Hoffman v. Sohio Petroleum Co.

292 P.2d 1107, 179 Kan. 84, 5 Oil & Gas Rep. 979, 1956 Kan. LEXIS 349
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJanuary 28, 1956
Docket39,907
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 292 P.2d 1107 (Hoffman v. Sohio Petroleum Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hoffman v. Sohio Petroleum Co., 292 P.2d 1107, 179 Kan. 84, 5 Oil & Gas Rep. 979, 1956 Kan. LEXIS 349 (kan 1956).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Parker, J.:

In this action, under pleadings not in controversy but joining issue on all questions pertinent thereto; judgment was rendered adjudicating the past, present and future rights of the parties to the landowners’ royalty payable under the terms of a basic oil and gas lease covering two quarter sections of real estate, which had been sold in two separate tracts to different purchasers after the execution of such lease. Plaintiffs, the purchasers of one of such tracts, appeal from the judgment decreeing they have no right to share in royalty payable for oil produced from an oil well located on the other quarter section of land, to which they have no title in either surface or minerals in place.

Many parties and interests are involved in this case. Nevertheless, once the complicated facts on which the lower court based its decision are set forth at length, its decisive issues become comparatively simple. The facts, as well .as the reasons for its decision, were fully covered by the trial court in exhaustive findings of fact and conclusions of law. Indeed, since the findings are not attacked by *86 either party they must be regarded as controlling. For reasons just stated, and because we know of no better way to depict the factual picture in such manner as to avoid confusion respecting decision of the questions presented, such findings of fact and conclusions of law are appended to and made a part of this opinion.

Pertinent portions of the judgment, from which the defendants took no appeal, read:

“It is therefore by the court considered, ordered and adjudged that judgment be rendered herein upon the conclusions of fact and law filed herein by the court.
“It is further by the court considered, ordered and adjudged that the oil and gas mining lease covering North Half (N %) of Section Twelve (12), Township Seventeen (17), Range Nine (9), of Ellsworth County, Kansas, is valid, subsisting and in full force and effect as to all of the real estate or originally embraced therein, and the defendants Inez B. Janzen, Elda Carol Janzen Perkins, Edwin Janzen, Melvin R. Janzen and Thelbert Janzen are estopped from claiming that the oil and gas lease is invalid.
“It is further by the court considered, ordered and adjudged that the plaintiffs have no right, title to, or interest in the Northwest Quarter (NW K) of Section (12), Township Seventeen (17), Range Nine (9), in Ellsworth County, Kansas, and no right to any of the royalties paid from oil produced from a well or wells located thereon.
“It is further by tire court considered, ordered and adjudged that the whole land owner’s % royalty of oil produced from the Northwest Quarter (NWS) of Section Twelve (12), Township Seventeen (17), Range Nine (9), of Ells-worth County, Kansas is owned by the defendants Janzen in the proportions shown by the division orders signed by all such defendants and are entitled to the % royalty in all oil heretofore produced and all oil hereafter produced from said described real estate.”

At this point disposition of the appellate issues involved will be simplified by brief reference to the identity of the parties and their respective interests.

The plaintiffs, some of whom had earlier joined in the basic oil and gas lease covering the north half of section twelve, subsequently acquired title to the northeast quarter of such section, as the result of a partition action, under a sheriff’s deed reciting that tract of land was conveyed subject to such lease.

In the course of the same partition action, wherein judgment was rendered decreeing partition of the north half of section twelve and directing its sale in two separate tracts, subject to the basic oil and gas lease above mentioned, the defendant Inez B. Janzen bid in the northwest quarter of such section, subject to such lease. Thereafter she acquired title to such tract under a sheriff’s deed *87 reciting that it was conveyed subject to that lease. Subsequently, Mrs. Janzen, her husband joining, executed four separate conveyances of mineral interests in and to the northwest quarter, granting a one-eighth mineral interest to each of the defendants Elda Carol Janzen Perkins, Edwin Janzen, Melvin R. Janzen and Thelbert Janzen, each conveying instrument stating that the sale of the interest therein conveyed was made subject to the terms of such lease. Thus it appears the interests of these grantees are the same as those of their mother, Mrs. Janzen. For that reason, and for another to be presently disclosed, the defendants Janzen, including Elda Carol Janzen Perkins, will be hereinafter referred to in this opinion as the appellees.

Except for the individuals above mentioned the interests of all other persons named herein as defendants spring from the seven-eighths working interest granted to the original lessee by the terms of the basic oil and gas lease. Plaintiffs have not appealed from the portion of the judgment holding that instrument is valid, subsisting and in full force and effect as to all the real estate originally embraced therein. And, as we have heretofore indicated, none of the defendants have perfected appeals from the judgment. Therefore, except for Sohio Petroleum Co. Inc., which has impounded the royalty due to landowners under the terms of the lease and stands ready to pay the same to whomever may be entitled thereto, none of the defendants having rights in the seven-eighths working interest will be affected by this appeal.

Since they give rise to this controversy two other matters, even though the facts with respect thereto are to be found in the appendix, should be specifically noted.

The first is that the northwest quarter of section twelve, now owned by the appellees, and the northeast quarter of the same section, now owned by appellants, were each acquired by their present owners subject to a basic oil and gas lease, containing what is known to the oil industry as an entirety clause which, so far as here pertinent, reads:

“If the leased premises are now or hereafter owned in severalty or in separate tracts, the premises, nevertheless, may be developed and operated as an entirety, and the royalties shall be paid to each separate owner in the proportion that the acreage owned by him bears to the entire leased area. There shall be no obligation on the part of the lessee to offset wells on separate tracts into which the land covered by this lease may hereafter be divided by sale, devise, or otherwise, or to furnish separate measuring or receiving tanks for the oil produced from such separate tracts.”

*88 The second of such matters is that after appellants and appellees had acquired title to their respective tracts of real estate a producing oil well was brought in on the northwest quarter of section 12, whereupon appellants claimed that, under the existing facts and circumstances, they were entitled to the proportion of the landowners’ royalty that the acreage owned by them bore to the entire leased area, namely one-half, under and by virtue of the entirety clause of the basic lease.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
292 P.2d 1107, 179 Kan. 84, 5 Oil & Gas Rep. 979, 1956 Kan. LEXIS 349, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoffman-v-sohio-petroleum-co-kan-1956.