Lab Oil Company v. Bentz

380 S.W.2d 846, 20 Oil & Gas Rep. 870, 1964 Tex. App. LEXIS 2663
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 25, 1964
Docket14
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 380 S.W.2d 846 (Lab Oil Company v. Bentz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lab Oil Company v. Bentz, 380 S.W.2d 846, 20 Oil & Gas Rep. 870, 1964 Tex. App. LEXIS 2663 (Tex. Ct. App. 1964).

Opinion

NYE, Justice.

This suit was one brought by the ap-pellees Ella L. Bentz, a widow, Francis L. Bentz and wife Faye Bentz, and Charles N. Bentz and wife Estelline Bentz, called hereinafter Bentz, seeking the cancellation and termination of an oil, gas and mineral lease and praying for removal of the cloud from the appellees’ title to the land by virtue of such lease, on the theory that after the expiration of the primary term, the lease terminated due to cessation of production or efforts to obtain production. The appellants, M. Liedeker, Sr., Paul A. Alford and Fred Bowman, individually and as partners, d/b/a Lab Oil Company, called hereinafter Lab, contend that this is a particularly drawn lease and that the word “operations” as used in the habendum clause of the lease was intended to cover activities of operating the lease and not development operations, and that such activities prevented such lease from terminating.

The lease in question covered two non-contiguous tracts of land in San Patricio County, about one mile west of Sinton, *847 Texas, one of approximately 11.75 acres and another of 68.25 acres. Bentz, on April 5, 1960, executed the subject oil, gas and mineral lease to Joe W. Thomas, one of the defendants and appellants herein, who thereafter assigned the lease to Lab, retaining an overriding royalty interest, one half of which Thomas assigned to A. Loy Sims.

Shortly after Lab received the assignment of the above lease, they commenced reworking three wells on the leased premises, one on the 68.25 acre-tract and two on the 11.75 acre-tract. Two wells were abandoned as dry holes. The other well, on the 11.75 acre-tract, was completed as a gas well in July or August of 1960 and was immediately connected to a gas purchaser’s line, and gas was sold to the purchaser. No oil was ever produced from the lease and this gas well was the only well on the lease that marketed any production. After Lab completed the reworking of this well and the laying of the pipeline to the purchaser, no other drilling or reworking on any well on any of the leased property was performed by Lab, nor did they engage in building lines or otherwise improving or repairing the leasehold or the equipment located on the lease.

Small quantities of gas were sold on a consistently decreasing basis from August, 1960, until February, 1961. For instance, the total revenue from %ths production in August, 1960, was $79.17, decreasing some each month until only $5.52 was received from production in February, 1961. During the next eight months no gas was sold and no shut-in gas payments were paid to Bentz.

On or about October 10, 1961, more than seven months after Lab stopped selling gas, Bentz executed and delivered another oil and gas lease on a portion of the same land to Charles F. Haas and Richard E. Haas, d/b/a Haas Brothers, and Charles F. Brocate and Donald Sharp, all inter-venors in the suit below and appellees here. Shortly thereafter, in November, 1961, sales by Lab were recommenced and continued up to the date of the filing of this suit. Total revenue per month received during this later period from sales varied from $1.64 to $12.64 per month.

The trial was held before the court without a jury. Judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff Bentz and inter-venors, declaring the subject lease, as well as all interest therein, reserved and/or assigned to Lab, J. W. Thomas, and A. Loy Sims, terminated as of, on or before December 1, 1962, and cancelling and removing the cloud on their title. Lab perfected its appeal to this court, assigning fourteen points of error.

Paragraph number two of the oil and gas lease contains the habendum clause. It is this clause that gives rise to this controversy. It reads as follows:

“2. Subject to the other provisions herein contained, this Lease shall be for a term of ninety (90) days from this date (called “primary term”) and as long thereafter as oil, gas or other mineral is produced from .said land or operations are conducted on the land covered hereby or this Lease is otherwise maintained as hereinafter provided.” (Emphasis supplied)

The controlling, question on this appeal is the meaning of the phrase contained in the habendum clause of the lease which could extend the duration of the effective term of the lease beyond its primary term. Such phrase, “ * * * as long thereafter as * * * operations are conducted on the land covered hereby * * * ”, should according to Lab, be construed to mean: as long thereafter as * * * activities are conducted on the land covered hereby, even if the expenses of conducting those activities were greater than the revenue from resulting production.

The trial court found, based on sufficient evidence, that the primary term had expired; that the defendants ceased operations, as that word is used in paragraph *848 two of tile subject lease, sometime in July or August of 1960; that “After completion of the No. 1 Ella Bentz ‘B’ Well and connecting same to the pipeline, defendants conducted no operations on the leased premises as that term is used in paragraph two (habendum clause) of the lease under which defendants claim”; that “the defendants did not produce gas in paying quantities from the lease under which defendants claim after the expiration of the primary term of the lease”; that “there was no well capable of producing in paying quantities and shut-in”; that “there were no drilling, reworking or other developing operations conducted on the premises after the primary term”; that the court found and concluded “that the clause ‘or operations are conducted on the land covered thereby’ as used in paragraph two of the subject lease (the Thomas lease) is not ambiguous; but I also conclude and find that even if ambiguous, under all the evidence admitted and offered, the parties to such lease did not intend that ‘operations’, as that term is used in said clause, would include those acts of the defendants since completion of the number 1 Ella Bentz ‘B’ well and the connecting of same to the pipeline sometime in July or August of 1960.” The court concluded that; “the lease under which the defendants claim terminated on or before December 1, 1962, and by reason of such termination the plaintiffs, Ella L. Bentz, Francis L. Bentz and wife Faye Bentz, Charles L. Bentz and wife Estelline Bentz, and the inter-venors Charles F. Haas and Richard E. Haas, individually and d/b/a Haas Brothers and Charles P. Brocato and Donald Sharp, are entitled to removal of said lease and any assignments thereof or interest therein as clouds upon their respective titles.”

Lab contends that irrespective of the foregoing, the term of the lease continued because certain “operations”, as that word or expression is used in the habendum clause and as contemplated by the parties, were .conducted continuously upon the lands covered thereby sufficiently to hold the lease. The activities claimed by Lab to amount to “operations” after the primary term of the lease had expired, are as follows: (1) production of gas continuously (although in very small quantities) to the house of Bentz for domestic purposes, (2) making well pressure reports and monthly production reports to the Railroad Commission of Texas, (3) going upon the lease two or three times a month

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Bluebook (online)
380 S.W.2d 846, 20 Oil & Gas Rep. 870, 1964 Tex. App. LEXIS 2663, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lab-oil-company-v-bentz-texapp-1964.