Jimmie Cook, a Single Woman v. El Paso Natural Gas Company, a Delaware Corporation, and Phillips Petroleum Company, a Delaware Corporation

560 F.2d 978, 58 Oil & Gas Rep. 206, 1977 U.S. App. LEXIS 12188
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedAugust 3, 1977
Docket76-1370
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 560 F.2d 978 (Jimmie Cook, a Single Woman v. El Paso Natural Gas Company, a Delaware Corporation, and Phillips Petroleum Company, a Delaware Corporation) 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
Jimmie Cook, a Single Woman v. El Paso Natural Gas Company, a Delaware Corporation, and Phillips Petroleum Company, a Delaware Corporation, 560 F.2d 978, 58 Oil & Gas Rep. 206, 1977 U.S. App. LEXIS 12188 (10th Cir. 1977).

Opinion

WILLIAM E. DOYLE, Circuit Judge.

In this action the question is whether the plaintiff, who owns a five percent overriding royalty interest in an oil and gas lease, is entitled to recover a compensatory royalty on the basis that the defendants who own a gas well which is located on an adjoining lease have drained gas from a lease under which plaintiff has the five percent overriding royalty interest.

The case was first filed in the State District Court for New Mexico, Eddy County. The defendants, El Paso Natural Gas Company and Phillips Petroleum Company, petitioned for removal to the United States District Court for the District of New Mexico, where the case was tried to the court on December 15,1975. Judgment was entered for plaintiff-appellee on February 25, 1976.

Mrs. Cook was the owner of a United States Oil and Gas Lease in which the legal description is the WVfe of Section 29, Township 23 South, Range 31 East, N.M.P.M., Eddy County, New Mexico. She assigned this lease to Phillips Petroleum Company on June 26,1964, reserving a five percent overriding royalty. In the lease there was a so-called potash stipulation which provided that no wells would be drilled for oil or gas at a location which, in the opinion of the Oil and Gas Supervisor of the Geological Survey, would result in undue waste of potash deposits or would constitute a hazard to or an undue interference with mining operations being conducted for the extraction of potash deposits.

On November 1,1971, Phillips assigned to El Paso an interest in the lease covering the description mentioned. On February 12, 1973, El Paso completed a well in the EV2 of Section 29. This was called the Mobil Federal Well No. 1. The proration unit assigned to the well by the New Mexico Oil Conservation Commission consisted of the E V2 of Section 29. El Paso sought to increase the proration unit to 640 acres which would have included both the West Half and East Half of the Section. This would have embraced the lease of plaintiff-appel-lee, Mrs. Cook (which lease was assigned, as noted above, to Phillips Petroleum Company).

On May 8, 1974, the United States Geological Survey determined that oil and gas drilling operations to a depth sufficient to test the so-called Morrow formation underlying the WV2 of Section 29 would result in undue waste of potash and would constitute a hazard to future potash mining. It entered an order prohibiting the drilling of an oil or gas well on the WV2 of Section 29.

At the conclusion of the trial both sides submitted proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law. The trial court ruling for plaintiff-appellee made findings of fact and conclusions of law in which it determined that: the Mobil Federal No. 1 Well was some 660 feet from the East line of the lease which plaintiff had owned covering the WV2 of Section 29; thereafter, production was commenced on the Mobil Federal Well on March 22,1973, and on May 8,1974, the United States Geological Survey (USGS) issued its prohibition against the drilling of a well on the WVfc of Section 29. The court also found that the Morrow gas pay zone reservoir for the Mobil Federal No. 1 Well extended into the WV2 of Section 29, whereby this underground area was contributing approximately 26% of the gas contained in the Morrow gas pay zone reservoir for the Mobil Federal No. 1 Well.

The court further found that the Mobil Federal No. 1 Well was draining gas in substantial quantities from the underground area beneath the WV2 of Section 29.

The court concluded that since the law implies a duty on an oil and gas lessee to protect the leased premises from offsetting adjoining land drainage of oil and gas, and since this is a covenant which runs with the land and the owner of an overriding royalty interest has standing to invoke the implied covenant to protect against drainage, and where a common lessee exists for two abutting oil and gas leases, the common lessee is *981 obligated to protect its lessor from oil and gas drainage from a well located in the other lease. This is not controlled or limited by the test as to whether a reasonable prudent operator would in the circumstances drill an offset well.

The court further concluded that the common lessee is under a duty to prevent drainage regardless of whether or not the drilling of an offset well on nonproducing land would satisfy the standards of the prudent operator rule.

A further conclusion of the trial court was that the defendants-appellants as common lessees under separate leases covering the EV2 and WVfc of Section 29 were under a duty to the plaintiff to protect her interest in the oil and gas under the WV2 of Section 29 against drainage from the defendants’ Mobil Federal No. 1 Well, located in the EV2 of Section 29.

The court’s next conclusion was that the plaintiff had not waived her rights to protection from drainage as a result of the existence of a potash stipulation nor by reason of the USGS prohibition against a well being drilled.

Nor did she waive or disclaim her rights by assigning her lease to Phillips Petroleum Company.

The terms of the lease do not circumscribe plaintiff’s right to be protected from drainage.

The payment of compensatory overriding royalty as an alternative to the drilling of an offset well where the interest owner is suffering losses as a result of drainage is appropriate.

The court finally concluded that as a result of the governmental prohibition, an offset well cannot be drilled upon the WV2 of Section 29. However, the alternative compensatory remedy is available to her and for that reason she is entitled to judgment.

The contentions of the defendants-appellants are:

First, that any right which plaintiff may have had to a compensatory royalty was nullified by the government prohibition issued by the Geological Survey.

Second, that the express drainage covenant in the plaintiff’s lease nullified any implied covenant to protect plaintiff’s leasehold from drainage.

Third, that appellants’ duty to protect the first lease from drainage resulting from the drilling of a well on the second is limited to the duty imposed upon a reasonably prudent operator.

Fourth, that El Paso and Phillips maintain that they have no duty to protect Mrs. Cook’s leasehold from drainage of oil and gas by the drilling of a well on an adjoining leasehold absent the lessor’s leasehold being capable of producing oil or gas in quantities sufficient to repay the appellants the cost of drilling, equipping and operating such a well at a reasonable profit.

Fifth, plaintiff is precluded, as an overriding royalty interest owner, from invoking the implied covenant to protect against drainage.

I.

The thrust of the first argument of the appellant companies is that the government prohibition against drilling in the WV2 of Section 29, the purpose of which was to protect potash deposits under that section, had the effect of excusing performance of any contractual duty including the implied covenant to protect appellee from drainage of the defendants-appellants, and that it was not limited to excusing the drilling of an offset well in the WV2 of Section 29.

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Bluebook (online)
560 F.2d 978, 58 Oil & Gas Rep. 206, 1977 U.S. App. LEXIS 12188, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jimmie-cook-a-single-woman-v-el-paso-natural-gas-company-a-delaware-ca10-1977.