Hall v. Dixon
This text of 401 So. 2d 473 (Hall v. Dixon) 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.
Opinion
Frank J. HALL, et al, Plaintiffs-Appellees,
v.
Colidge DIXON, et al, Defendants-Appellants.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.
Weiner, Weiss, Madison & Howell, Shreveport, for plaintiffs-appellees.
Fish, Montgomery & Robinson, Springhill, for defendants-appellants.
Lawrence L. May, Jr., Vivian, Roland McKneely, Bossier City, Alfred Bullock, Shreveport, Ronald Miciotto, Bossier City, D. G. Tyler, Shreveport, for defendant-appellee.
Before MARVIN, JASPER E. JONES and FRED W. JONES, JJ.
En Banc. Rehearing Denied July 15, 1981.
JASPER E. JONES, Judge.
Plaintiffs, Frank J. Hall, Frank J. Hall, Jr., Cristine Hall, Lynn Hall Lasiter, Katherine *474 Hall Cherry, Charles B. Sentell, Jack Jorden, Jr., J. M. Harper, Jr., Haskill Bonner, M. & V. Oil, Inc., Petrol Industries, Inc., Jackson B. Davis, Alfred W. Bullock, and Lyndall Bullock Tinnin, were granted a judgment enjoining appellants, Colidge Dixon, Earl Dixon, Haston Smith, Adeline S. Stringer, Theodora S. Evans, Huey P. Dixon, Sherry Linda Williams, Renee Ann Williams, Joe Woodrow Williams, Lucille Dixon Anderson, Daniel Smith, Edith B. Dixon Novoscone, Jake Smith, and Laura Mae Smith, from interfering with plaintiffs' exploration for minerals on 120 acres of land located in Caddo Parish, Louisiana. The judgment also enjoined appellants from interfering with plaintiffs' production of any minerals they found by virtue of said exploration. The judgment also decreed that the prescription of nonuse as applicable to plaintiffs' mineral rights was suspended from November 3, 1978 (this was the date plaintiffs filed their suit) until the date the judgment became final and definitive.
Plaintiffs are mineral interest owners, lessors-royalty interest owners, and lessees-working interest owners of 81.3 mineral acres in the E-½ of the SW-¼ and the SE-¼ of the NW-¼, Sec. 35, T21N, R15W, Caddo Parish, Louisiana. Plaintiffs planned in October of 1978 to immediately drill a well on the 120 acres because they believed minerals under it were being drained by wells producing on acreage adjacent to it. Plaintiffs were also motivated to drill the well because many of plaintiffs' mineral servitudes and/or leases would expire in 1979 or 1980, and plaintiffs needed to drill on the subject property in order to maintain their mineral servitudes and/or their mineral leases.
Plaintiffs had actually alleged their servitudes would expire in 1979, apparently believing all earlier production on these servitudes had ceased in 1969. However, at trial they established there had been some production on their mineral servitudes in the fall of 1970. Plaintiffs, pursuant to their plan, had a well location surveyed and staked in October, 1978, and on October 20, 1978 secured a permit from the Department of Conservation of the State of Louisiana authorizing the drilling of the well at the staked location. Plaintiffs further secured a drilling contractor who preparatory to drilling secured the services of James Hall, an oilfield construction contractor, to level the drilling site and dig the necessary drilling pits.
Appellants are alluded to in pleadings and briefs filed in this record as part owners of the surface and minerals in the 120 acres upon which plaintiffs desire to drill. Appellant, Colidge Dixon, who contends he is owner of a 1/12th interest in said property which he contends is affected by no outstanding mineral servitudes, lives near the property. He was of the opinion that plaintiffs had no right to drill a well upon the property and for that reason he physically removed the stake which the surveyor had placed to designate the location of the proposed well. Access to the property was only available through a locked gate and Colidge Dixon had a key to this gate. When James Hall arrived at the location of the property with his bulldozer for the purpose of clearing the site and digging the pits, he was unable to get through the locked gate. He was advised by someone he talked to in the area that Colidge Dixon was going to prevent the drilling of the well and would have any equipment that he found on the property seized. The following day James Hall found Colidge Dixon and sought permission to enter the property to prepare the drilling site. Dixon refused Hall permission to enter the property and told him he would have any of Hall's equipment on the property seized by his lawyer.
Plaintiffs filed this suit on November 3, 1978 seeking to enforce their rights as co-owners to explore for and produce minerals under the 120 acres, pursuant to the provisions of LSA-R.S. 31:176[1] and 177[2].
*475 Appellants vigorously defended the action. Included among appellants' pleadings was a motion objecting to the use of summary process wherein they contested plaintiffs' right to the preliminary injunction. Plaintiffs thereafter abandoned their efforts to obtain the preliminary injunction and converted the entire proceeding to an ordinary action. After numerous delays, some of which were attributed to the motions for continuance filed by counsel for appellants, the case was tried on May 5, 1980, and the judgment appealed from was signed on August 20, 1980.
Appellants assign as error (1) the trial court's suspension of the running of prescription of the mineral servitudes when there were neither allegations nor proof that there were obstacles to their use which the servitude owners could not remove, (2) alternatively, the court erred in commencing the suspension of the running of prescription on November 3, 1978 because none of appellants did anything on that date, or thereafter, to create an obstacle to plaintiffs' use of their mineral servitude, and the trial court erred in suspending the running of prescription beyond November 16, 1978, the date set for the hearing on the preliminary injunction, and (3) the trial court erred in suspending prescription on the servitudes on property owned by persons who did nothing to create an obstacle to plaintiffs' use of their servitudes.
DID PLAINTIFFS ESTABLISH AN OBSTACLE TO THE USE OF THEIR MINERAL SERVITUDES?
The law which provides that an obstacle suspends the prescription of nonuse of a servitude is contained in the following provisions of the mineral code:
LSA-R.S. 31:59If the owner of a mineral servitude is prevented from using it by an obstacle that he can neither prevent nor remove, the prescription of nonuse does not run as long as the obstacle remains.
LSA-R.S. 31:60An obstacle to drilling or mining operations or to production of any mineral covered by an act creating a mineral servitude suspends the running of prescription as to all minerals covered by the act.
Plaintiffs proved that appellant, Colidge Dixon, who claimed the ownership of 1/12th of the 120 acres subject to their mineral servitudes, pulled up the stake that had been placed by the surveyor to designate the site of the proposed well. Plaintiffs further proved this appellant had a key to a locked gate which controlled access to the proposed well site which was located in a fenced pasture. Colidge refused to permit plaintiffs' contractor to bring in the necessary equipment to level the well site and construct the pits necessary to the drilling operation. This appellant prohibited this contractor from doing the necessary work preparatory to the drilling of the well and actively obstructed the work by pulling up the stake. Colidge admitted these facts at the trial of the case.
In Perkins v. Long-Bell Petroleum Company, 227 La.
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