Jackson v. Gulf Refining Co.

10 So. 2d 593, 201 La. 721, 1942 La. LEXIS 1294
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJuly 20, 1942
DocketNo. 36484.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 10 So. 2d 593 (Jackson v. Gulf Refining Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jackson v. Gulf Refining Co., 10 So. 2d 593, 201 La. 721, 1942 La. LEXIS 1294 (La. 1942).

Opinion

O’NIELL, Chief Justice.

This case is a sequel of the case of Jackson et al. v. United Gas Public Service Company et al., 196 La. 1, 198 So. 633. In that case the plaintiffs, who were the •heirs of Gus Gibson, sued N. S. and W. R. Spearman for a fourth interest in a tract of land having an area of 169% acres, claimed and possessed by the Spearmans, in the Parish of Caddo. The plaintiffs claimed, alternatively, that, if they were not entitled to a fourth interest in the land, they were entitled to a twentieth interest in it. The Union Producing Company held a lease on the land, as successor to the original lessee, United Gas Public Service Company, to whom the Spearmans had granted the lease. The North Central Texas Oil Company held a deed from the Spearmans for %2 interest in the mineral rights, and the Southland Royalty Company held a deed for 2%39 interest in the mineral rights in the land. The mineral rights of both parties were subject to the lease which was granted by the Spearmans to the United Gas Public Service Company and afterwards transferred to the Union Producing Company. A corporation called Wright Brothers Company held a deed from the Spearmans for a part of the timber on the land.

The plaintiffs’ ancestor, Gus Gibson, was recognized as owner of a fourth interest in the land, in the Succession of Tyson, 186 La. 516, 172 So. 772. After the suit of Jackson et al. v. United Gas Public Service Co. et al. was disposed of, one of the heirs of Gus Gibson, who was also one of the plaintiffs in the suit, died and 'his interest was inherited by the remaining heirs of Gus Gibson, who are the plaintiffs in the present suit. The plaintiffs in this suit therefore are, virtually, the same parties who were the plaintiffs in the suit of Jackson et al. v. United Gas Public Service Co. et al. In that case the plaintiffs *725 sued all of the parties having an interest in the land, namely, N. S. and W. R. Spear-man, who possessed the land as owners, and the United Gas Public Service Company and the Union Producing Company, lessees, and the Southland Royalty Company and the North Central Texas Oil Company, part owners of the mineral rights, and Wright Brothers Company, owners of part of the timber on the land. The plaintiffs had made a sale of their interest in the 169% acres of land to the Spearmans, calling their interest a fifth interest, when in fact it was a fourth interest. They claimed in their first suit that the sale was null for certain reasons, set forth in their petition, and, in the alternative, they claimed that if the sale was valid it conveyed only a fifth interest in the land and therefore left them the difference between a fourth and a fifth interest, or %o interest in the land. They prayed for a judgment recognizing them to be the owners of a fourth interest in the land, or, in the alternative, recognizing them to be the owners of a twentieth interest in the land. They prayed also that the United Gas Public Service Company and the Union Producing Company should be ordered to render an accounting of the oil and gas which they had taken from the land, as lessees, and that they should be ordered to pay to the plaintiffs a fourth, — or, alternatively, a twentieth,— of the net value of the oil and gas taken from the land. The judge of the district court gave. judgment rejecting the plaintiffs’ principal demand, for a fourth interest, but granting their alternative demand for a twentieth interest, in the land. The judgment was declared to be against all of the defendants, naming them. In the judgment, the United Gas Public Service Company and the Union Producing Company were ordered to render an accounting of the oil and gas which they had produced from the land as lessees, and were ordered to pay to the plaintiffs %o of the net value of the oil and gas which they had produced, less %o of the cost of production. The plaintiffs, complaining of being recognized as owners of only a twentieth instead of a fourth interest in the property, appealed to this court. All of the defendants, except the North Central Texas Oil Company and the Southland Royalty Company, and Wright Brothers Company, also appealed. On the original hearing in this court the judgment of the district court was affirmed, but, on rehearing, a plea of estoppel which the defendants had filed in the district court was sustained, ■ and the plaintiffs’ suit was dismissed. The plea of estoppel was founded upon the fact that, in the sale made by the plaintiffs to the Spearmans, although the interest which the plaintiffs sold was declared to be a fifth interest, it was at the same time represented to be all of the interest which the plaintiffs owned; hence this court held that the sale by the plaintiffs to the Spearmans conveyed all of the plaintiffs’ fourth interest in .the property.

Before the plaintiffs filed their first suit, entitled Jackson et al. v. United Gas Public Service Company et al., they transferred to their attorney, for his fee, a half *727 interest in their claim. Hence he was one of the plaintiffs in that suit and is one of the plaintiffs also in this suit.

The plaintiffs are claiming in this suit Vzo of the value of the oil and gas produced from the land by the United Gas Public Service Company and the Union Producing Company as lessees. The plaintiffs aver that Vzo of the net value of the oil and gas produced -amounts to $60,000, and that the United Gas Public Service Company and the Union Producing Company, as lessees, and the Gulf Refining Company, having received a part of the -oil from the -lessees, and -the North Central Texas Oil Company and the Southland Royalty Company as owners of part of the mineral rights, are indebted in solido unto the plaintiffs for the $60,000, or for whatever sum may be shown to be the net value of Vzo of the oil and gas -produced from the land. The plaintiffs prayed for a judgment against the defendants, accordingly. They prayed also for an injunction to restrain the Union Producing Company from operating the oil wells on the land, or from removing the derricks or other drilling equipment, without first obtaining permission from the plaintiffs, so far as Vzo interest in the oil, gas and other minerals and the mineral rights are concerned. Each of the defendants filed a plea of res judicata and an exception of no cause or right of action.' The judge of the district court gave judgment for the defendants, maintaining their pleas of res judicata and their exceptions of no -cause or right of action, and rejecting the demands of the plaintiffs at their cost. They are appealing from the decision.

The theory on which the plaintiffs now claim Vzo, or S per cent, of the minerals or mineral rights in the 169% acres -of land is that the North Central Texas Oil Company and the Southland Royalty Company owned together more than Vzo of the minerals or mineral rights in the land, and therefore -these defendants, by failing to appeal from the judgment of the district court declaring -the plaintiffs to be the owners of Vzo of the land without any exception of the minerals or mineral rights in -the land, lost a sufficiént part of their mineral rights to constitute Vzo of all of the mineral rights in the land, — and the plaintiffs thereby acquired the V20 of the mineral rights in the land,— notwithstanding the judgment was reversed by this court so far as the other defendants were concerned.

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Bluebook (online)
10 So. 2d 593, 201 La. 721, 1942 La. LEXIS 1294, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jackson-v-gulf-refining-co-la-1942.