Hafeman v. Gem Oil Company

80 N.W.2d 139, 163 Neb. 438
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 28, 1956
Docket34017, 34018, 34023
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 80 N.W.2d 139 (Hafeman v. Gem Oil Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hafeman v. Gem Oil Company, 80 N.W.2d 139, 163 Neb. 438 (Neb. 1956).

Opinion

Boslaugh, J.

This action seeks a determination and adjudication of the rights of the parties to royalty of the landowner payable by the terms of the base oil and gas lease of two noncontiguous quarter sections of real estate owned *441 by Arthur H. Hafeman, an accounting of the royalty he claims is due him because of the production of oil from the land, a judgment in his favor for the amount thereof, and general equitable relief.

The parties are numerous and will, when appropriate, be designated herein as follows: Arthur H. Hafeman, plaintiff in the district court, as appellee; and the defendants in that court, including Dean Terrill who is an appellee in case No. 34017, as appellants. The parties do not have a common status or identical and equal interests. They may be classified as follows: Appellee, who owned the land when the lease thereon was executed and delivered and who has a mineral interest therein; appellants who own only a mineral interest in one quarter section of the land will be sometimes referred to herein as mineral owners; appellants who own only a working interest in the lease as to the one quarter section of the land will be sometimes referred to herein as leasehold owners; Gem Oil Company and Dean Terrill are individually mineral owners and they each have a working interest in the lease. They will be sometimes referred to respectively as Gem Oil Company and Terrill.

The pleadings are quite voluminous and involved. There is no controversy concerning them. They join issue on questions pertinent to the litigation. Additional statements as to their contents will be made when appropriate. The parties concede, and the record verifies the correctness of their conclusion, that there is no issue of fact in the case. The controversy relates to the interpretation, meaning, and significance of the proof which principally consists of instruments and writings.

Appellee was the owner of the northeast quarter of Section 23 and the southeast quarter of Section 12, Township 14 North, Range 55 West, Kimball County, Nebraska. The land in Section 23 is referred to as Tract 1 and the land in Section 12 as Tract 2. Appellee *442 and his wife on October 1, 1949, executed and delivered an oil and gas lease of the land to Magnolia Petroleum Company and thereby leased the land to it for oil and gas exploration and production. The lease contained provisions for its assignment by either party, in whole or in part, and an entirety clause. The lease was filed for record in the office of the register of deeds of that county on December 2, 1949, and it was in force at all times important to this litigation.

The lessee by letter proposed a farmout and assignment of the base lease, to the extent it affected Tract 1, to Eddie Fisher. The proposal was accepted by him on March 16, 1954. The terms of it were that if he commenced the drilling of a well on a designated location and prosecuted it with due diligence to a depth sufficient to test certain formations or until production in paying quantities was obtained and completed the work in a specified time, the lessee would assign to Eddie Fisher the lease as to Tract 1. The letter concerned two leases and contained this language: “Reference is here made to said leases and the record thereof for this and all other purposes.”

Appellee and his wife on April 12, 1954, conveyed by mineral deed to Eddie Fisher for a consideration of $4,000 an undivided % interest in and to the oil, gas, and other minerals in and under and that may be produced from Tract 1, subject to the oil and gas lease of October 1, 1949. This deed recites that it is the intention of the grantor to convey 80 mineral acres. The grantee in the deed was, by agreement acknowledged April 22, 1954, changed from Eddie Fisher to Gem Oil Company. Appellee and his wife on May 15, 1954, conveyed by mineral deed to Dean Terrill for a consideration of $2,500 an undivided % interest in and to the oil, gas, and other minerals in and under and that may be produced from Tract 1, subject to the oil and gas lease of October 1, 1949. This deed recites it was the inten *443 lion to convey and transfer approximately 40 mineral acres out of said tract.

The commercial production of oil was established May 15, 1954, by the test well drilled on Tract 1 in accordance with the farmout letter. The lessee of the base lease assigned it as to Tract 1 to Eddie Fisher on June 9, 1954. In the period of May 8, 1954, to June 22, 1954, both inclusive, he assigned to other persons all the leasehold interest in Tract 1 which he acquired from the original lessee.

The Gem Oil Company was the lease operator. It caused a division order, dated June 15, 1954, to be prepared. It was directed to the oil company. It was signed by the owners of royalty and working interests, including appellee. It described 32 separate fractional interests. The interest of appellee was therein designated as “% of % R.I.” The interest of Gem Oil Company was designated as “3/32 of % R. I.” and “67/128 of % W. I.” The interest of Dean Terrill was described as “% of % R. I.” and “1/64 of % W. I.” The interest of Dean Terrill, Trustee, was described as “1/16 of % W. I.” Appellee by the terms of the division order certified and guaranteed that he was the owner of “Yk of % R- I.” of the oil produced from Tract 1 and he authorized Gem Oil Company to receive all money from oil produced therefrom according to instructions set forth in the order. The amount received from the sale of oil was specified to be paid to the parties designated therein severally in the proportions named. The order provided it could be terminated by any party in interest by giving 30 days’ notice. The division order was not for or to the purchaser of the crude oil produced because of the lease. There is no proof that anyone was misled or was induced to act by the fact that it represented the interest of appellee as appellants claim it should be. The division order was prepared by the Gem Oil Company, addressed to it, and it was for that company. The fractional interests of the owners and *444 the fractional breakdown in the division order were determined by the representatives of Gem Oil Company. It did not secure and had no division order title opinion. The crude oil from Tract 1 was from the time of first production until April 5, 1955, sold to Western Crude Marketers. The total purchase price thereof was paid by it to and was distributed by Gem Oil Company. George Fisher, the secretary and treasurer of that company, actually handled the sale of the crude oil.

The Gem Oil Company made a detailed monthly oil-run report to appellee which exhibited his interest in the production as set forth in the division order and the net royalty due him on that basis. He accepted and retained payments made to him monthly as royalty due him as shown by the division order from the first productiofi to April 5, 1955, in the total sum of $12,463.69. This case was commenced March 30, 1955. A royalty payment of $839.50 was made to him April 27, 1955, and the last royalty paid him was May 27, 1955, in the sum of $121.65.

Appellee signed a statement, dated June 24, 1954, and addressed to Magnolia Petroleum Company, as follows: “Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
80 N.W.2d 139, 163 Neb. 438, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hafeman-v-gem-oil-company-neb-1956.