Kyle v. Wadley

24 F. Supp. 884, 1938 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1795
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Louisiana
DecidedAugust 2, 1938
Docket753
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 24 F. Supp. 884 (Kyle v. Wadley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kyle v. Wadley, 24 F. Supp. 884, 1938 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1795 (W.D. La. 1938).

Opinion

DAWKINS, District Judge.

Plaintiffs, as present title holders to certain lands in Red River Parish, brought this suit to cancel leases thereon executed in 1914 and 1915, by the former owners. It is charged, first, that there has not been reasonable development by the several lessees ; second, the lands have not been protected from drainage by wells on adjoining properties; and third, the lessees have ceased to produce. oil and gas in paying quantities.

Defendants have met the charge with the contention (not alleged in the answer) that the demand is premature, because there was no putting in default by request for further development, by estoppel, m that plaintiffs have continued to accept royalties from production, and on the merits it is averred that the property has been fully developed.

The original bill involved the lease upon a single large tract of 1200 acres, but by amendment two additional leases upon smaller parcels, aggregating approximately another 100 acres, .were added. However, in defendants’ brief it is conceded that the rights of the lessees upon the two smaller tracts have been lost by abandonment and cancellation thereof is not contested.

Prior to the execution of the three leases in 1914 and 1915 to the Atlas Oil Company, all the properties were owned by Honoré and Potter Palmer, Jr. All three were, through mesne conveyances transferred to the Standard Oil Company of Louisiana, which over a period of years, drilled approximately forty wells on the property, twenty-six of which were on the larger or 1200 acre tract in controversy here, and of which one was a shallow gas well. This company produced more than a million dollars worth of oil from the leases with corresponding benefits to the lessors.

On August 14, 1931, the Standard Oil Company of Louisiana assigned all three leases to Cecil M. Brickell, including all equipment, machinery, buildings, etc. thereon, except “warehouse stock”, for the price of $5,000, absolving itself from all warranty, even as to the return of the purchase price. Brickell drilled one more well on the large tract, and on May 21, 1935, assigned the lease to J. K. Wadley and wife, defendants in the present suit, for the sum of $12,500, cash.

On January 1, 1918, T. J. Crichton and Will D. Mercer acquired the fee to these lands for the price of $35,000, and on January 21, 1931, Mercer sold his half interest to Crichton. Crichton died on the - day of-, 1929, leaving a widow, since married to Fred L. Kyle, and minor children, who are the plaintiffs in this suit.

The two small leases contained express provisions that reasonable development meant a well to each ten acres, but the one covering the larger tract involved here, provided : “After oil shall have been discovered', in the event of the discovery of oil on said lands, the lessee shall so conduct the operation of drilling wells on said land as to reasonably develop the same without unreasonable delay between the cessation or *886 abandonment of work on one well and the beginning of work on another.”

A map of the area made by the Standard Oil Company and offered in evidence by the plaintiffs, shows that all of the wells on the larger tract, with four exceptions, were drilled along the edges as off-sets to those on other properties. All of these were producers, except two, and were located along the eastern, southern, and western boundaries, with one in the central northern edge. The two dry holes were located respectively (No. 34) in the northwestern corner of the tract in controversy in Section 16, apparently as an off-set to a producer on the Christopher property in the same section on the west; and the other (No. 28) was slightly east of the center of the tract in the northeast 'quarter of Section 18. The four which were interior wells, were respectively 26, 27, 28 (the dry hole), and 29, all in the north half of Section 18. Producers were drilled surrounding this dry hole, on the north-east (No, 13), on the south-east (No. 26), on the south-west (No. 27), and on the north-west (No. 29). All of these except No. 13 were interior wells as distinguished from edge or boundary production. There was no interior drilling in Section 17, which contained approximately 420 acres or a little more than one-third of the whole tract although production was had in every instance along the borders, as well as in the small strip extending into the north-west corner of Section 16, except in the one case (No. 34), which was an off-set to a producer (No. 15) on the Christopher tract above mentioned. Out of the entire tract, the . north half of section 18 alone, consisting of some 320 acres, appears to have had development approximating, anything like that on the adjoining properties to the south and south-east.

Dry holes were drilled a short distance from the north-east corner of the tract (in section 9), another directly north and some three-fourths of a mile distant, in Section 8, and a third on the east in section 12, about one-fourth a mile from the boundary of the large tract. However, wells immediately east and south of this last dry hole, on one of the smaller tracts, were producers.

Wells drilled by the Gulf Refining Company (Nos. 13, 16, 17 and 18), on the Christopher tract immediately east, were never off-set although they produced substantial amounts of oil for many years., Well No. 20, in the south-west corner of the south-east quarter of Section 17, had an initial production of 226 barrels, but no further efforts were made north of it. It is true that there were no wells on the adjoining tract at this point closer than one-fourth of a mile, except in the northwest corner of the north-east quarter of southwest quarter of section 17, and this was offset (No. 7) by the lessees here. The three edge wells (4, 5 and 6) in the north-east quarter of Section 18, produced initially 1600, 203 and 300 barrels of oil, respectively, while, as heretofore pointed out, No. 28, in the north half of this quarter section was dry.

There is, of course, dispute between the witnesses on each side as to what, in their opinion, was reasonable development under the circumstances of this particular case. At least one of considerable experience in the field, gave it as his opinion that there should have been one well to each ten acres, as provided in the smaller leases; while a witness for the defendant thought that the wells actually drilled were all that were justified at the time. There was little chance for drainage of the interior where the lessees promptly off-set the wells of others near the borders of the tract, but which was not done in at least the four instances mentioned. The lessees, in the absence of reasonably clear circumstances, requiring a different course, were entitled to judge of the necessity for other wells. However, the main object of the lease was to produce, for the joint benefit of the lessor and lessee, all the oil that could be had, and the latter was required to drill as many wells for this purpose as appeared reasonably necessary, so long as it could be done without expending a greater sum than might be realized from the oil so produced. 40 C.J. 1065; Hutchinson v. Atlas Oil Co., 148 La. 540, 87 So. 265. It may have been considered by the Standard Oil Company, which drilled most of the wells, that there could be recovered from the property all of the available oil through the wells which were actually drilled.

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Related

Massie v. Inexco Oil Co.
614 F. Supp. 880 (W.D. Louisiana, 1985)
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82 So. 2d 1 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1955)

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Bluebook (online)
24 F. Supp. 884, 1938 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1795, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kyle-v-wadley-lawd-1938.