Mar Win Development Company v. Wilson

104 N.W.2d 369, 13 Oil & Gas Rep. 1063, 1960 N.D. LEXIS 79
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 13, 1960
Docket7878
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 104 N.W.2d 369 (Mar Win Development Company v. Wilson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mar Win Development Company v. Wilson, 104 N.W.2d 369, 13 Oil & Gas Rep. 1063, 1960 N.D. LEXIS 79 (N.D. 1960).

Opinion

STRUTZ, Judge.'

This action was brought by the respondents to quiet title to a leasehold created by an oil and gas lease dated May 5, 1949, executed by Carrie Bratsberg as lessor to Arthur M. Cook as lessee, which lease covered eighty acres of land in Burke County, North Dakota, described as the South Half of the Southwest Quarter (S14SW14) of Section 6, Township 163 North, Range 91 West, together with other lands. This action, however, involves only the eighty-acre tract and a lien claimed on the west half of that tract by the defendants and appellants, which lien had been filed against such tract for the drilling of an oil well. The lease was recorded in the office of the register of deeds of Burke County on November 2, 1949.

On December 17, 1957, Arthur M. Cook assigned to the Petroleum Corporation of America, referred to in this case as P.C.A., three leases, one of which was the Brats-berg lease. The assignment of the Brats-berg lease never was recorded, but was deposited in escrow with the two other leases in the United States National Bank of Denver, Colorado, accompanied by an escrow memorandum executed by Cook. The memorandum contained the requirements for release of the assignments from escrow.. One of these requirements was a provision that the Petroleum Corporation of America was to pay to Arthur M. Cook the sum of $70,200, in the following manner: $25,000 on or before January 15, 1958; $25,000 on or before February 15, 1958; and $20,200-on or before March 15, 1958. The memorandum contained the further requirement that P.C.A. was “to commence the drilling of an oil ánd/or gas well” on the land described in the Bratsberg lease on or before March 10, 1958. The bank was instructed “to release the assignments to the Petroleum Corporation at such time as the sum of $70,200 has been paid in full and proof has been submitted that a well has been commenced on the above described location.”

The assignments reserved to Cook an overriding royalty of fifteen per cent of the oil and gas produced.

*371 P.C.A. made the first payment of $25,000 as required by the agreement. It also procured the services of Newcastle Drilling Company to drill a well. Drilling was commenced prior to March 10, 1958, in accordance with the requirement of the escrow memorandum. The last two cash payments, however, never were made, although Cook granted to P.C.A. an extension of time on the second payment until June 1, 1958. Shortly after that date, the escrow agreement was terminated and the Bratsberg lease assignment was returned to Cook. On June 30, 1958, P.C.A. executed a quitclaim deed to Arthur M. Cook covering the eighty-acre tract together with other land. Thus it appears that in June 1958 Cook obtained a return of the assignment that he had deposited in escrow and obtained a quitclaim deed for the land covered by the Bratsberg lease. Cook’s next step was to execute an assignment of the Bratsberg lease to the plaintiff in this action, Mar Win Development Company.

Meanwhile, on March 19, 1958, Newcastle Drilling Company, having completed drilling the well for P.C.A., filed a lien under the provisions of Chapter 35-24 of the 1957 Supplement to the North Dakota Revised Code of 1943, in which, according to entry No. 33 of the abstract of title, which is the only evidence of the lien in this record, it

“Claims a lien upon the oil and gas mining leasehold estate and interest therein of the Petroleum Corporation of America, upon the SW54SWJ4 Sec. 6, Twp. 163 North, Range 91 West, and other lands.”

The lien filed by Newcastle Drilling Company purports to cover the west forty acres of the eighty-acre tract described in the Bratsberg lease.

Entry 22 of the abstract of title shows a sheriff’s certificate of sale on foreclosure' of lien which was recorded in the office of the register of deeds on August 7, 1958.' This certificate recites that the sheriff of' Burke County, by virtue of a judgment and decree of foreclosure dated July 7, 1958, in favor of Newcastle Drilling Company and against Petroleum Corporation of America, and by virtue of a writ of special execution, on the 5th day of August 1958, at two o’clock p. m., did sell property described in the lien and in the judgment and writ of special execution. The certificate then, states:

“I then offered for sale the interest of Petroleum Corporation of America in the leasehold for oil and gas purposes of the following described real' property, to-wit: The Southwest Quarter of the Southwest Quarter (SW14SW14) of Section 6, Township 163 North, Range 91 West in Burke County, North Dakota; and Glenn D. Wilson offered and bid therefor the sum of $9,000.00.”

The sheriff then certified that the bidders-for the respective items were entitled to-deeds at the end of one year if such property was not redeemed.

Cook admitted receiving the first payment of $25,000 and testified that, prior to March 10, 1958, the well was “commenced,, drilled, and abandoned.” He also testified, with respect to the extension of additional' time to P.C.A. for making the second payment of $25,000, as follows :

“Well, even the first payment wasn’t paid on time and the thing was booted around with promises. February 15th the thing was killed, they called and said they would start the well and pay us all the balance due us before the well was finished. We said go ahead and start the well; that was the original intent to get the well drilled.”

Thus P.C.A. had made a substantial payment and had taken possession of the leasehold when its agent, Newcastle Drilling Company, moved onto the land and started, drilling as contemplated.

The appellants contend that, under Chapter 35-24 of the 1957 Supplement to the- *372 North Dakota Revised Code of 1943, and under the facts in this action, the lien of Newcastle Drilling Company, which is the basis of the appellants’ claim, attached to the whole leasehold and not merely to the interest of Petroleum Corporation of America in the leasehold. They point to the.fact that the plaintiff’s assignor, Arthur M. Cook, required P.C.A. to drill an oil well on the property described in the Bratsberg lease; that Newcastle Drilling Company’s lien, being of record at the time Cook executed an assignment of the Bratsberg lease to the plaintiff, Mar Win Development Company, resulted in Mar Win’s taking the assignment subject to the lien. Appellants contend, therefore, that the lien was a lien on not only P.C.A.’s interest in the Bratsberg lease but upon the entire leasehold, including Cook’s interest therein, and that the appellants, by purchase of the sheriff’s certificate, acquired an interest which was superior to the interest of Mar Win, which acquired its interest by assignment from Cook after the filing of the lien.

We do not believe it is necessary here for this court to determine what interests. could have' been covered by the lien under- the law: of North Dakota and the facts im this case. A statutory lien exists only where there has been a compliance with the statute. 53 C.J.S. Liens § 5, p. 847.'

Whether the ' lien of Newcastle Drilling Company could have covered interests greater than the interest of P.C.A. therefore is not important, since the lien itself purports to be a lien on the interest of P.C.A. only.

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Bluebook (online)
104 N.W.2d 369, 13 Oil & Gas Rep. 1063, 1960 N.D. LEXIS 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mar-win-development-company-v-wilson-nd-1960.