John H. Fetzer, Jr. And C. C. Robinson v. Bodcaw Company

601 F.2d 356, 63 Oil & Gas Rep. 475, 1979 U.S. App. LEXIS 13423
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedJuly 5, 1979
Docket79-1184
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 601 F.2d 356 (John H. Fetzer, Jr. And C. C. Robinson v. Bodcaw Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
John H. Fetzer, Jr. And C. C. Robinson v. Bodcaw Company, 601 F.2d 356, 63 Oil & Gas Rep. 475, 1979 U.S. App. LEXIS 13423 (8th Cir. 1979).

Opinion

HENLEY, Circuit Judge.

This case, with respect to which federal jurisdiction is founded on diversity of citi *357 zenship, involves the ownership, including the ownership of underlying minerals such as oil and gas, of a one hundred foot strip of land running through the West Half of the Northeast Quarter of Section 26, Township 19 South, Range 23 West in Columbia County, Arkansas, and containing slightly over six acres of land. The strip is part of the existing main line of the Louisiana & Arkansas Railway Company, which operates a railroad in South Arkansas and North Louisiana, and which is the corporate successor of the Louisiana & Arkansas Railroad Company which was formed in 1898.

The area in controversy is now claimed by the Railway Company on the one hand, and by Bodcaw Company (Bodcaw) on the other hand. Bodcaw is the remote corporate successor of the old Bodcaw Lumber Company (Lumber Co.) that operated in a number of South Arkansas counties, including Columbia, and in a number of North Louisiana parishes, in the latter part of the Nineteenth Century and perhaps into the relatively early years of the present century-

From time to time the Railway Company has executed oil and gas mining leases covering lands included in its right of way. The plaintiffs in this case, John H. Fetzer, Jr. and C. C. Robinson, own a working interest in an oil and gas lease executed a number of years ago by the Railway Co. 1 The lease covers the lands here involved, at times referred to as the “Section 26 lands,” as well as other lands that are no longer involved in the litigation.

These “Section 26 lands” along with a number of other tracts of land have been combined into a single unit for the purpose of oil and gas development, and the oil well or wells located on the unit are managed by Bodcaw as the unit operator. Working interests in leases covering the lands lying in the unitized tracts are of varying proportions, and the majority of those interests appear to be owned by Bodcaw. Under the unitized operation Bodcaw bills other lessees for their proportionate parts of development and operational costs. The oil produced from the unit appears to have been purchased from Bodcaw by Cities Service Oil Company and to have been run through the pipeline operated by Louisiana-Nevada Transit Company. 2

The controversy between the plaintiffs and Bodcaw did not arise before 1973. Pri- or to that year and during the development stage of the unit Bodcaw did not question the Railway Company’s ownership of the minerals underlying its right of way in Section 26 or its right to execute leases involving underlying oil and gas. 3 And, indeed, the record indicates that Bodcaw billed the plaintiffs regularly for their share of development costs, and that plaintiffs paid the bills.

However, in 1973 Bodcaw took the position that it owned the minerals underlying the right of way of the Railway Company, and that leases executed by the Railway Company were invalid. When Bodcaw took that position, Cities Service Oil Company, that has been mentioned, promptly placed questioned proceeds from sales of oil produced from the unit into what is known as a “suspense account,” as a result of which *358 plaintiffs as lessees of the Railway Company have not been paid for any oil produced from the unit since the controversy between them and Bodcaw arose.

Plaintiffs commenced this suit for an accounting in the district court in October, 1973, and the case fell to then Chief (now Senior) District Judge Oren Harris. Numerous additional parties, including Bod-caw, came into the case. The case was ultimately submitted to Judge Harris on a voluminous record. He was called upon to construe two deeds executed, respectively, in 1898 and 1899, and he ruled in favor of the plaintiffs and against Bodcaw. 4 Bod-caw appealed and we reversed, not because of ultimate disagreement with Judge Harris’ finding on the merits but because the court felt that the district judge had indulged an impermissible assumption as to the chronology of the two deeds that we just mentioned. Fetzer v. Cities Service Oil Co., 572 F.2d 1250 (8th Cir. 1978). We remanded the case for further consideration.

As a result of that further consideration, the trial judge filed a second full but unpublished opinion in which he adhered to his original view that plaintiffs were entitled to prevail. Again, Bodcaw has appealed.

The rights of the parties are governed by Arkansas law, and the deeds involved in the case are to be construed by reference to the Arkansas law of conveyancing.

Both sides deraign title from a common source, namely the old Bodcaw Lumber Co. that has been identified. In the 1890’s the Lumber Co. was engaged extensively in the cutting and milling of timber, principally pine, in South Arkansas, including Columbia County, and in North Louisiana.

The controlling stockholders of the Lumber Co. were the Buchanan brothers, William and James A. William Buchanan was President of the corporation and James A. Buchanan was the corporate Secretary. The Lumber Co. has not been an operating company for many years, and the Buchanan brothers have long since died.

In 1898 and prior thereto the Lumber Co. operated its own line of railroad on its own lands. The Section 26 lands involved here were acquired by the Lumber Co. in 1895. In connection with the railroad the company owned not only the land on which the tracks of the road were laid but also rolling stock, rails, cross ties and other railroad equipment. The northern terminus of the company line was the small town of Stamps in Lafayette County, Arkansas where the line connected with the main line of the St. Louis, Southwestern (Cotton Belt) Railway Company. The company line extended south and east from Stamps into northern Louisiana. It was still being extended southward in 1898.

In that year the Buchanans formed the original Louisiana & Arkansas Railroad Company, which we will call the “Railroad Co.,” that was ultimately succeeded by the present Louisiana & Arkansas Railway Company, plaintiffs’ lessor, which we have referred to as the “Railway Co.”

On April 1,1898 the Lumber Co. executed in favor of the Railroad Co. one of the two deeds that are the bones of contention here. We set out the instrument in full:

DEED
KNOW ALL MEN BY THESE PRESENTS: That the Bodcaw Lumber Company, a corporation duly organized and incorporated under and by virtue of the laws of the State of Arkansas, by its President, William Buchanan, who is duly authorized to act herein, for and in consideration of the sum of Two Hundred Thousand Dollars ($200,000.00), One Hundred and Fifty Thousand Dollars ($150,-000.00) of which has been paid in cash, and balance of Fifty Thousand Dollars ($50,000.00) in note of even date herewith, executed by the Louisiana & Arkansas Railroad, the receipt of which is hereby acknowledged, has this day sold, transferred and delivered and by these

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Bluebook (online)
601 F.2d 356, 63 Oil & Gas Rep. 475, 1979 U.S. App. LEXIS 13423, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/john-h-fetzer-jr-and-c-c-robinson-v-bodcaw-company-ca8-1979.