Hill v. General Petroleum Corp.

16 P.2d 1035, 128 Cal. App. 284, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 213
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 20, 1932
DocketDocket No. 4538.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 16 P.2d 1035 (Hill v. General Petroleum Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hill v. General Petroleum Corp., 16 P.2d 1035, 128 Cal. App. 284, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 213 (Cal. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

TUTTLE, J., pro tem.

The purpose of this action is to have it adjudged that a certain restrictive covenant in an oil lease is inoperative and unenforceable and to remove said covenant as a cloud upon the title to real property belonging to plaintiffs.

The complaint contains seven counts. Demurrers were sustained to the last four counts, and upon failure to amend the cause was tried upon the first three counts. The trial court found for defendants upon the issues raised, and judgment was entered that plaintiff take nothing. The appeal is prosecuted from the judgment.

The only contention made upon this appeal is in respect to the sufficiency of the complaint, and the several causes of action therein set forth. The sufficiency of the evidence to support the findings is not questioned, nor is any ruling of the court upon matters of evidence attacked.

The plaintiffs entered into an oil and gas lease with defendant Midway Gas Company, on February 1, 1922, covering certain property in the Santa Fe Springs oil-fields in Los Angeles County.

The first cause of action is one to remove a cloud on the title to lands owned by plaintiff, described as lot 21, block 77, township of Santa Fe Springs, and included originally in said lease. It alleges the ownership of the lands by the plaintiffs, the execution of an oil and gas lease thereon by the plaintiffs in favor of the defendants, including a recital of the history of the transfer of the lease, and also alleges that the oil and gas lease contained, among other provisions, this language:

“Right of Oil Company to quitclaim.
“At any time or times after the date of this lease, the Oil Company may, at its option, execute and either deliver to the owner or cause to be recorded in the office of the county recorder of said county a quitclaim deed or deeds or other necessary legal instrument, duly acknowledged so as to be ready for recordation, quitclaiming all or any portion of the leased lands, as the Oil Company may select, and *287 upon the delivery or filing for record of any such deed the land so quitclaimed thereby shall forthwith be released from the effect of this lease, and none of the rights and obligations of the parties hereto shall thereafter apply to said quitclaimed lands except as follows, viz.: . . .
“ (2) The owner shall not drill nor excavate for or otherwise seek or take oil, gas or other hydrocarbons upon said quitclaimed lands at any place thereon nearer than four hundred (400) feet to any well upon lands retained by the Oil Company, during the life of such well ...”

The first cause of action further alleges that the defendant General Petroleum Corporation executed and caused to be recorded a quitclaim deed, quitclaiming the property described in the complaint, with one other parcel to the plaintiffs, and that the quitclaim deed contained the language above set forth as subdivision “(2)” of paragraph “XII” of the lease. The complaint further alleges that on the date of the recording of the quitclaim deed, the only well existing on lands retained by the defendants or any of them under said well within 400 feet of any part of lot 21 was the well known as “General Petroleum H-M No. 1” or “Hill-Midway No. 1,” then producing from the Bell Sand. The complaint then recites that the development of the field, in which the premises are located, has resulted in the discovery of seven (7) separate and distinct zones, and the complaint describes these zones, their various thicknesses, and depth from the surface, and also sets forth a map showing these zones. The complaint further alleges that the defendants have drilled ten (10) wells within 400 feet of lot 21 described in the complaint, to the Bell, Meyer, Nordstrom and Buckbee zones, on lands in which plaintiffs have no right, title or interest, and the complaint sets forth the productivity of these various zones as measured in barrels of oil extracted to date from the wells within 400 feet of lot 21 drilled by defendants and on lands in which these plaintiffs have no right, title or interest. The complaint then alleges that the Hill-Midway No. 1 well ceased to produce oil in commercially paying quantities before September, 1928, and was finally abandoned on the twentieth day of February, 1929.

The complaint further alleges that the defendants are producing large quantities of oil within 400 feet from lot *288 21 and were producing this oil prior to the time the well known as Hill-Midway No. 1 ceased to produce oil in commercial quantities, and have been and now are producing large quantities of oil therefrom, and that this oil being so produced is being drained from beneath the premises known as lot 21; that the plaintiffs have no interest in the lands upon which the wells of the defendants are being operated, and the defendants do not intend to pay the plaintiffs any royalties for oil taken from beneath lot 21.

Plaintiffs then allege that the defendants will continue to produce oil from wells adjoining lot 21 and will continue pumping oil in large quantities from all productive zones thereunder, to plaintiffs’ great and irreparable injury and damage.

Plaintiffs allege that by reason of the facts above set forth, the defendants have no further right, title or interest in and to lot 21 under subdivision “ (2) ” of paragraph “XII” of the said oil and gas lease, or otherwise.

Plaintiffs then allege that the terms of the quitclaim deed from defendants to plaintiffs constitutes a cloud upon the title of plaintiffs to the real property described in the complaint and that this cloud is preventing the plaintiffs from making an advantageous and highly profitable oil and gas lease thereunder, for the extraction of oil and gas therefrom; and that unless this cloud is removed the plaintiffs will be unable to enjoy the property and other rights owned by them in the same, and will be deprived of the full use thereof.

The complaint further alleges that the plaintiffs have had a Iona fide offer from oil producing companies to lease the premises on a twenty per cent royalty basis, all of which will not affect or injure the defendants or any of them, in any way, in their operations on any of the premises described in the oil and gas lease attached to the complaint.

The second count contains most of the allegations of the first, and in addition alleges that there was no consideration for the covenant.

The third count is almost identical with the first, and contains the additional allegation that the consideration for the covenant wholly failed.

The property covered by the lease has been subdivided into blocks and lots and streets laid out. These lots are *289 grouped in the lease into four parcels, A, B, C and D. Parcel D or lot 21, described in the quitclaim deed mentioned in the complaint, is a lot with a 50-foot frontage and a depth of 150 feet. Within the 400-foot radius mentioned in subdivision (2) of paragraph XII of the lease, there were, at the time of the filing of the complaint, numerous producing oil-wells operated by defendant General Petroleum Corporation, and producing oil at a profit.

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Bluebook (online)
16 P.2d 1035, 128 Cal. App. 284, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 213, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hill-v-general-petroleum-corp-calctapp-1932.