Lippert v. Angle

508 P.2d 920, 211 Kan. 695, 45 Oil & Gas Rep. 193, 1973 Kan. LEXIS 447
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedApril 7, 1973
Docket46,634
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 508 P.2d 920 (Lippert v. Angle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lippert v. Angle, 508 P.2d 920, 211 Kan. 695, 45 Oil & Gas Rep. 193, 1973 Kan. LEXIS 447 (kan 1973).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Harman, C.:

This is an action by lessors seeking to recover royalties for gas produced from gas wells and for interest thereon. The trial court rendered judgment for plaintiff lessors, ordering payment of the royalties sought, plus interest. The defendant lessee appeals, contesting the amount of royalties due and the liability for interest.

The material facts are not in dispute. We summarize those essential for an understanding of the litigation. Appellant George *696 A. Angle, who commenced his business career as a geologist, has been in the oil and gas industry on his own as a driller and producer since 1953. In the early 1960’s he began securing oil and gas leases in the Reichel gas field primarily in Rush county. Gas wells in this area had previously been connected to the Kansas-Nebraska Company pipeline gathering system and gas was sold to Kansas-Nebraska and then processed for helium extraction in a small United States government helium plant at Otis. This plant operated from 1945 to 1968.

Included among the leases which appellant acquired in the Reichel field were leases from appellees, the Lipperts and others, for whom appellee E. Verne Lippert, one of the largest owners, was spokesman and witness. The leases in question were standard form 88 (Producers 1952) covering oil and gas. The royalty clause for gas sold from the leased premises provided for monthly payment in the amount of one-eighth of its market value at the well.

Appellant’s ultimate hope in his leasing program was to develop helium-bearing gas reserves in sufficient quantities to support a liquid helium extraction plant. By securing leases and drilling wells he eventually developed what he considered sufficient helium reserves to warrant the construction of his own gathering system and the helium plant. Appellant had about 35,000 acres under lease. For a period of time after development he paid shut-in royalty on some of the wells, including those of appellees.

Because he had witnessed what he considered breaches of confidence by persons connected with the highly competitive oil and gas industry appellant had developed a policy of not revealing his plans to anyone more than was required and during the time he was obtaining these leases he did not reveal to the lessors his plan for eventually establishing a liquid helium extraction plant.

On July 25, 1963, appellant contracted with Air Reduction Company, a large purchaser and marketer of helium, for the sale of liquid helium he hoped to produce. With this contract and the various leases he had secured appellant was able to obtain from New York banks financing in the amount of $7,000,000 with which to build his helium plant and make other necessary expenditures in connection with the project.

In order to assure Air Reduction and his bankers as well that he had unquestioned ownership in the gas from which he expected to produce helium, appellant asked his royalty owners to sign an *697 instrument prepared by him entitled “Division Order and Gas Purchase Agreement” (referred to hereafter as DOGPA). This document provided for royalty payments on all gas of 140 per m.c.f., less proportionate reductions for gas containing less than a certain amount of BTU’s. The instrument contained no reduction for any compression charges. It specifically covered “all of the gas in its natural state, together with all its liquid and gaseous components including hydrocarbons and non-hydrocarbons produced from and attributable to Second Party’s interest in the production of said substances from wells now or hereafter drilled. . . .” At that particular time and previously there had been discussion by lessors in some gas fields which contained helium that the ordinary oil and gas lease did not include transfer of the rights to the helium, a non-hydrocarbon, and some landowner suits had been filed claiming title to the helium produced but none had been finally determined. The DOGPA also gave appellant the right to produce and sell all the gas produced without any reservation of use by lessors of gas for household purposes on dwellings located on the leased premises. The DOGPA was for a period of twenty years and as long thereafter as gas was produced.

At the time the DOGPA was submitted to the lessors the highest price paid for gas in the Reichel field was 130 per m.ci. (less certain reductions for below-standard BTU content and for compression charges where applicable). This price was being paid by Kansas-Nebraska for gas which was processed through the government helium extraction plant and then sold by Kansas-Nebraska for heat, fuel and light. Other prices in the field were lower than that, including one of 100 per m.c.f. paid by Kansas-Nebraska for a recently connected well.

More than 340 of appellant’s royalty owners in the Reichel field executed the DOGPA but appellees refused to do so. Appellees had heard rumors of a new helium plant and their refusal, in part at least, was because they thought the 140 price basis was less than they would receive under the provisions of the lease. Appellant completed his gathering system and liquid helium plant and commenced production. He produced gas at approximately ninety-six wells and transported it to his plant at Otis where helium was extracted in liquid form. Appellant then sold the helium and the residue natural gas to third parties. Appellant’s helium plant commenced operation in 1966. Since appellees had not signed the DOGPA appellant withheld their royalty payments, sending them *698 each, month instead a statement entitled “Payment Advice”, which indicated the amount of royalties they would receive under the DOGPA. This document also stated the running total of royalties which were “being held in suspension and cannot be paid to you until our office receives your signed division order”. Appellant made no other offer or tender of royalties to appellees, except as hereinafter stated.

On February 1, 1967, Kansas-Nebraska increased its purchase price in the Reichel field to 140 per m.c.f., less reductions, apparently in accord with a general industry custom that the price be increased 10 every five year’s.

On October 27, 1969, appellees brought this action in the form of an accounting to recover their royalties. Initially they claimed royalties in excess of the 140 per m.c.f. mentioned in tire DOGPA. Theh petition alleged that no market value existed for the gas and they requested royalties based on its actual, intrinsic or real value. They also sought interest at the rate of ten percent per annum.

Appellant answered. He denied the allegation that no market value for the gas existed and he asserted no1 interest was owing. He acknowledged he was holding in suspension the royalties due appellees and others who had not signed the division order providing for payment of royalties.

Appellees then filed a motion for partial summaiy judgment in which they sought payment of the 140 per m.c.f. provided in the DOGPA as a credit against appellant’s royalty obligation, plus interest thereon, without prejudice to their claim for additional amounts as royalties.

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Lippert v. Angle
527 P.2d 1016 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1974)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
508 P.2d 920, 211 Kan. 695, 45 Oil & Gas Rep. 193, 1973 Kan. LEXIS 447, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lippert-v-angle-kan-1973.