LeBard v. Richfield Oil Corp.

364 P.2d 449, 56 Cal. 2d 532, 15 Oil & Gas Rep. 1, 15 Cal. Rptr. 617, 1961 Cal. LEXIS 317
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 31, 1961
DocketL. A. 25997
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 364 P.2d 449 (LeBard v. Richfield Oil Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
LeBard v. Richfield Oil Corp., 364 P.2d 449, 56 Cal. 2d 532, 15 Oil & Gas Rep. 1, 15 Cal. Rptr. 617, 1961 Cal. LEXIS 317 (Cal. 1961).

Opinions

TRAYNOR, J.

In 1955 plaintiff owned less than one acre of land that was surrounded by other lands subject to an oil and gas lease held by defendant Richfield Oil Corporation as lessee. Richfield recorded a declaration of pooling individual oil and gas leases held by it in the vicinity into Operating Unit A and filed a notice of intention to drill on the land surrounding plaintiff’s land. On March 14, 1955, pursuant to section 3608 of the Public Resources Code, the State Qil and Gas Supervisor recorded a declaration that plaintiff’s land was deemed to be included in Richfield’s Operating Unit A. On March 18, 1955, plaintiff sold and conveyed her land to defendants Kalmikov, and on May 12, 1955, the Kal[534]*534mikovs sold and conveyed the land to defendants Flores but reserved to themselves “all oil, gas, mineral and any other kindred substances in, on or under said land but without right of surface entry to said property. ’ ’

In 1955 section 3608 of the Public Resources Code provided:1

“Where land aggregating less than one acre is surrounded by other lands, which other lands are subject to an oil and gas lease aggregating one acre or more, and if, under the provisions of Sections 3600 to 3607, inclusive, of the Public Resources Code, the drilling or producing of a well on said land is declared to be a public nuisance, said land shall, for oil and gas development purposes and to prevent waste and to protect the oil and gas rights of landowners, be deemed included in said oil and gas leasehold on said other lands when there is filed with the State Oil and Gas Supervisor a notice of intention to drill a well upon the said leasehold covering said other lands and the State Oil and Gas Supervisor has caused to be recorded with the county recorder of the county in which said land aggregating less than one acre is located a declaration as hereinafter provided. . . .

“The owners of the oil and gas mineral rights in said land so deemed included in said oil and gas leasehold on said other lands, as herein provided, shall thereafter receive in money, based upon the production of oil and gas from said leasehold including said land, a pro rata share of the landowners’ royalty determined in accordance with the provisions of said oil and gas lease in the proportion that the area of said land bears to the aggregate of the total area covered by said oil and gas lease including the area of said land; provided further, that said owners of said oil and gas mineral rights in said land shall in no case receive less than their pro rata share determined, as herein provided, on the value of one-eighth part of the oil and gas produced . . . ; and provided further, that without the consent of said owners of said land the lessee or operator of said oil and gas leasehold shall have no right to use the surface of said land nor to use the subsurface thereof down to a depth of 200 feet below the surface thereof. ...”

Plaintiff brought this action to establish her right to royalties accruing pursuant to this section. The Flores defaulted and Richfield and the Kalmikovs demurred to the complaint. Their demurrers were sustained without leave to amend and judgment was entered for them. Plaintiff appeals. .. ,

[535]*535Plaintiff contends that the “owners of the oil and gas mineral rights in said land so deemed included in said oil and gas leasehold” to whom the royalties are payable are the Owner or owners of those rights at the time the land is deemed to be included; not the owner or owners at the times thereafter when royalties are payable. She therefore concludes that the right to receive royalties pursuant to section 3608 is not appurtenant to the land deemed included in the lease and did not pass to the Kalmikovs when she conveyed the land to them.

Defendants contend that the owners referred to are the owner or owners at the time royalties are payable and that therefore the right to royalties created by section 3608 is appurtenant to the oil and gas rights in the included land and passes with a conveyance of that land unless the oil and gas rights or the right created by section 3608 are reserved.

We agree with defendants’ contention. The statute provides, not that the owners of the oil and gas mineral rights at the time the land is deemed included shall receive the royalties, but that after that time the owners of those rights shall receive the royalties. Since the statute contemplates a continuing relationship between the owners of those rights and the lessee, it reasonably follows that it is the current owners who are to be paid.

This conclusion is supported by the legislative history of section 3608. In Hunter v. Justice’s Court, 36 Cal.2d 315, 317 [223 P.2d 465], we pointed out that “Section 3608 was probably adopted in response to this court’s decision in Bernstein v. Bush, 29 Cal.2d 773 [177 P.2d 913], where it was held that the spacing requirement (§ 3600) as applied to the owners of several small pieces of property was invalid for the reason that they were wholly deprived of the right to take oil from their land in that they could not drill an offset well on their land to prevent the draining of the underlying oil basin by wells on adjacent land and that ‘where, . . . the law, in its application at least, does not afford adequate means of protection as a substitute for the right to drill an offset well’ it is invalidly applied.” We sustained the validity of section 3608 in the Hunter case and held that it gave the petitioner therein “an ‘adequate means of protection or substitute,’ for his right to extract oil from his property.” That right belongs to the owner of the land and passes with a conveyance of the land unless it is severed by a reservation or has been severed by a prior grant. To be effective, a substitute for [536]*536that right must necessarily inure to its owner. Section 3608 provides that it does so inure, and it in no way purports to sever the right to receive royalties from the ownership of the oil and gas mineral rights for the duration of the lease in which the land is deemed included.

Plaintiff contends, however, that section 3608 in effect made her a community lessor with Richfield’s other lessors when her land was deemed included in Operating Unit A and that therefore the rules governing community oil leases are applicable. Those rules were stated in Tanner v. Title Insurance & Trust Co., 20 Cal.2d 814, 820 [129 P.2d 383], as follows:

“By executing the community lease, the respondents and each of the other lessors assigned or conveyed to his colessors a percentage interest in all oil produced on his land by the lessee during the continuance of the lease. The consideration for that transfer was the similar mutual assignments of the other lessors. The royalty interest thus transferred by each landowner to his colessors is an incorporeal hereditament in gross (Callahan v. Martin, supra [3 Cal.2d 110 (43 P.2d 788,101 A.L.R. 871)]) and the grantee’s interest in the oil produced upon the property of one of the colessors is entirely separate and distinct from the royalty interest retained by him in oil which might be produced from his own premises.

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Bluebook (online)
364 P.2d 449, 56 Cal. 2d 532, 15 Oil & Gas Rep. 1, 15 Cal. Rptr. 617, 1961 Cal. LEXIS 317, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lebard-v-richfield-oil-corp-cal-1961.