Le Blanc v. Haynesville Mercantile Company, Inc.

88 So. 2d 377, 230 La. 299, 6 Oil & Gas Rep. 443, 1956 La. LEXIS 1416
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 7, 1956
Docket42396
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 88 So. 2d 377 (Le Blanc v. Haynesville Mercantile Company, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Le Blanc v. Haynesville Mercantile Company, Inc., 88 So. 2d 377, 230 La. 299, 6 Oil & Gas Rep. 443, 1956 La. LEXIS 1416 (La. 1956).

Opinion

FOURNET, Chief Justice.

The defendant, Haynesville Mercantile Company, Inc., Trustee, is appealing from *301 a. judgment of the district court decreeing a certain mineral royalty interest conveyed to it on March 19, 1940, by instrument executed in its favor by the landowners, plaintiff Elia Dugas and her husband, Alcide LeBlanc, 1 to have prescribed, and in addition ordering it to pay attorney’s fees of $300. The case was submitted to the trial judge on an agreed statement of facts which are stipulated in the record and are substantially as follows:

The royalty interest in dispute conveyed a Yeith of the oil, gas or other minerals on, under and to be produced from three tracts of land (one in Sec. 25, two in Sec. 26, T. 13 S., R. 4 E.) in Vermilion Parish, subject to a lease then affecting the lands, but not limited to royalties accruing under said lease — the rights granted in the deed to “remain a charge and burden on the land * * * and binding on any future owners or lessees.” The grantors reserved the right to grant future leases affecting the lands, “so long as there shall be included therein, for the benefit of the grantee herein the royalty rights herein conveyedand the grantors further reserved “the right to collect and retain all bonuses and rentals paid for or in connection with any future lease or accruing under the lease now outstanding.”

On February 16, 1945, Elia Dugas and Alcide LeBlanc executed an oil, gas and mineral lease, having a primary term of five years from date, in favor of Union Oil Company of California, covering the land included in the royalty deed described above, along with other lands; a provision of the lease (Paragraph 3) stipulated that in the event gas was discovered for which there was lack of a market at the well, the lessor could pay to the lessee, on or before the first of January of each year after production had ceased for lack of market, $100 “as royalty for each such well, * * * and while such royalty is so paid such well or wells shall be considered as producing in commercial quantities for all purposes hereunder.” The lease was amended on August 5, 1948, to provide that “in lieu of the shut-in gas royalty clause” (Paragraph 3), “Lessee may maintain its rights hereunder from month to month” if there were on the leased land a well capable of producing gas or gas condensate and the lease was not then being maintained by production or by operations on the land, by paying lessors “for rentals herein elsewhere named a sum equal to %2th of the amount of an-, nual rentals” based bn the number of acres then covered by the lease, "each payment to extend Lessee’s rights for a period of one month from the due date thereof *303 * * In lieu of another paragraph (No. 5) of the original agreement, under which the lessee had been given the right to combine leases, royalty and mineral rights to create one or more operating units of 40 acres, there was substituted a paragraph amplifying the original provisions, again granting to lessee the right to pool or combine the “acreage, royalty, or mineral interest covered by this lease, or any portion thereof, with other land, lease or leases, royalty and mineral interests in the immediate vicinity thereof * * * to form one contiguous body of land for each unit” not to exceed substantially 320 acres each for each gas or gas-condensate well — lessee to execute and record an instrument identifying and describing the pooled acreage, “and upon such recordation, the unit or units shall thereby become effective.” The paragraph further provided “Lessor shall receive * * * regardless of whether or not such production is from any part of the land hereinabove described, a royalty equal to such portion of a one-eighth royalty as the number of acres out of this lease and included in any such operating unit bears to the total number of acres included in the respective operating unit. * * * such portion of a one-eighth royalty shall be in lieu of any other royalties which would accrue to Lessor hereunder on account of production of oil, gas, * * *.” Production from any portion of the unit was to have the same effect as if a well were commenced or completed on the land embraced by the lease.

The lease was maintained to February 16,. 1950, by delay rental payments, timely made' by .the lessee. On February 13, 1950, the lessee executed and had recorded a declaration of unitization, creating, for the purpose of production of gas, the “A. D. LeBlanc Unit III.” That unit included a portion of the property covered by the royalty sale to the defendant and by the mineral lease to the Union Oil Co. of California, and embraced land on which there was already a well, one which had been brought in some 7 months before, on July 30, 1949, and which, though capable of producing gas and condensate in paying quantities, had been immediately shut in, after testing, for lack of a market. That well, located on acreage belonging to A. D. LeBlanc and others, is known as “A. D. LeBlanc No. 1.”

The lease having been maintained to February 16, 1950, as mentioned above, by delay rental payments, beginning on that date and continuing to January 16, 1951, the plaintiff received timely monthly “shut-in” gas royalty payments; on January 18, 1951, the well was placed in production and has continued to produce gas and condensate in commercial and paying quantities. While the defendant did not join in either the original lease to the Union Oil Co. of California, or the amendment thereto, all parties recognize that the lease is valid and subsisting, in full force and effect; the royalties accruing to defendant under its terms have been held in suspense pending the outcome of this suit.

*305 Following trial on the merits — in which the plaintiff contended that the royalty interest conveyed to the defendant on March 19, 1940, had prescribed because of non-production during the ten year period following the sale and that those rights had reverted to the owners of the land as of 'March 19, 1950; and defendant resisted on the ground that prescription had been interrupted (a) by the declaration of unitization recorded by the lessee on February 13, 1950, (b) by the payment of delay rentals and '“shut-in” gas royalties under the lease as amended, (c) by completion of the A. D. LeBlanc No. 1 well as a producer on July 30, 1949, and (d) by production from that well 'beginning on January 15, 1951 — the trial judge held that “Such production as was incidental to the completion and testing of the well is not sufficient to enable the royalty owner to share in such production, and will not be considered sufficient to interrupt the running of prescription.” Attorney’s fees were allowed, under the authority of LSA-R.S. 30:101, 2 as a result of the refusal of the defendant, despite demand more than thirty days prior to institution of suit, to furnish plaintiffs with an acknowledged instrument directing the cancellation of the royalty deed.

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Bluebook (online)
88 So. 2d 377, 230 La. 299, 6 Oil & Gas Rep. 443, 1956 La. LEXIS 1416, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/le-blanc-v-haynesville-mercantile-company-inc-la-1956.