Gulf Oil Corporation and Estate of William G. Helis v. Nicholas D. Olivier

412 F.2d 938
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJuly 14, 1969
Docket26296
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 412 F.2d 938 (Gulf Oil Corporation and Estate of William G. Helis v. Nicholas D. Olivier) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gulf Oil Corporation and Estate of William G. Helis v. Nicholas D. Olivier, 412 F.2d 938 (5th Cir. 1969).

Opinion

THORNBERRY, Circuit Judge:

The controversy began as a 'simple suit on a debt with Nicholas Olivier, the plaintiff-appellee, suing Humble Oil, one of the appellants, to recover overriding royalty payments carved out of an oil and gas lease on 57.36 acres of land in Plaquemines Parish, Louisiana. Humble did not deny that it was producing as lessee under the lease alleged in the complaint, which we shall call the Cutrer-Olivier lease, nor did it challenge the validity of the assignment of overriding royalties alleged in the complaint. Rather, it took the position that it could not safely make payments under its assignment of overriding royalties to Olivier because of the existence of a conflicting lease on the same property and of conflicting overriding royalties carved out of the conflicting lease. On the theory that the conflicting lease might somehow expose it to double liability or affect its independent liability to Olivier, Humble filed a motion under Rule 22 for inter-pleader of the parties in the conflicting chain of title. The district court granted the motion, holding that Olivier’s suit against Humble for overriding royalty payments necessitated an adjudication as to which of the two conflicting leases was superior. See Olivier v. Humble Oil & Refining Co., E.D.La.1963, 225 F.Supp. 536. Following trial on the merits, the court held the Cutrer-Olivier lease to be superior and awarded overriding royalty payments to Olivier with interest on payments accrued since 1959. Gulf Oil, the Estate of William G. Helis, and William G. Helis, Jr., parties whose interest will be identified hereafter, appeal from the adjudication of title, saying that the conflicting lease, which we shall call the Perez lease, is superior to the Cutrer-Olivier lease. Humble does not contest the way in which the title question was decided but appeals from the award of interest to Olivier and from the court’s refusal to award costs and attorneys’ fees to Humble. Except for the award of interest, we affirm.

I.

For purposes of this case, we may assume that the original owners of the 57.-36 acres of land were Dr. and Mrs. Noah Cutrer. They lost the property at a tax sale in 1945 but attempted to redeem it as provided by Louisiana law in 1948. The validity of the redemption is in question here. The purchasers at the 1945 tax sale were predecessors in interest of the so-called Perez group and, for convenience, will be referred to as the Perez group. The title dispute underlying the conflict between the two leases is basically a dispute over whether the property is owned by successors in interest of the Perez group, purchasers at the tax sale, or successors in interest of Dr. and Mrs. Cutrer, the original owners who attempted to redeem the property by paying back taxes plus interest and penalties. In 1953, proceeding on the assumption that the redemption was valid, Dr. Cutrer and Nicholas Olivier, who had obtained an ownership interest under the Cutrer chain of title, leased the property to Humble for drilling purposes and an overriding royalty for Olivier (Vzí of %) was carved out of the lease. In 1949, proceeding on the assumption that their tax title had become unassailable by passage of the three-year statutory period without a valid redemption, the Perez group had leased the same property to William G. Helis, succeeded by the Estate of William G. Helis, and an overriding royalty interest (V&i) had been assigned to William G. Helis, Jr. Thus, the title dispute involved Cutrer and Olivier on the one hand and the Perez group on the other, conflicting lessors ; Humble and the Estate of William *940 G. Helis, conflicting lessees; and Olivier and William G. Helis, Jr., overriding royalty owners under the conflicting leases:

Conflicting leases on 57.36 acres of land in Plaquemines Parish, Louisiana

Cutrer-Olivier lease (1953) Perez lease (19U9)

Lessors: Cutrer, Olivier Perez group

Lessees: Humble William G. Helis—

Estate of William G. Helis

Owners of overriding royalties: Olivier

William G. Helis, Jr.

In 1958, the lessees resolved the title dispute as between themselves by executing a joint operating agreement, contributing their leases to the joint operation, and designating the Gulf Oil Corporation as operator. The oil production made possible by this joint operating agreement brought about Olivier’s claim against Humble for overriding royalty payments. In 1959, Olivier attempted to remove the cloud on the Cut-rer title by obtaining a quitclaim deed from the Perez group. This instrument gave him whatever interest the Perez group had in the property and the Perez group passed out of the picture. Thus, as of 1959, Olivier had the lessor’s interest in both chains of title and clearly was the central figure in the title dispute:

Olivier

Lessees: Humble Estate of William G. Helis

Overriding royalty owners: Olivier William G. Helis, Jr.

Having explained the facts relevant to the title dispute, we now attempt to describe more completely the structure of the present lawsuit. As previously stated, Humble was allowed to interplead everyone involved in the title dispute, including Gulf, the Estate of William G. Helis, and William G. Helis, Jr. 1 In the trial court, Olivier opposed the interpleader on the ground that the title dispute was irrelevant to his lawsuit against Humble since Humble admitted producing under the Cutrer-Oliv-ier lease and admitted having assigned an overriding royalty interest to Olivier. These admissions, he argued, obligated Humble to make the overriding royalty payments regardless of which lease was superior. But the court rejected his contention, partly because the assign *941 ment of an overriding royalty from Humble to Olivier contained what is called a proportionate reduction clause:

If Lessor in said lease owns a less interest in the premises covered thereby than the entire undivided fee, then said overriding royalties shall be payable to the assignee herein in the proportion which the interest of the Lessor in said land bears to the entire and undivided fee.

This clause means that no payments are due to the assignee of the overriding royalty if the lessor has no interest in the property and the lease out of which the override was carved is invalid; so far as this ease is concerned, the clause could be interpreted to eliminate Humble’s liability to Olivier for overriding royalties in the event the Cutrer-Olivier lease were held inferior to the Perez lease. Thus, partly because of the proportionate reduction clause, Humble was permitted to bring the title question into the case so that the court could determine its effect on Humble’s liability to Olivier.

Besides feeling that the proportionate reduction clause might effectively nullify its liability to Olivier, if the Cutrer-Olivier lease were found to be invalid, Humble had another reason for wanting the title dispute to be resolved. Under the joint operating agreement, it was obligated to pay five-sixths of whatever overriding royalties were validly claimed.

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Bluebook (online)
412 F.2d 938, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gulf-oil-corporation-and-estate-of-william-g-helis-v-nicholas-d-olivier-ca5-1969.