Lynch v. Southern Coast Drilling Company

442 S.W.2d 804, 33 Oil & Gas Rep. 695, 1969 Tex. App. LEXIS 2121
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 11, 1969
Docket14726
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 442 S.W.2d 804 (Lynch v. Southern Coast Drilling Company) 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
Lynch v. Southern Coast Drilling Company, 442 S.W.2d 804, 33 Oil & Gas Rep. 695, 1969 Tex. App. LEXIS 2121 (Tex. Ct. App. 1969).

Opinion

CADENA, Justice.

This is an appeal by Frank Lynch, Elen-ora Lynch and Edward R. Fitzsimmons, three of several defendants below, from a judgment declaring that an oil and gas lease, of which they were the assignees, had terminated because of the cessation, after expiration of the primary term, of production of oil or gas. Of the other defendants, only Rollert-Waddell Company, appearing here as an appellee in defense of the judgment, which declares that its lease is in full force and effect, is before this Court. The other two appellees, Southern Coast Drilling Company, Inc., and J. W. McCormick, Jr., were plaintiffs below.

The lease declared terminated by the judgment below was executed in 1952 by Carl Appling, lessor, to J. Kenneth Black-mar, lessee, whose interest, by mesne conveyances, subsequently became vested in appellees. According to its terms, the lease was to remain in effect for a primary term of five years, “and as long thereafter as oil or gas, or either of them, is produced from said land by the lessee.”

The appeal is predicated on the asserted errors of the trial court in denying appellants’ motion for continuance and in overruling their special exceptions to plaintiffs’ pleadings.

The motion for continuance was based on the fact that none of appellants, all of whom were residents of California, would be able to be present and testify during the trial in Guadalupe County. According to the motion, the affidavit of appellant Fitz-simmons attached thereto, and the testimony of appellants’ counsel given at the hearing on the motion, the appellants, if present, would give the following testimony:

(a) Appellant Fitzsimmons would testify that by agreement dated March 28, 1963, the lessor, in consideration of payment to him of compensatory royalty by appellees, acknowledged that the 1952 lease was not, and had never been, in default. Further, Fitzsimmons would testify that he had never been given notice that lessor considered that appellees had failed to discharge their obligations under the lease.

(b) Appellant Frank Lynch would testify concerning remedial work performed on the leased premises, and that he had received no notice from lessor claiming an alleged breach of the terms and conditions of the lease.

(c) Appellant Elenora Lynch would testify with reference to a conspiracy by persons, other than appellees, to divert the assets of Frank and Elenora Lynch, including their interest in the 1952 lease, and that she never received notice from lessor claiming breach of the lease agreement.

*806 Plaintiffs’ claim that the interest of appellants in the 1952 lease had terminated was based on the fact that for a period of time prior to December 7, 1963, after the expiration of the primary term, there had been no production of oil or gas on the leased land. Pertinent portions of the lease instrument provide as follows:

(a) If, for any reason, production of oil or gas should cease after the expiration of the primary term, lessee was given the right, at any time within ninety days after such cessation of production, to resume drilling operations in an effort to restore production. If such reworking operations were begun within the specified period, the lease was to continue in effect as long as such operations were being continuously prosecuted, and if such operations resulted in production of oil or gas, the lease would remain in effect so long as such production continued.

(b) Should lessor consider that lessee had not complied with his obligations under the lease, lessor “shall notify lessee in writing, setting out specifically in what respects lessee has breached this contract.” After providing that lessee should have sixty days after receipt of such notice within which to correct, or begin to correct, the asserted default, the lease provided that service of such notice “shall be precedent to the bringing of any action by lessor on said lease for any cause, and no such action shall be brought until the lapse of sixty (60) days after service of such notice on lessee.”

(c) “Title to minerals ■ vested in grantee under this grant shall not end or revert to grantor until there is a complete, absolute and intentional abandonment by grantee of each and all of the purposes, expressed or implied, of this grant and every part and parcel of the demised premises * *

The declaration of termination of the lease was based on the trial court’s finding, amply supported by the evidence, that there had been no production of oil or gas on the leased premises from August, 1963, to January, 1964, and that during such period of time there had been no drilling or other operations conducted on the land.

The motion for continuance does not assert that any of the appellants could or would testify to facts showing that oil or gas was being produced on the land during the periods mentioned in the preceding paragraph. While it was alleged that Frank Lynch would testify “with respect to the remedial work performed” on the leased premises, neither the motion, the affidavit, nor the testimony of appellants’ counsel gives any inkling as to the nature of such “remedial work.” Nowhere do we find even a suggestion that the remedial work consisted of the “drilling operations” which, under the terms of the lease, might be required to keep the lease in force following the cessation of production of oil or gas. Nor is there any allegation to the effect that Frank Lynch would testify that such remedial work was undertaken within ninety days after the cessation of production and “continuously prosecuted.” Under these circumstances, there is no showing that the testimony which Frank Lynch might give would defeat plaintiffs’ claim, and the motion was deficient in that it failed to show the materiality of such testimony. Rule 252, Texas Rules of Civil Procedure.

Nor is expected testimony relating to lack of notice to appellants of any claimed breach by them of their obligations under the lease material to any issue in this case. By its very language, the lease provision relating to notice is applicable only where lessor is claiming that “lessee has not complied with all its obligations” under the lease. It is now well settled in Texas that an oil and gas lease, such as the one before us, creates a determinable fee in the lessee, and that the provision to the effect that, after the expiration of the primary term of five years, the lease shall continue in force as long as oil or gas is produced constitutes a special limitation upon the estate transferred. Stephens County v. Mid-Kansas Oil & Gas Co., 113 *807 Tex. 160, 254 S.W. 290, 29 A.L.R. 566 (1923). Nowhere in the lease does the lessee undertake any obligation to drill, to continue production after oil or gas is discovered in paying quantities, or to commence new drilling operations after existing wells have ceased producing. 1 When the condition constituting the special limitation occurred, the lease terminated by force of such limitation, and not as the result of any default in their obligations by lessees or of any breach by lessees of any contractual duties imposed upon them by the terms of the lease. The existence of the condition terminating the lease was not a breach of duty by lessees and created no cause of action in lessor.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
442 S.W.2d 804, 33 Oil & Gas Rep. 695, 1969 Tex. App. LEXIS 2121, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lynch-v-southern-coast-drilling-company-texapp-1969.