Gypsy Oil Co. v. Schonwald

1924 OK 1133, 231 P. 864, 107 Okla. 253, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 681
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 16, 1924
Docket14474
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 1924 OK 1133 (Gypsy Oil Co. v. Schonwald) 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
Gypsy Oil Co. v. Schonwald, 1924 OK 1133, 231 P. 864, 107 Okla. 253, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 681 (Okla. 1924).

Opinion

*254 BRANSON, J.

At all times herein mentioned, Dillard H. Clark was the owner in fee of lots 3 and 4 and the south half of the northwest quarter (referred to herein as the N. W. %) of section 2, township 24 north, range 1 west, Noble county. Okla. He and wife, Ella, executed an oil and gas mining lease to W. E. Templeman, on October 25, 1916, for a term of years, and as long thereafter as oil and gas was produced. It was, in turn, assigned by the said lessee to the plaintiff in error, Gypsy Oil Company, a corporation. August 15, 1921, in lieu of the said lease, Dillard H. Clark executed to the plaintiff in error an oil and gas lease on the same land. The provisions in said lease questioned herein are, first, the royalty clause. It is as follows:

“To pay the lessor as royalty one-eighth part of all the oil saved from that produced, such part to be run to the lessor’s credit in the pipe line, which lessee may connect with the well; or at lessee’s option to pay to lessor one-eighth part of the market value of such oil sold at the time of its production in the field where produced, and in this last event, settlement shall be made by the lessee by the 15th day of each month, for the royalties for the preceding month”

—and, second, a provision, to wit:

“If the leased premises are hereafter owned in severalty or in separate tracts, (he premises, nevertheless, shall b.e developed and operated as an entirety, and royalties shall be paid to each separate owner in the proportion that the acreage owned by him bears to the entire leased acreage, and the lessee shall not be bound by any change in the ownership of the leased acreage, unless and until notified thereof in writing, and when such change is affected by will, deed, or other written instrument, said notice shall be accompanied by such instrument, or a duly authenticated copy thereof. This stipulation, and all other stipulations, covenants, conditions, agreements and terms of this instrument shall extend to, and be binding upon the heirs, executors, successors, assigns, and the legal representatives of the parties hereto.”

On the 23rd day of June, 1922. said Dillard H. Clark executed a so-called “mineral deed” to one of the plaintiffs, Dave Sehon-wald, which “mineral deed’’ purported to convey to the grantee a one-fourth interest in the grantor’s right to oil and gas and other minerals, in and under a certain portion of said land, to wit, lot 4, and the southwest quarter of the northwest quarter of section 2, township 24 north, range 1 west, or the west half of the 160-acre tract, which “mineral deed,” after the granting clause, recited the following:

“Said land being now under an -oil and gas lease, executed in favor of the Gypsy Oil Co. It is understood and agreed that this sale is made subject to the terms of said lease, but covers and includes one-fourth of all the oil royalty and gas rental or royalty due and to be paid under the terms of said lease.”

The other defendants in error herein derive their interests, whatever they may be, .through said mineral deed to Dave Schon-wald. and their interests are contingent upon his. Under this lease, the defendant, the Gypsy Oil Company, developed said 160-acre tract, and found large deposits of oil an the leased premises. Eor a long time prior to the institution of this suit, and at the time of its institution, the lessee was producing large quantities of oil and gas from the land covered by the lease. In accord with the terms and provisions of the lease, the lessee was paying out the royalty. The wells drilled on the above described west half of said northwest quarter were much more productive of oil than the wells drilled upon the east half, and it is to be noted that the west half was the land incorporated by description in the mineral deed.

This fact was no doubt the moving cause of this lawsuit, and it ranges around the abov.e-quoted provisions of the lease, and the above-quoted provisions of the “mineral deed.”

Plaintiffs plead fraud and mistake in a too voluminous manner to undertake even to quote the substance in this opinion, but the gist of which is set out in the following paragraphs from plaintiffs1 petition:

“And the said Dillard H. Clark did not know and was not advised at the time of the execution of said lease, Exhibit ‘B,’ that said recited and quoted paragraph was in said lease, or that said lease, Exhibit ‘B,’ was in form and terms different from said former lease. Exhibit ‘A,’ excepting gas royalties only, or that any of his rights which he had retained to himself in and to the one-ei'ghth royalty in the oil to be obtained or produced from said tract of land was in any wise impaired, and did not know and was not advised that any clause was being placed in said lease which might b.e so construed as to deprive him of his free and full vested right to alienate and transfer the same. And the said Dillard H. Clark was, therefore, overreached, deceived, and imposed upon in the placing of said clause referred to in said renewal lease, and the said Dillard H. Clark did not know until a long time thereafter that said clause was in said lease, and would not have executed, the same had he known that said clause was in said lease, and would not have executed said lease if he had known that there was any clause 'therein which might be so con *255 strued as to in any way infringe upon, impair, or interfere with the full right which he possessed, and which plaintiffs allege he thereafter possessed, to transfer his right in and to the cne-eighth royalty in the oil and gas which he reserved to himself under the terms of said lease on said land.
“And by reason of which imposition and 'rand upon said Dillard H. Clark, the plaintiffs allege that said clause in said lease is wholly without consideration, nugatory, and void, and that the defendant Dillard H. Clark, at all times under said lease. Exhibit ‘B.’ same being a renewal and extension of said lease Exhibit ‘A’ possessed and retained unto himself the full right, power, and authority to transfer in severalty and in respect to separate tracts said one-eighth royalty interest in and to the oil and gas to be produced by the defendant Gypsy Oil Company, under the terms of said lease, Exhibit ‘B,’ from the above described quarter section of land.
“These plaintiffs further allege that the said clause .particularly vrefdb;\ed to and above quoted, if the same be so construed as to take or attempt to take from the said Dillard H. Clark his full and free right to sell, transfer, and assign part or all of his said one-eighth royalty interest in and to the oil and gas to be produced from said tract of land, was a specific property right in said land vested in, and retained in the said Dillard H. Clark under the terms of said lease, Exhibit ‘B,’ and that the said clause particularly referred to and above quoted, if so construed as to impair or destroy that right, was and is void on the high ground of public policy, and for the reason that it was an unlawful attempt, if done knowingly by the defendant Gypsy Oil Company, as plaintiffs allege it was done, to take from the said Dillard H.

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Bluebook (online)
1924 OK 1133, 231 P. 864, 107 Okla. 253, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 681, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gypsy-oil-co-v-schonwald-okla-1924.