Hanszen v. Cocke

246 So. 2d 200, 40 Oil & Gas Rep. 176, 1971 La. App. LEXIS 6182
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 15, 1971
DocketNo. 8194
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 246 So. 2d 200 (Hanszen v. Cocke) 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
Hanszen v. Cocke, 246 So. 2d 200, 40 Oil & Gas Rep. 176, 1971 La. App. LEXIS 6182 (La. Ct. App. 1971).

Opinion

BLANCHE, Judge.

Plaintiffs-appellants claim the ownership of a one-fourth mineral interest in a 202.20 acre tract of land located in St. Mary Parish and known as Amanda Plantation. The primary issues are (1) whether the pendency of certain litigation1 in St. Mary Parish over the validity of a mineral lease affecting the aforesaid property from September 12, 1940, to April 17, 1944, amounted to an “obstacle” to the use of the servitude, thus suspending the running of prescription as to the said servitude for the time said litigation was commenced until it was concluded, and (2) whether the action of A. Veeder Company, Inc., in instituting the aforesaid litigation resulted in an “unjust enrichment” to A. Veeder Company, Inc., giving rise to a quasi-contractual obligation requiring restitution of the amount by which plaintiffs were impoverished and defendants-appellees were enriched.2

The trial court maintained the plea of prescription filed by defendants-appellees and rejected plaintiffs’ demands at their cost. The trial judge in a thorough and well-reasoned opinion disposed of all the issues raised by appellants on appeal save one exception which we will comment upon later herein, and we take the liberty of adopting therefrom the following as the opinion of the Court:

“This suit concerns the ownership of a one-fourth 04th) mineral interest in a tract of land in St. Mary Parish, Louisiana, containing 202.20 acres, which tract of land is commonly known and referred to as ‘Amanda Plantation’. Plaintiffs trace their title to the claimed mineral interest to a certain mineral deed executed by A. Veeder Company, Inc., ancestor in title of defendants, as Grantor, in favor of David M. Picton, Jr., ancestor in title of plaintiffs, as Grantee, dated December 7, 1935 (Plaintiff’s Exhibit A). By virtue of the mineral deed above referred to, David M. Picton, Jr. acquired a one-fourth (J4th) mineral interest in several tracts of land owned by A. Veeder Company, Inc., among which was ‘Amanda Plantation’. None of the other lands covered by this deed were contiguous to ‘Amanda Plantation’. Previous to the execution of this mineral deed and on July 7, 1932, A. Veeder Co., Inc. had executed an oil, gas and mineral lease (Plaintiff’s Exhibit B), together with other parties, covering fifteen separate tracts comprising a total of 1331.29 acres (including ‘Amanda Plantation’, Tract 8 in the original lease)- and therefore the Picton mineral deed was executed subject to this lease. At this point it should be noted that at the time of the execution of the lease, A. Veeder Company, Inc., owned in fee, Tracts 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 7, 8 (Amanda Plantation), 12, 13, 14 and 15 of said lease; however, the remaining lands covered thereby, viz.: Tracts 6, 9, 10 and 11, were owned by other parties who joined with the Veeder Company in executing the lease. Subsequent to the execution of the lease, which will be hereafter referred to as the ‘Siler lease’, the parties lessor and lessee executed an amendment thereto correcting the description of lands covered thereby, which instrument likewise contained a stipulation to the effect that the royalties on production which might accrue under the terms thereof were to be paid separately to the Lessors therein as the actual record ownership of the various lands therein leased may appear. This instrument of amendment although executed on January 17, 1935 was not recorded until February 24, 1938. The ‘Siler lease’ was subsequently assigned by the original lessee to John R. Black and A. T. Schwennesen (Stipulation Paragraph 2), who by instrument dated December 31, 1934 (Stipulation Paragraph 4) assigned such lease as to a portion of the acreage covered thereby, including the west 25 acres of ‘Amanda Plantation’ to Shell Petroleum Corporation and Amerada Petro[202]*202leum Corporation. The portion of the ‘Siler lease’ assigned to Shell and Amerada was by them formally released on January 18, 1938 (Stipulation Paragraph 4-A). The ‘Siler lease’, less the acreage assigned to Shell and Amerada, was eventually acquired by Pan American Production Company and others (Stipulation paragraphs 5, Sa, and 6), who thereafter caused to be drilled several wells in search of oil or gas during the year 1937 and succeeding years, some of which were productive, all of which wells were drilled on lands not subject to plaintiffs’ mineral servitude. No drilling operations were conducted on and no production was obtained from ‘Amanda Plantation’ until October 23, 1947, thirteen years following execution of the Picton mineral deed, when the Veeder No. 31 well was drilled and completed as a dry hole.

“No production was obtained from ‘Amanda Plantation’ until March of 1951 and all production from this tract ceased in August of 1961. (Stipulation Paragraphs 16 and 17). No part of ‘Amanda Plantation’ has ever been pooled or unitized with any other lands (Paragraph 12 of Stipulation).

“On September 12, 1940, after expiration of the primary term of the ‘Siler lease’, A. Veeder Company, Inc. filed a suit against Pan-American Production Company, et al., seeking cancellation of the ‘Siler lease’, which suit bears number 19S20, Docket of the 16th Judicial District Court for the Parish of St. Mary, Louisiana. David Picton, Jr. and his successors in title were not parties to this suit. Plaintiff in that suit sought cancellation of the ‘Siler lease’ because the primary term had expired without any exploration having been undertaken on the lands of the Veeder Company, including ‘Amanda Plantation’. Pan American Production Company defended on the ground that the ‘Siler lease’ was a joint lease as between lessor and lessee and that since it had drilled wells and was producing on other lands covered by said lease such action had the effect of maintaining the lease in its entirety. The matter was eventually heard by the Supreme Court of Louisiana ([205 La. 599] 17 So.2d 891), which Court determined that the ‘Siler lease’ was in fact joint as between lessor and lessee, and, accordingly, rendered judgment favorable to the defendants. A rehearing was denied in this matter on April 17, 1944 and on that date the judgment in this suit became final.

“Plaintiffs in the instant suit, on the basis of the facts above set forth, contend that the mineral servitude as it applies to ‘Amanda Plantation’ established by the deed of December 7, 1935, is still in existence, the prescription of non-use running against such servitude having been suspended during pendency of the litigation last referred to and their servitude having been drilled during the extended term thereof, and/or that the drilling and production under the ‘Siler lease’, a joint lease, although on lands not subject to their mineral servitude, had the effect of interrupting prescription on all mineral servitudes subject thereto.3 On the other hand, defendants urge that the current of prescription running against plaintiffs’ mineral servitude was neither suspended nor interrupted and that same expired by reason of non-use ten years following its establishment and long prior to the initial operations on ‘Amanda Plantation’, which occurred in the fall of 1947.

“Plaintiffs initially contend that by virtue of the Picton mineral deed of December 7, 1935 (Exhibit A) David Picton, Jr. acquired, in addition to the one-fourth mineral interest in ‘Amanda Plantation’ and other lands; a like interest in the [203]*203‘Siler lease’.4 They next reason that when their grantor, A.

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Bluebook (online)
246 So. 2d 200, 40 Oil & Gas Rep. 176, 1971 La. App. LEXIS 6182, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hanszen-v-cocke-lactapp-1971.