Hulda Elizabeth Evensen, and Edward Colton Evensen v. Pubco Petroleum Corporation, Formerly Pubco Development, Inc.

274 F.2d 866, 14 Oil & Gas Rep. 1021, 1960 U.S. App. LEXIS 5676
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 8, 1960
Docket6143_1
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 274 F.2d 866 (Hulda Elizabeth Evensen, and Edward Colton Evensen v. Pubco Petroleum Corporation, Formerly Pubco Development, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hulda Elizabeth Evensen, and Edward Colton Evensen v. Pubco Petroleum Corporation, Formerly Pubco Development, Inc., 274 F.2d 866, 14 Oil & Gas Rep. 1021, 1960 U.S. App. LEXIS 5676 (10th Cir. 1960).

Opinion

CHRISTENSON, District Judge.

Interpretation of a written contract of the parties relating to their respective interests in certain State of New Mexico oil and gas leases is involved in this case, which is jurisdictionally founded upon the diversity of their citizenship and the requisite amount in controversy. The trial court resolved the dispute by con *868 struing the contract favorably to the appellee’s contention.

Appellants assert here that the trial court erred in the following particulars: In determining that they were entitled to only a Me working interest in a certain gas well which had been drilled by appellee on leased land pursuant to the parties’ agreement; in receiving and giving effect to evidence extrinsic to the written contract to vary its unambiguous terms; in finding its meaning contrary to the clear weight of all the evidence even though the extrinsic evidence were to be considered; in denying appellants the right to an assignment of, and the proceeds from, a full Vie working interest in the well, and in terminating on a date prior to judgment the running of interest on such proceeds by reason of a tender asserted to be insufficient.

Appellants Huida Elizabeth Evensen and Edward Colton Evensen, her son, who were plaintiffs below and who hereinafter will be referred to as the “Even-sens,” owned in joint tenancy three State of New Mexico oil and gas leases covering four 40-acre tracts in Section 36, Township 32 North, Range 11 West, N. M.P.M. These leases were assignable (except in undivided interests) but were subject to the requirement that any well drilled to the “Mesaverde” formation be Iocated on a half-section drilling tract, The Evensens, in April, 1952, assigned their leases to Pubco Petroleum Corporation, hereinafter referred to as “Pub-co” and simultaneously as a part of the same transaction executed with Pubco a written contract the terms of which have given rise to the present controversy.

This contract provided in substance that contingent upon the consent of certain other owners of oil and gas leases covering land in Section 36, Pubco would drill a well thereon to the Mesaverde formation and if it failed to do so within a stipulated time, would pay to Evensens a compensatory royalty of $21.25 per month. Provision was made for payment to Evensens of an overriding royalty of 1% of the value of any oil or gas produeed from such well allocable to the acreage covered by the leases assigned by the Evensens to Pubco until such time as Pubco should recover from the production of the well 150% of its share of the drilling costs, limited in advance for the purpose to $80,000.

Paragraphs 4 and 5 of the contract deal with the rights of the parties in the event of, and following, the recovery by Pubco of 150% of its drilling costs. The exact location of the contemplated well within Section 36 was not known at the time the contract was executed; hence, the relationship between the acreage in a half-section unit and the acreage Even-sens might have in the particular half-section on which the well would be drilled was no^ known. The provisions of paragraphs 4 and 5 therefore were made to depend flexibly upon which half of See tion 36 the well actually would be drilled, in view of the requirement that the drill-bag tract be at least a half-section, and in view of the prospective communitization of the area. 1 As it turned out, the well was drilled in the west half of Section 36. Eliminating for clarity certain alternate provisions rendered inapplicable by the actual location and financing of the .well, paragraphs 4 and 5 of the agreement read:

“4. * * * After Pubco has recovered ***(*** 150% of $80,000 in the event others shall not make contributions toward such well,) and the acreage assigned to such well shall be the N 1/2 or the W 1/2 of Section 36, Township 32 North, Range 11 West, N.M.P.M., Pubco shall be obliged to reassign to Evensens any and all interest Pubco received from Evensens under the Assignment of April —, 1952, on the *869 NE % of the NW % of Section 36
“5. In addition and simultaneous with the above and foregoing * -x- * jn tjjg event a producing well shall be drilled by Pubco and the acreage allotted to such well shall be the W 1% of the section aforesaid, Pubco, after recovering 150% of its cost, as aforesaid, shall be obliged to assign to the Evensens Mi of %, (or Mo) full participating and/or working interest in the well. * * * ”

At the trial, over Evensens’ objection that the contract was plain on its face and that the admission of evidence concerning the transactions leading up to its execution violated the parol evidence rule, the trial court received oral and documentary evidence concerning such negotiations, and the conversations and understanding of the participants culminating in the written agreement.

In line with its tentative oral decision following the trial, the lower court in due course entered written findings of fact to the effect that the agreement in question was executed by the parties as a written memorial of a prior agreement, partly oral and partly written, providing in substance that after Pubco had recovered 150% of its proportionate part of the costs of drilling each well which might be drilled on the acreage which was the subject thereof, the Evensens were thereupon to receive a fraction of the working interest in the applicable comrnunitized area proportionate to one-half of the acreage assigned by Evensens to Pubco which was committed to the comrnunitized unit in question. The trial court further found that “Insofar as the intention of the parties is material herein,” the parties did not intend their oral agreement to be altered by the written contract, despite the fact that the mechanics of the contract involved an assignment of 100% of plaintiffs’ acreage, which was to be followed by communitization, and subsequent reassignment of record title and the non-communitized interests in specific 40-acre tracts, rather than by the initial assignment by the Evensens of an undivided 50% interest in all leasehold interests owned by them in Section 36. The court concluded that the April, 1952 agreement was not ambiguous and that

“ * * * there is no need for the Court to consider or give any weight to parol evidence in determining its meaning, and the Court does not do so. There is no conflict between Paragraphs 4 and 5 of the contract, but, if there is, Paragraph 5 is specific and express with reference to the parties’ agreement as to the working interests, and overrules and controls Paragraph 4. * * * ”

The lower court’s judgment, accordingly, recognized a working interest in favor of the Evensens in and to the well in question only to the extent of Ms, and held that the reassignment to Evensens of the lease covering the NE % of the NW 14 of Section 36, Township 32 North, Range 11 West, N.M.P.M., San Juan County, New Mexico, would not vest in Evensens any additional working interest in, or to the proceeds from the sale of, the Mesaverde formation gas well.

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Bluebook (online)
274 F.2d 866, 14 Oil & Gas Rep. 1021, 1960 U.S. App. LEXIS 5676, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hulda-elizabeth-evensen-and-edward-colton-evensen-v-pubco-petroleum-ca10-1960.