Frost Lumber Industries, Inc. v. Union Power Co.

162 So. 37, 182 La. 439, 1935 La. LEXIS 1611
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedApril 1, 1935
DocketNo. 33235.
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 162 So. 37 (Frost Lumber Industries, Inc. v. Union Power Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Frost Lumber Industries, Inc. v. Union Power Co., 162 So. 37, 182 La. 439, 1935 La. LEXIS 1611 (La. 1935).

Opinion

ROGERS, Justice.

On January 12, 1917, the Frost-Johnson Lumber Company, now known as the Frost Lumber Industries, Inc., and the Union Saw Mill Company, conveyed to the Federal Petroleum Company an undivided one-half interest in all the minerals and mineral rights under certain lands of the vendors in the parishes of De Soto, Sabine, Natchitoches, Ouachita, and Union. On the same day the parties entered into a joint operating contract providing for the development by any one of them of any part of the land conveyed.

On October 15, 1917, the Union Saw Mill Company sold to the Frost-Johnson Lumber Company all the land then owned by the vendor in the parishes of Union and Ouachita. The deeds contain certain stipulations regarding the oil, gas, and mineral rights, and refer also to the former deed to the Federal Petroleum Company.

On December 23, 1920, the Frost-Johnson Lumber Company and the Federal Petroleum Company sold to the Union Power Company all the gas and gas rights under the land that is described in the mineral deed from the Frost-Johnson Lumber Company to the Federal Petroleum Company, and on the same day the parties entered into an operating contract providing for the development and production by them of the minerals respectively owned by each.

All the instruments were recorded in the parishes where the lands affected are situated.

This suit was commenced by the Frost Lumber Industries, Inc., as an action of jactitation, or slander of title, for the purpose of obtaining a decree canceling and erasing from the public records the muniments of title under which the Union Power Company, Inc., holds the gas rights on the lands situated in the parishes of De Soto and Sabine, The suit was converted into a petitory action by the Union-Power Company, Inc.

The defendant first filed a motion for a bill of particulars, which was overruled. Defendant then filed a plea of estoppel which was referred to the merits. Thereafter defendant filed its answer admitting the ownership and possession of the land by plaintiff and setting up a title in itself *443 to the gas and gas rights in and under the land.

Plaintiff filed a plea of ten years’ prescription liberandi causa against defendant’s title to the mineral rights. But defendant set- up in its answer that the running of the prescription pleaded was interrupted by agreements between the parties, agreements between the plaintiff and other parties, resolutions of the board of directors of the plaintiff company, judicial allegations in other suits by plaintiff, letters written by the officers of the plaintiff company, and the execution of certain leases.

After a trial on the merits, the court below rendered judgment decreeing the Frost Lumber Industries, Inc., to be the owner in legal possession of the property in dispute, free from any claim of the Union Power Company, Inc., to the gas and gas rights lying thereunder. From this judgment the Union Power Company, Inc., has appealed.

Inasmuch as there has been no development under the rights of servitude acquired by the defendant on the lands of the plaintiff, defendant’s rights have become prescribed, unless the running of prescription has been interrupted by the documents on which the defendant relies. That is the sole question presented in the case.

Before reviewing the facts disclosed by the record, we shall discuss the law relied on by the parties in support of their respective contentions. Before doing this, however, we think it may be well to observe that, where noncontiguous tracts of land are embraced in one mineral deed, each tract represents a distinct servitude. And the development and production of minerals from one of the tracts, no matter how extensive such operations may be, will not interrupt' the running of prescription on the other tracts. Lee v. Giauque, 154 La. 491, 97 So. 669; Keebler v. Seubert, 167 La. 901, 120 So. 591; Arent v. Hunter, 171 La. 1059, 133 So. 157.

The defendant predicates its claim of interruption' of prescription on the general rule set out in article 3520 of the Civil Code reading as follows: “Prescription ceases likewise to run whenever the debtor, or possessor, makes acknowledgment of the right of the person whose title they prescribed.”

Defendant, in support of its claim, also-cites the cases of Frost-Johnson Lumber Co. v. Nabors Oil & Gas Co., 149 La. 100, 88 So. 723, 724; Sellington v. Producers’ Oil Co., 152 La. 81, 92 So. 742, 743; Lewis, v. Bodcaw Lumber Co., 167 La. 1067, 120 So. 859, 860; White v. Ouachita Natural Gas Co., 177 La. 1052, 150 So. 15. On the other hand, plaintiff relies upon practically the same cases in support of its demands. It therefore becomes necessary for us to review the cases in order to ascertain their bearing and effect upon the point at. issue.

The first case referred to by the parties, is' that of Frost-Johnson Lumber Co. v. Nabors Oil & Gas Co. In that case the Louisiana Coal & Lumber Co., Limited, un *445 der which the defendant claimed, had acquired title to the mineral rights in certain lands. Subsequently, title to the lands became vested in the plaintiff. Two of the intervening deeds contained the following stipulation, viz.: “It is further stipulated that all mineral rights are expressly reserved, having heretofore been sold by the present vendor to the Louisiana Coal & Lumber Company, Limited, subject to the stipulations contained in such sale of mineral rights to said company.” And the court, without any elaborate discussion, held that the stipulation contained an acknowledgment which was sufficient to interrupt the running of prescription against the mineral rights.

The next case is that of Sellington v. Producers’ Oil Company. In that case the stipulation relied on as interrupting the running of prescription was couched in the following language, viz.: “The vendor herein specially reserves and excepts from this sale all the oil, gas and other minerals in and under said land, with the right of ingress and egress in order to mine and produce the same; the oil, gas and other minerals under said land, with the right to enter upon said land at any time for the purpose of removing the same, having been heretofore sold by J. M. Sellington to the Producers’ Oil Company, as shown by act of sale recorded in the recorder’s office, Caddo parish, La.”

After the Producers’ Oil Company had acquired from Sellington the mineral rights on certain lands owned by him, Mrs. Sellington, the then owner, sold a portion of the lands thus encumbered to John Murray and his wife. It was in the deed from Mrs. Sellington to the Murrays that the language hereinabove quoted appeared. But that land was not involved in the suit. It was only on the remainder of the land that Mrs. Sellington sought to enforce her prescriptive rights. The language of the opinion shows that, while the stipulation contained in the deed from Mrs. Sellington to the Murrays might be sufficient to interrupt the running of prescription as to the land therein described, it'was not sufficient to interrupt the running of the prescription as to other lands, although all the lands had been included in the sale of the mineral rights to the Producers’ Oil Company. The court was careful to point out in its opinion that the acknowledgment made by Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
162 So. 37, 182 La. 439, 1935 La. LEXIS 1611, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frost-lumber-industries-inc-v-union-power-co-la-1935.