Flag Oil Corp. of Delaware v. King Resources Co.

1972 OK 19, 494 P.2d 322, 41 Oil & Gas Rep. 545, 1972 Okla. LEXIS 272
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 1, 1972
Docket43873
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 1972 OK 19 (Flag Oil Corp. of Delaware v. King Resources Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Flag Oil Corp. of Delaware v. King Resources Co., 1972 OK 19, 494 P.2d 322, 41 Oil & Gas Rep. 545, 1972 Okla. LEXIS 272 (Okla. 1972).

Opinion

BARNES, Justice:

The question in this appeal involves the effect, if any, of an amendment to an oil and gas lease, upon the continuance of the lease under the circumstances hereinafter described.

The lease i's dated August 8, 1957. The lessors are Flag Oil Corporation of Delaware and Panhandle Cooperative Royalty Company, usually referred to hereafter as “Flag” and “Panhandle”, respectively. One C. M. Fleetwood was lessee.

The lease’s primary term was five years from its date with the added potential for extension provided by a conventional “thereafter” provision.

The leased acreage is part of an area designated for the production of gas from 640-acre drilling and spacing units by an order this State’s Corporation Commission entered in April, 1959. In the same year, King-Stevenson Oil Company, Inc., hereafter referred to as “K-S”, acquired most of the lessee’s ⅝ths working interest in the lease, and, in September of that year, K-S, and an associate, commenced drilling a well on the lease’s .Section 1 land. This well is denominated the “No. 1 Thompson” *323 and was completed as a producing gas well in the Morrow Formation on November 9, 1959. The well then had a potential production of 9,000 MCF per day.

Thereafter, on February 12, 1960, K-S and the defendant in error, Slats Honey-mon Drilling Company, to which it had assigned an undivided ½ interest in the lease, designated all of Section 1 as one of the unitized area’s gas production units.

As the Thompson well has no pipe line connection and remained shut in, the lessee, K-S, on March 25, 1960, wrote the lessors, Flag and Panhandle, a letter representing that a “diligent effort” was being made to obtain a market for the well’s gas. Among other things, the letter stated:

“As the majority of the leases in this area contain a shut-in gas chiase and these people receive shut-in gas royalty, we would like to pay you on this basis also. However, as your lease does not contain a shut-in gas clause, we are enclosing Amendment to Oil and Gas Lease which provides for making shut-in gas royalty payments.

The letter solicited execution of the enclosed form. Flag and Panhandle responded March 30, 1960, as follows:

“We have your letter of March 25, and wish to advise that these companies do not sign perpetual shut-in gas clauses. We will, however, give you a limited one if such is desired.
“We note that you have two more years to run on the lease and since the well is shut-in, we feel sure that you are within your rights to pay us $1.00 per acre rental especially for the term of the lease and so long thereafter as there is no market available for the gas.
“However, if as above stated, you desire two to three years shut-in gas clause after the expiration of the lease, we will change this amendment to read so and execute same and send to you.” (Emphasis added)

A few days thereafter, K-S’s Oklahoma City office received a letter from Flag and Panhandle, dated April 6th, enclosing the agreement (entitled “AMENDMENT TO OIL AND GAS LEASE,” but referred to in said letter as a “two-year shut-in clause”), which later became the subject of the controversy precipitating the present action. The controversial portion of said agreement appears in the following excerpt :

“WHEREAS, Lessor does desire to amend said Oil and Gas Lease to add a provision relating to shut-in gas wells.
“NOW THEREFORE, for and in consideration of the sum of $1.00 and other good and valuable consideration, paid by KING-STEVENSON OIL COMPANY, INC. to Lessor, receipt of which is hereby acknowledged, Lessor does agree that said Oil and Gas Lease be amended by adding the following provision thereto:
“(5) ‘Where gas from a well producing gas only is not sold or used, Lessee may pay or tender a royalty One Dollar ($1.00) per year net royalty acre retained hereunder, such payment or tender to be made, on or before the anniversary date of this lease next ensuing after the expiration of ninety (90) days from the date such well is shut in and thereafter on the anniversary date of this lease during the period such well is shut in, to the royalty owners or to the royalty owners’ credit in the rental depository bank here- „ inafter designated. If such payment or tender is made it will be considered that gas is being produced within the meaning of the preceding paragraph.’
“It is further provided that lease cannot be perpetuated beyond August 8, 1964, by payment of shut-in gas well royalties as provided in Paragraph 5, hereof, but this restriction shall not present the perpetuation of this lease tinder other provisions of same.
‡ ⅜ ⅝ ⅝ ⅝ >j< >>

(Emphasis added)

On the anniversaries of the lease’s execution in August, 1960 and 1961, K-S paid *324 to, or for the benefit of, Flag the sum of $1.00 for each acre of Flag’s 9.94-acre interest, as delay rentals, but, on August 8th of each of the subsequent years, 1962 and 1963, it paid Flag that amount as “shut-in royalty.”

On July 23, 1964, K-S wrote Panhandle that it had been unable to obtain a market for the Thompson well’s gas and asked that the subject lease be extended another year. Almost two months later, on September 17th, Flag replied to K-S’s letter, noting that the lease’s hereinbefore quoted Amendment had specified a “cut off date” of “August 8, 1964,” and requesting that the lease be released (as having expired). On September 23rd, K-S wrote Flag refusing to give the release. Thereafter, on October 1, 1964, Flag wrote K-S returning a cashier’s check in the amount to $9.94 K-S had tendered the depository bank to be credited to Flag’s account.

On March 23, 1966, the Northern Natural Gas Company finally agreed to purchase the Thompson well’s gas, and forwarded to K-S a proposed gas purchase contract for a term of twenty years, beginning on June 10, 1966. K-S executed this contract and returned it to Northern Natural Gas Company in May, 1966. In September, 1966, the Federal Power Commission first authorized sale of gas under said contract, and sale of the Thompson well’s gas was thereafter commenced in December of that year.

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Bluebook (online)
1972 OK 19, 494 P.2d 322, 41 Oil & Gas Rep. 545, 1972 Okla. LEXIS 272, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flag-oil-corp-of-delaware-v-king-resources-co-okla-1972.