commissioner approved a survey of the unit created under Order No. 548, showing that 24.197 acres of the Fawvor lease, in accordance with *604 a survey plat dated June 20, 1961, was included in Unit No. 1 under Order No. 548.

9. On July 21, 1961, a revised plat showed the Fawvor acreage in Unit No. 1 as 26.217, as the prior plat was based on a misconception of a boundary line of the lease.

10. On July 19, 1961, Forest furnished a copy of Order No. 548, with a copy of the first survey plat to the defendants, U. S. Oil and Lyons; on July 25, 1961, Forest sent to Mr. Gotschall of U. S. Oil a copy of the revised plat dated July 21, 1961.

11. On August 9, 1961, James H. Fawvor, Jr., telephoned Mr. Lyons, advising the lease was in default for the lessee's failure to pay a drilling delay rental on or before July 27, 1961; thereafter, there were conferences, correspondence between various representatives of the lessees and the Fawvors and their attorney at that time, Mr. Oliver P. Stockwell, resulting in the continued claim by the Fawvors that the lessees had defaulted for failure to pay the rental on or before July 27, 1961, and the claim by the lessees that they were not in default.

12. On October 13, 1961, pursuant to the lease agreement, a proportionate rental payment of $16.941.65 was deposited to the credit of the Fawvors, within the period of ninety days following the shut-in of Fawvor No. 1, which had been in the process of drilling on July 27, 1961. The Fawvors refused to accept the rental so deposited and have continued to persist in that refusal to the present time.

13. On November 30, 1961, Mr. Fawvor, Sr., acting for the lessors, made a written demand for a release of the lease.

14. On October 11, 1961, Forest Oil Corporation, which had been designated as the operator of the unit in the Commissioner's order, transmitted to the owners of interests in the unit a division order, for approval and execution, setting forth the proportionate interests of the various parties in the production from the Unit No. 1 well, and the amount allocated thereon to U. S. Oil and its associate lessees included one hundred per cent of the interest allocable to the Fawvor land in the unit, including royalties due the Fawvors. U. S. Oil had previously advised Forest, in July, 1961, that it would distribute royalties on the Fawvor land attributable to the Fawvor acreage in the Doland Unit No. 1.

15. On November 6, 1961, U. S. Oil ordered a supplemental abstract of title on the Fawvor land for division order purposes, and the supplemental abstract was delivered shortly thereafter and, on November 13, 1961, was forwarded by Mr. Gotschall to Mr. Joe Louis, an attorney in the U. S. Oil office, with the request that he prepare division orders in connection with payments of royalties and other interests under the Fawvor acreage in the Doland Unit No. 1.

16. On November 7, 1961, Mr. Gotschall wrote to Mr. Fawvor, Sr. in further discussion of the proportionate rental payment that had been made in lieu of the July 27, 1961, rental and, in the postscript of that letter, stated that the Houston office of the company would be forwarding division orders for signatures to cover royalties on production from the Fawvor land included in the Doland Unit No. 1, and asked for the cooperation of the lessors in executing the division orders when received in order that U. S. Oil might be certain that the interests of the Fawvor children were correctly calculated, as a result of certain transfers made by Mr. Fawvor, Sr. to the children as reflected in the original title opinion.

17. On December 6, 1961, Mr. Louis, for U. S. Oil, transmitted separate gas and oil division orders to the Fawvors, the owners of other royalty interests and overriding royalty interests and to the owners of working interests in respect to production from the Fawvor acreage in the Doland Unit No. 1.

*605 18. The Fawvors declined to sign, approve or return the proposed division orders.

19. On January 19, 1962, Mr. Louis, for U. S. Oil, wrote the Fawvors about the division orders previously forwarded on December 6, 1961, stating that U. S. Oil would assume, in the absence of any reply, that the interests credited were correct, and that the accounting department was being instructed to make payment to the Fawvors of the royalty in the Unit No. 1 well as calculated on the division orders.

20. On January 29, 1962, royalty checks were mailed by U. S. Oil to the Fawvors, which were received on or about February 2, 1962, and the said checks have been retained by the Fawvors, but uncashed. Subsequently, monthly royalty checks have been issued, received and retained, but were uncashed.

21. On April 15, 1962, Mr. James H.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Hilliard v. Amoco Production Co.
688 So. 2d 1176 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1996)
Mesa Petroleum Co. v. Scheib
726 F.2d 614 (Tenth Circuit, 1984)
Shown v. Getty Oil Co.
645 S.W.2d 555 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1982)
Bayou Bouillon Corp. v. Atlantic Richfield Co.
385 So. 2d 834 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1980)
Arceneaux v. Hawkins
376 So. 2d 362 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1979)
Adam G. Nunez v. The Superior Oil Company
572 F.2d 1119 (Fifth Circuit, 1978)
Nunez v. Superior Oil Co.
406 F. Supp. 261 (W.D. Louisiana, 1976)
Bourgeois v. EXXON CORPORATION
300 So. 2d 632 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1974)
Hibbert v. Mudd
294 So. 2d 518 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1974)
Wilson v. Sun Oil Company
290 So. 2d 844 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1974)
Alvord v. Sun Oil Company
271 So. 2d 561 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1973)
Hibbert v. Mudd
272 So. 2d 697 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1972)
Wilson v. Sun Oil Co.
265 So. 2d 344 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1972)
Floyd Williams v. Humble Oil & Refining Company
432 F.2d 165 (Fifth Circuit, 1970)
Williams v. Humble Oil & Refining Co.
432 F.2d 165 (Fifth Circuit, 1970)
House v. Tidewater Oil Company
219 So. 2d 616 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1969)
Bennett v. Sinclair Oil & Gas Company
275 F. Supp. 886 (W.D. Louisiana, 1967)
Fontenot v. Sunray Mid-Continent Oil Company
197 So. 2d 715 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1967)
Melancon v. Republic Petroleum Corp.
196 So. 2d 277 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1967)
Bollinger v. Republic Petroleum Corporation
194 So. 2d 139 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1967)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
162 So. 2d 602, 20 Oil & Gas Rep. 731, 1964 La. App. LEXIS 1502, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fawvor-v-us-oil-of-louisiana-inc-lactapp-1964.