Magnolia Petroleum Co. v. Price

1922 OK 99, 206 P. 1033, 86 Okla. 105, 1922 Okla. LEXIS 117
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 21, 1922
Docket12243
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 1922 OK 99 (Magnolia Petroleum Co. v. Price) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Magnolia Petroleum Co. v. Price, 1922 OK 99, 206 P. 1033, 86 Okla. 105, 1922 Okla. LEXIS 117 (Okla. 1922).

Opinion

HARRISON, C. J.

This suit grew out of a controversy between the Magnolia Petroleum Company, which owns an oil and gas lease on the N. E. ¼ of sec. 33, twp. 1., S. of R. 8, W. I. M., and W. T. Price, who owns an agricultural lease on the same land.

Under its lease the Magnolia Petroleum Company sought to go upon the land and drill for oil and gas. Price sought to pre *107 vent the Magnolia Company from drilling, and refused to allow its employes to enter upon the land for drilling purposes, he, Price, being in possession under his agricultural lease and claiming the right to all the oil and gas by virtue of such lease.

On May 25, 1920, the judge of the district court being absent from the county, the Magnolia Company applied to and was granted a temporary order by the county judge, restraining Price from interfering with the Magnolia Company’s drilling operations, and thereafter, on June 4th, the judge of the district court, having returned to the county, continued said order in force until June 22nd, and it seems that such order remained in force until March, 1921, and that the Magnolia Company, operating under such order, had drilled some five or six producing wells, from which it had taken vast quantities of oil.

On November 18th, Price filed his answer to the Magnolia Company’s amended petition, claiming the oil and gas by virtue of his agricultural lease and preference right under the law to purchase, and prayed for an accounting for the oil and gas the Magnolia Company had taken from the land.

Before the case was finally disposed of the state intervened through the Commissioners of the Land Office and the Attorney General, claiming that the title to said lands and the mineral rights were still in the state, and that it had executed a valid oil and gas lease to the Magnolia Company and was entitled to its royalties therefrom for the benefit of the’ state, section 33 having been reserved by acts of Congress, by the Enabling Act, and the Constitution for public building purposes.

The case was not disposed of by the district court until March, 1921, at which time the temporary restraining order which had been in force since May, 1920, was dissolved and judgment rendered in favor of Price; Price being adjtxdged to be the owner of all oil and gas and other mineral rights by virtue of his preference right to purchase when the land should be sold, and the state and Magnolia Company being perpetually enjoined from interfering with said land or with Price’s right to the oil and gas and other minerals therein, and an accounting 'ordered. Both the Magnolia Company and the state have appealed from said judgment.

It being conceded, or at least it being true, that under the law the Commissioners of the Land Office have jurisdiction over public lands of the slate with power to lease and sell such lands, the real decisive questions are, whether said commissioners have done any act which the law did not authorize them to do; or have failed to do some act which the law required them to do. The rights of all parties are to be determined by these questions, and these questions must be determined by the law relating to this subject and the terms of the lease contracts which the state has made with these parties.

The first law bearing directly upon the question herein involved was the act of Congress approved May 2, 1890, 26 Stat. L. 81, a portion of which act constitutes the Organic Act of the territory of Oklahoma, section 18 of which provides:

“That sections numbered sixteen and thirty-six in each township in said territory shall be, and the same are hereby reserved for the purpose of being applied to public schools in the state or states hereafter to be erected out of .the same. In all cases where sections - sixteen and thirty,-six, or either of them, are occupied by actual settlers prior to survey thereof, the county commissioner* of the counties in which such sections are so occupied are authorized to locate other lands, to an equal amount, in sections or fractional sections, as the case may be, within their respective counties, in, lieu of the sections so occupied. * * *”

Said section further provides:

“All tracts of land in Oklahoma Territory which have been set apart for school purposes, to educational societies or missionary boards at work among the Indians, shall not be opened for settlement, but aré hfereby granted to the respective educational societies or missionary boards for whose use the same has been set apart. * * *”

These are all the provisions in the Organic Act which directly pertain to the subject under consideration, and it will be observed that the controlling purpose of the act was to reserve sections numbered 16 and 36 in each township for school purposes when the territory became a state. That is, said sections were reserved from homestead settlement in order that when such territory should become a state, said sections might be granted to the state for school purposes, and no other. 'So specific and clear is this idea carried out that it provided that in cases where said sections numbered 16 and 36, or either of them, were' occupied by actual settlers prior to the survey thereof by the government, the county commissioners of the counties of the territory should have power to select other lands in lieu of the lands so occupied by actual settlers at the time of the passage of the act, in order that when the territory became a state it would have sections numbered 16 and 36 in each *108 township, or lands selected in lieu thereof, free and clear of all claims of actual settlers prior to the passage of the act, for common school purposes exclusively, and to reserve same from homestead settlement after the passage of the act. No provision in the entire act is clearer than that the sole purpose of Congress was to reserve said sections from homestead settlement in order that when the territory, became a state it would have such lands as. a permanent fund for common school purposes exclusively. No settlers’ rights or preference rights of any character are recognized or contemplated except as to those actual settlers in good faith before the passage of the act, and before the survey of "the lands by the government, and in such case it authorized the county commissioners to select other .lands in lieu df the lands so settled. ...

To the same effect are all subsequent acts bearing upon the subject. The act of March 3, 1893,,.¡opening -the Cherokee Outlet- to settlement, maiide--the same reservation- as- to sections 16 and 36, and for the same specific purpose. The executive proclamation of I August 19, 1893, opening the Cherokee Outlet for settlement, made the • same,. reservation and made a reservation as to section 13 in each township for university, agricultural and normal school purposes, subject to the action of Congress; and section 33 of each township for public building purposes. By the act of March 4, 1894, Congress ratified the additional reservation made by the President and expressly reserved sections 13 and 33 in each township for the specific purposes mentioned in the President’s proclamation.

The act of January 18, 1897, made similar reservations as to Greer county, and for the same purpose.

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Bluebook (online)
1922 OK 99, 206 P. 1033, 86 Okla. 105, 1922 Okla. LEXIS 117, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/magnolia-petroleum-co-v-price-okla-1922.