Great Western Oil & Gas Company v. Mitchell

1958 OK 68, 326 P.2d 794, 9 Oil & Gas Rep. 719, 1958 Okla. LEXIS 420
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 11, 1958
Docket37299
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 1958 OK 68 (Great Western Oil & Gas Company v. Mitchell) 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
Great Western Oil & Gas Company v. Mitchell, 1958 OK 68, 326 P.2d 794, 9 Oil & Gas Rep. 719, 1958 Okla. LEXIS 420 (Okla. 1958).

Opinion

HALLEY, Justice.

M. J. Mitchell, Henry Homes, Sr., and R. G. Piper filed this action in the District Court of Pontotoc County, Oklahoma, against Great Western Oil and Gas Company, Aimer Stewart, R. P. Ross, Firth C. Owens, Margaret C. Meade and James C. Meade, alleged to be co-owners in a certain oil and gas lease covering land in that County, and being operated by Great Western Oil and Gas Company, which owned a one-half interest in the lease.

Numerous other defendants were named as parties who had liens against the leasehold estate or who had performed labor or furnished services or materials to Great Western for the operation of the lease, but who had not been paid by the operator, Great Western. .Plaintiffs alleged that they had paid their share of the operating expenses to Great Western, except certain sums which were tendered into court. Plaintiffs prayed that all parties having claims against the leasehold be required to present their claims and that plaintiffs be relieved of further liability on such claims.

It was alleged that Great Western, as operator of the lease, had made excessive charges for operating expenses and that it *796 be required to account for and pay any amount found to be due plaintiffs.

Plaintiffs also prayed that the property be partitioned and for appointment of commissioners to make partition.

Plaintiffs alleged that the leasehold estate is not being- properly operated by Great Western and that excessive charges are made for operations conducted by it in drilling wells not agreed to by plaintiffs and prayed that a receiver be appointed to take over the operation of the lease. By stipulation K. B. Nowels was appointed to take over the operation of the lease.

Great Western answered by general denial and alleged that it owned a one-half interest in the lease and that R. G. Piper owned a one-sixth interest and M. J. Mitchell a one-sixth interest. It developed that one-half of Mitchell’s interest was owned by Henry Homes, Sr., but stood in the name of Mitchell. Ownership of the remaining interests in the lease were set out but we do not deem it necessary to discuss them further here because the issues involved do not cover such interests.

Great Western alleged that on October 30, 1953, it entered into an Operating Agreement in writing with its co-owners in the leasehold estate whereby Great Western was designated operator of the lease and under which agreement it conducted the operations of the lease until May 12, 1954, when such agreement was superseded by a stipulation whereby K. B. Nowels took over the operation of the lease. It was admitted that R. G. Piper did not sign the Operating Agreement, but he was advised of its terms and acquiesced therein and is bound thereby. It is alleged that M. J. Mitchell did not sign the Operating Agreement, having acquired his interest from one who did sign such agreement and is bound thereby.

Great Western alleged that it had fully complied with the terms of the Operating Agreement in every respect and that under its terms, M. J. Mitchell was indebted to Great Western in the sum of $3,876.83, and that R. G. Piper is indebted to it in the sum of $1,791.12. It prayed for judgment against Mitchell and Piper in the sums mentioned.

The record is very voluminous in oral testimony and documentary exhibits. The court entered judgment appointing commissioners to partition the leasehold estate, and also covering certain other phases of the case. Later the court entered judgment in favor of R. G. Piper against Great Western in the sum of $4,278.42, and in favor of M. J. Mitchell and Henry Homes, Sr. in the sum of $2,109.51, which sums had been placed in the hands of the court clerk who was ordered to disburse the same as above stated.

Great Western has appealed. By stipulation and evidence issues have been reduced to a proper interpretation of the Operating Agreement above mentioned and the justification of the drilling of well No. 7 by Great Western as to R. G. Piper and the deepening of that well by Great Western below the Señora Sand as to M. J. Mitchell and Henry Homes, Sr. Piper, Mitchell and Homes had paid to Great Western, or tendered into court, their entire proportionate share of the cost of the drilling of well No. 7 and its deepening thereof and recovered judgment to the effect that the entire amount paid or tendered by Piper be returned to him and', that Mitchell and Homes be reimbursed for their share of the cost of deepening well No. 7, which was a dry hole in the Señora Sand at 1,552 feet, to the Earlsboro Sand at more than 1,600 feet deep, on the theory that Piper had never agreed to the drilling of that well and that Mitchell had not agreed that it be deepened. Mitchell, Homes and Piper were allowed by the judgment to retain their proportionate share of the oil produced from well No. 7, but not required to contribute to the drilling of the well as to Piper or the deepening as to Mitchell and Homes.

Great Western has submitted two propositions as follows :

“First, the trial court erred in excusing Mitchell from the payment of his pro rata cost of the drilling of Well *797 No. 7 below 1552 feet and in allowing him to retain the oil produced by that well attributable to his interest.
“Second, the trial court erred in excusing Piper from the payment of his pro rata cost of Well No. 7 and in allowing him to retain the oil produced by that well attributable to his interest.”

We think that a correct decision of the issues presented by the above propositions depends upon the terms of the Operating Agreement by which the Great Western agreed to operate the lease. We deem it necessary to set out the pertinent portions of the Operating Agreement of October 30, 1953, which are as follows:

“ * * * the second parties hereby grant and give unto first party the right and privilege and hereby designate it to be the operator of the leasehold property above described, granting and giving it complete management and control over the joint property.
“Second parties, as non-operators, shall be entitled to inspect the leasehold estate at all reasonable times and are entitled to access thereto.
“First party shall act at all times for the joint account of the parties hereto and this contract shall never be construed as constituting a partnership agreement between the parties and the liabilities of the parties hereto is limited to the provisions of this contract and the property hereinabove described.
“The contract may be terminated by either party upon 30 days written notice to the other party. Such termination to become effective on the 1st day of the succeeding calendar month at 7:00 o’clock A.M., after receipt of said notice.

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Bluebook (online)
1958 OK 68, 326 P.2d 794, 9 Oil & Gas Rep. 719, 1958 Okla. LEXIS 420, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/great-western-oil-gas-company-v-mitchell-okla-1958.