Kerr v. Hillenberg

1962 OK 160, 373 P.2d 66, 17 Oil & Gas Rep. 167, 1962 Okla. LEXIS 431
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 26, 1962
Docket39598
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 1962 OK 160 (Kerr v. Hillenberg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kerr v. Hillenberg, 1962 OK 160, 373 P.2d 66, 17 Oil & Gas Rep. 167, 1962 Okla. LEXIS 431 (Okla. 1962).

Opinion

JACKSON, Justice.

On December 10, 1959, plaintiff Sallie Kerr filed a quiet title suit in which the principal relief demanded consisted of the cancellation of oil and gas leases on 200 acres of land in Okmulgee County, Oklahoma. Mrs. Kerr alleged that she owned the surface and an undivided one-half interest in the minerals. Defendants were claimants of the leasehold and the owners of some of the royalty interest.

The 200 acres concerned constituted a portion of 280 acres of land covered by three oil and gas leases executed in November, 1912. Oil was discovered during the primary terms of the leases, and they had been jointly operated for many years prior to the filing of this action, to the extent that fuel from- one lease was used in the operation of all three. Plaintiff Kerr acquired her title to the premises about 1946; defendant Aphia French Lyons acquired title to the leasehold in 1930.

Late in 1958 plaintiff Kerr took the position that the leases had expired because of non-production, and on September 18, 1959, she executed an oil and gas lease covering her portion of the premises to J. L. Stratton. Stratton did not record his lease until November 9, 1959, on which day Mrs. Lyons assigned her leasehold estate in the premises to defendant Harold Hillenberg, reserving an over-riding royalty interest.

The contest, therefore, is between Mrs. Kerr and Mr. Stratton, on the one hand, who contend that the 1912 leases had expired because of non-production, and Mrs. Lyons and Mr. Hillenberg, as defendants, who contend that the 1912 leases had not expired.

The trial court found generally in favor of Mrs. Lyons and Mr. Hillenberg, and quieted Hillenberg’s title in the leasehold estate (under the 1912 leases) pursuant to his cross petition.

From the judgment, Mrs. Kerr, plaintiff below, has appealed, and Mr. Stratton, a defendant below, has cross-appealed. Since their interests are the same, we will refer to them hereinafter as plaintiffs or by name, and we will refer to Mrs. Lyons and Mr. Hillenberg as defendants or by name.

Plaintiffs’ first proposition is that the 1912 leases had expired of their own terms because of non-production.

In support of their argument under this proposition, plaintiffs rely heavily upon a letter from the oil purchasers showing the net production of the leases concerned from November, 1956, through 1958, together with the testimony of a former pumper for Mrs. Lyons. Using this evidence, plaintiffs-seek to demonstrate mathematically that the leases were actually operated at a loss to lessee during those years, as was done in Gypsy Oil Co. v. Marsh, 121 Okl. 135, 248 P. 329, 48 A.L.R. 876.

In Henry v. Clay, Okl., 274 P.2d 545, this court held in the syllabus:

“The term ‘paying quantities’, as used in an oil and gas lease, means paying quantities to the lessee. If the well pays a profit, no matter how small, oyer operating expenses, it produces in paying quantities, though it may never repay its cost and the operation as a whole may prove unprofitable.”

*69 While production was admittedly small during the years in question, plaintiffs failed to prove that production was not “in paying quantities”, for the following reason. The major item of expense used by plaintiffs in their mathematical computations was the salary of the pumper, which they set at $175.00 per month for the entire period. In this connection, there was evidence that Mrs. Lyons hired a pumper on September 15, 1958, and that he worked at that salary until February, 1959. However, there is no evidence whatsoever as to the salary of pumpers who worked the leases prior to September, 1958. Plaintiffs therefore failed to prove that the leases were being operated at a loss, and the trial court’s finding in this regard is not against the clear weight of the evidence.

It thus appears that if plaintiffs were entitled to prevail, it was upon the theory that the leases expired because of the cessation of actual production late in 1958, and not because of lack of production “in paying quantities” before that time. We therefore examine the record to determine the circumstances surrounding the actual cessation of production.

Under substantially uncontradicted evidence in the record, actual production ceased on leases 1 and 3 on December 15, 1958, when the “head was cracked” on the old Superior engine which was the common source of power for both leases, and on lease number 2 on February 16, 1959, when the stock of fuel, which had been supplied to its power source from lease number 1, became exhausted. Plaintiff Kerr admitted in effect that she never considered the leases at an end until production stopped in December, 1958. There was substantial evidence from defendant Lyons, corroborated by other witnesses, as to persistent efforts to obtain replacement parts for the engine in order to start the operation of the leases again.

Soon after production ceased, Mrs. Kerr began to deny the validity of the leases. She admitted that she talked to “a dozen people” about it. In April, 1959, Mrs. Lyons entered into a tentative agreement with the Webco Drilling Company for a water flood operation; on May 1, 1959, Mr. Webb, for Webco, wrote Mrs. Lyons that “After talking with some of the landowners and having your lease checked, I find that there are so many complications involving the legal angle that I do not believe I had better take this deal up”. It is not denied that plaintiff Kerr was one of the landowners with whom Mr; Webb talked, and that she told him the Lyons leases had expired. A few days later Mrs. Lyons began negotiations with Gulf Oil Corporation and on May 22, 1959, Gulf made a substantial offer for the leasehold and the equipment thereon, with Mrs. Lyons to retain an over-riding royalty interest. The offer was later withdrawn because of Mrs. Lyons’ doubtful title. Plaintiff Kerr admitted that when she talked with the Gulf representative, she told him that Mrs. Lyons did not have a lease. She also testified that she continued to receive gas for domestic use from the leases until May, 1960, several months after this action was filed. All of the above evidence is substantially uncontradicted.

Under the clear weight of the evidence in this case, the cessation of production was due solely to the mechanical breakdown of the engine which was the power source, and Mrs. Lyons made persistent and good faith efforts to get it repaired so that operation and production could be resumed. Under these circumstances, the life of the lease was extended by the following rule:

“Where there is a temporary cessation of production * * *, after the expiration of the primary term of the lease which was to continue for a fixed term and as long thereafter as oil or gas or either of them was produced from said land, the lease continues in force unless the period of cessation, viewed in the light of all the circumstances, is for an unreasonable length of time.” Cotner v. Warren, Okl., 330 P.2d 217.

*70 , Therefore, the leases involved continued •in force for a reasonable length of time. In Cotner v. Warren, supra, this court held lin effect that five or six months was not an unreasonable length of time under the circumstances shown to exist.

Plaintiffs argue, however, in effect that Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
1962 OK 160, 373 P.2d 66, 17 Oil & Gas Rep. 167, 1962 Okla. LEXIS 431, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kerr-v-hillenberg-okla-1962.