Gulf Oil Corp. v. Adams

209 So. 2d 770, 30 Oil & Gas Rep. 560, 1968 La. App. LEXIS 5407
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 2, 1968
DocketNo. 10982
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 209 So. 2d 770 (Gulf Oil Corp. v. Adams) 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
Gulf Oil Corp. v. Adams, 209 So. 2d 770, 30 Oil & Gas Rep. 560, 1968 La. App. LEXIS 5407 (La. Ct. App. 1968).

Opinion

BOLIN, Judge.

Gulf Oil Corporation sues defendants seeking reimbursement for certain production payments made by it under an oil and gas lease on property located in Caddo Parish, Louisiana. Defendants acquired the lease from Gulf on February 1, 1960. Following trial on the merits the lower court rendered judgment in favor of Gulf, but in an opinion on application for new trial the court reversed its judgment and rendered an award in favor of defendants Noel L. Adams, Jr. and the other heirs of Noel L. Adams, Sr., now deceased. From this judgment Gulf appeals.

This appeal deals primarily with the interpretation of certain portions of the assignment to the Adamses, but an understanding of the entire matter requires some recitation of the transactions leading up to the agreement of 1960.

Originally a number of oil and gas leases were acquired from the property owners by Haynes Production Company, Inc. in 1933, 1934 and 1935. By a recorded assignment in April, 1936, Standard Oil Company acquired the lease of the property herein involved, together with other leases which are of no consequence in the instant case, and on May 15, 1936, Standard assigned an undivided one-half interest in these leases to Gulf Refining Company. Concurrently therewith, by an unrecorded agreement, Gulf assumed one-half of the obligations, incurred by Standard in its acquisition from the stockholders of Haynes, being designated as one-half of three-sixteenths of seven-eighths of all oil and gas produced from the assigned leases. It was further agreed Standard would continue as operator of the leases. The remaining undivided one-half interest was retained by Standard, which was succeeded by and subsequently became Carter Oil Company and these companies continued as operators of Caldwell #5, which is the only producing well located on the property involved in this case.

On August 1, 1959, Carter subleased its one-half interest in the Caldwell #5 well to Noel L. Adams, Sr. and Noel L. Adams, Jr., reserving to itself an overriding royalty of one-half of three-sixteenths of seven-eights of all oil, gas and casinghead gas produced and saved from the premises which were subleased. The reserved portion was tantamount to Carter’s one-half of the production payments due the shareholders of Haynes Production Company in [772]*772the original sale and assignment to Standard.

All of the actual transfers, assignments and subleases were recorded. However, in conjunction with the transfers unrecorded collateral agreements were executed by the parties dealing with the operating expenses of the various leases. Additionally, Standard contracted that part of the original consideration to the Haynes shareholders was to be a production payment of three-sixteenth of seven-eighths of all production from the producing wells until such time as said payments totaled Ten Million Dollars.

Gulf Oil Corporation, successor to Gulf Refining Company, assigned all of its right, title and interest in Caldwell # 5 to defendants on February 1, 1960. This transfer was made without warranty of title and was subject to certain exceptions, the pertinent one being:

“It is recognized that the rights and interests herein conveyed are subject to an agreement, as amended, made and entered into under date of May 15, 1936, by and between Standard Oil Company of Louisiana and Gulf Refining Company, buyer having succeeded to the rights, duties and obligations of the said Standard Oil Company of Louisiana thereunder and Seller having succeeded to the rights, duties and obligations of Gulf Refining Company thereunder. Therefore, except for any final accounting between Seller and Buyer, the said agreement, insofar as it covers and applies to the rights and interests herein conveyed, shall be deemed to have terminated as of the effective time and date of this instrument.”

On August 1, 1959, prior to the above assignment, Gulf agreed that Adams should be the operator of the well under an unrecorded instrument wherein the operator (Adams) agreed that the rights, duties and obligations of said operator should be the same as those set forth for Standard in the May 15, 1936 operating agreement. It is in this latter operating agreement that Gulf had assumed the obligation of making production payments which were classified as part of the “other valuable consideration” for the assignment from Standard to Gulf.

At all times prior to this assignment the production payments had been made to the Haynes shareholders by Standard (later Humble Oil & Refining Company) and Gulf had been billed for these payments. After Gulf’s assignment to appellees and pursuant to Article 1 thereof, appellees remitted to Gulf its one-half of net proceeds from the Caldwell lease for gas production during the last four months of 1959 and oil in tanks on February 1, 1960, after deducting .082031 or one-half of three-sixteenths of seven-eighths thereof. This remittance expressly stated it excluded royalty and production payments.

Upon being billed for one-half of the Haynes payment obligation in October 1960, Gulf advised Humble that appellees should be thus billed, and sent appellees a copy of its letter. Humble promptly wrote appellees, sending Gulf a copy of such letter, stating that the Caldwell lease was burdened with the Haynes payment obligation; that as successor to Gulf, appellees would stand one-half of such payment; that Humble would make the entire payment and bill appellees for their share; and that Humble enclosed its statement for $34.47 for appellees’ part of the February 1960 production payment. However, either through oversight or inadvertence, Humble continued to make the production payment to the Haynes shareholders, after Gulf’s assignment to defendants, from 1960 through 1963 without billing Gulf or Adams for such payments.

In January, 1964, Gulf received from Humble a payment due it from other wells and from this payment had been deducted $5,982.32 as reimbursement for the production payments to the Haynes shareholders. This was Gulf’s first notice that Adams had neither paid nor made arrangements [773]*773for the payment of the contingent consideration payable from production under the lease of Caldwell #5 after February 1, 1960. After considerable correspondence between the parties, this suit was instituted May 13, 1965.

Gulf argues that where a party’s title instrument is signed by him and evidences that his title is burdened with prior obligations arising from recorded or unrecorded documents, he is bound thereby. Gulf further urges that in considering a contract in its entirety, the court should consider the relation of the parties, their connection with the subject matter and the circumstances under which the contract was made and then determine the intention of the parties from the entire agreement; and all clauses are to be construed together in arriving at the intent of the parties thereto, no isolated clause or provision in itself being controlling.

Appellees urge the correctness of the lower court’s decision principally under the law of registry as enunciated in McDuffie v. Walker, 125 La. 152, 51 So. 100 (1909). They contend that since they were “third parties” to the unrecorded agreement dated May 15, 1936, wherein Gulf assumed the rights, duties and obligations of Standard to pay one-half of three-sixteenths of seven-eighths of production, they are not bound thereby.

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Related

Admiral Paint Company v. Goltzman
254 So. 2d 104 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1972)
Gulf Oil Corp. v. Adams
211 So. 2d 333 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1968)

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Bluebook (online)
209 So. 2d 770, 30 Oil & Gas Rep. 560, 1968 La. App. LEXIS 5407, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gulf-oil-corp-v-adams-lactapp-1968.