John D. Fields v. Stanolind Oil and Gas Company and Ada Oil Company

233 F.2d 625
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJuly 3, 1956
Docket15813_1
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 233 F.2d 625 (John D. Fields v. Stanolind Oil and Gas Company and Ada Oil Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
John D. Fields v. Stanolind Oil and Gas Company and Ada Oil Company, 233 F.2d 625 (5th Cir. 1956).

Opinion

HUTCHESON, Chief Judge.

Brought by Stanolind Oil & Gas Company, as lessee, and Ada Oil Company, to whom it had assigned the E % of Section 51 under a farm out agreement, the suit was in equity to quiet, and remove cloud from, title to plaintiffs’ oil and gas leasehold estate in and to twenty-three sections of land located in Sutton County, Texas, and for injunction.

The claim was: that plaintiffs were the owners of an oil and gas lease on twenty-three sections of land in Sutton County, Texas, dated August 3, 1944, from John D. Fields, Substitute Trustee, to Stanolind Oil & Gas Company, clause two of which provided:

“Subject to the provisions herein contained 1 this lease is for a term *626 of ten years from this date, called primary term, and as long thereafter as oil, gas or other mineral is produced from said land hereunder, or drilling or reworking operations are conducted thereon.”;

that on July 26, 1954, while the lease was still in force and effect and within the original ten year period, Ada commenced the drilling of a well and prosecuted operations thereon continuously to and including November 24, 1954; that within less than sixty days thereafter, to-wit, on January 8, 1955, and in exact accordance with the terms of the lease, plaintiffs staked a location, made preparations for, and were proceeding with the immediate commencement of a second well to be drilled on the NW^ of Section 53, another of the sections covered by the lease, but that defendants, upon the unfounded claim that the lease had lapsed and terminated, threatened to interfere, and did interfere, with plaintiffs, hindering and preventing them from doing so, and thereby clouded plaintiffs’ title to and enjoyment of their mineral estate in the lands. Plaintiffs therefore prayed that they be quieted in their title to and the enjoyment of the rights granted in the lease, that the clouds be removed therefrom, and that defendants be enjoined from interfering with them in, and preventing their operations under, the lease.

The defenses were: (1) an attack, for the reasons set out in the answer, upon the appointment, the title and the authority of John D. Fields as trustee to execute the lease relied on by plaintiffs; (2) a denial of plaintiffs’ claim that the lease had been kept, and was still, in force; and (3) a claim that operations, on which plaintiffs were entitled to rely to keep the lease in force, ceased on November 1, 1954, and that when, on January 8, 1955 they undertook to start drilling another test well thereon, the lease had terminated, expired and ceased to exist.

Plaintiffs’ motion to strike defendant’s demand for a jury on the authority of Humble Oil & Refining Co. v. Sunray Oil Co., 5 Cir., 191 F.2d 705, denied, the case proceeded to trial before the court and a jury.

In support of their claim and in rebuttal of the claims of defendants, plaintiffs offered documentary and oral testimony to prove the facts as pleaded by them and that the defendants and their predecessors in title, by the acceptance of bonuses and delay rentals, had fully ratified, affirmed, and adopted the lease. Neither oral nor written testimony in contradiction thereof was offered by defendants, and at the conclusion of the trial, the only question of decision was whether the lease was kept in force by operations on the well conducted by plaintiffs after November 1, 1954, and the commencement on January 8, 1955, of operations for the drilling of a new well.

The record standing thus, and plaintiffs moving for an instructed verdict, with the defendants saying, “We think it is a.question of fact, and we have no motion”, the court, stating: “We find as facts, Gentlemen, that the motion of the plaintiffs for an instructed verdict is borne out by the preponderance of the testimony”, directed a verdict for plaintiffs and entered judgment 2 on the verdict.

Appealing from the judgment, the defendants, except the Hopkins group, conceding that the lease was ratified and was in force when the drilling of the first well began, are here insisting: (1) that, as matter of law, plaintiffs’ proof showed *627 the discontinuance of good faith drilling operations after November 1, 1954, and that the sixty days for the commencement of a new well expired on January 1, 1955, eight days before the second location was staked; and (2) that if this is not so, their proof did no more than make an issue of fact, and it was error to instruct a verdict and grant judgment thereon.

The Hopkins defendants make the same contentions and in addition insist that ratification by their predecessor in interest was not established.

Appellees, meeting the first two claims of error head on with the insistence that there was no evidence to support a contrary judgment and that if there was, the case was in equity and the district judge’s findings are in accord with the evidence, cite, as completely supporting the judgment of the trial court, cases from this court 3 and from the Texas courts. 4

As to the claim of the Hopkins group, that the lease was not ratified by them or their predecessor, appellees point to the undisputed testimony of Judge Alvis Johnson, 5 the husband of Thelma Fields, a sister of Eleanor Fields Hopkins, and to the fact that no proof to the contrary was offered by the defendants.

The record thus showing conclusively that there is no basis in fact or in law for the special contention of the Hopkins group, we turn from it to consider, in the light of defendants’ admissions, which have greatly narrowed and pointed up the issue, the contentions on which the appellants as a whole rely, (1) that the evidence showed as matter of law that the lease had lapsed, and (2) in the alternative, that the proof did no more than make an issue of fact upon whether it had.

Admitting that plaintiffs were in compliance with the terms of the lease and the lease was in force and effect on November 1, 1954, appellants’ sole contention is not that what Mr. Bruno testified, without dispute or contradiction, was done on and to the well on and after November 1st, was not done but that it was not, and could not, in law or in fact, be regarded as, additional operations within the meaning of the lease.

In support of this contention, appellants, contrasting what was done before with what was done after November 1st, points, to the testimony of the intensive drilling and working activities between July 26th and November 1st, during which time drilling costs of around $100,-000 were incurred, and, in marked contrast to these strenuous and exhaustive efforts to make a producer, to the testimony of Bruno as to what appellants call the superficial and flimsy acts and things done after November 1st. 6 So *628

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Bluebook (online)
233 F.2d 625, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/john-d-fields-v-stanolind-oil-and-gas-company-and-ada-oil-company-ca5-1956.