March Oil Co. v. Lee

1924 OK 1153, 241 P. 804, 113 Okla. 242, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 794
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 23, 1924
Docket15264, 15265
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1924 OK 1153 (March Oil Co. v. Lee) 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
March Oil Co. v. Lee, 1924 OK 1153, 241 P. 804, 113 Okla. 242, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 794 (Okla. 1924).

Opinion

McNEILL, C. J.

The above cases were commenced in the district court of Creek county in December, 1922, by plaintiffs to recover possession of their restricted lands, and for an accounting for oil and gas taken from said lands since January 7, 1922.

The material facts may be stated as follows : Plaintiffs are full-blood Creek Indians, and on January 7, 1907, executed oil and gas leases to one Snyder, on the lands in eonltroversy. Said leases were executed on the form prescribed by the rules and regulations of the Secretary of the Interior and in accordance with the rules and regulations in force and effect at that time, and as provided by the rules and regulations, were for a term of 15 years with a ten per cent, royalty, and were approved by the Secretary of the Interior. Shortly after the execution and approval of the leases, the Department of the Interior prescribed amended rules and regulations known as the rules and regulations of April 20, 1908. The amended rules and regulations prescribed a new form of oil and gas leases on restricted land, the term being changed from 15 years to ten years with the provision as much longer thereafter as oil or gas was produced from said premises, and increased the royalty from ten to twelve and one-half per cent. The 15 year lease contained no provision for extending the lease beyond the 15 year term. The original lease form, as well as the new form, contained the following provision:

“And it is mutually understood and agreed that this indenture of lease shall in all respects be subject to the rules and regulation heretofore or that may hereafter be lawfully prescribed by the Secretary of. the Interior relative 10 oil and gas leases in the Creek Nation.”

The leases contained a further provision •that they are no,t to be transferred or assigned unless the assignment is approved by the Secretary of the Interior.

Iru May, 1908, Snyder transferred and assigned said lease to the March Oil Company. These assignments were approved by the Secretary of the Interior July 25, 1908, with the following indorsement upon the lease:

“Washington, D. C. May 25, 1908.
“The assignment of this lease to the Omega Oil Company is approved, subject to the regulations of April 20, 1908, the rate of royalty on oil to be 12% per cent.
“Jesse E. Wilson, Assistant Secretary.”
The Commissioner of the Eive Civilized Tribes kept a lease docket, and the following entry appears on said docket:
“Assignment and bond approved subject to regulations of April 20, 1908 royalty oil rate 12%%.”

The lease docket contained an entry of August 8, 1908, as follows:

“Received consent of lessee to regulations of April 20, 1908, and increase royalty rate to 12%%.”

The Omega Oil- Company developed said premises and in May, 1911, transferred said leases to the March Oil Company. The lease docket discloses that the bond of the March Oil Company was filed June 8, 1911, and the following entry- appears on the docket June 14, 1911:

“Received lessor’s consent to proposed assignment.”

The assignment was approved by the Secretary on June 19, 1911. The lease docket disclosed that in June, 1922, the Commissioner of the Eive Civilized Tribes notified ¡the March Oil Company that its lease had expired on January 7, 1922. The March Oil Company filed an application or petition! with the Secretary of the Interior, setting forth the fact that under subdivision B 15 A of the amended rules and regulations of 1908, in all leases executed or assigned after October 7, 1907, 'the .lessee might obtain all the rights and privileges of the terms of the lease form approved April 20, 1908, providing the owner of the lease stipulated in writing to increase the royalty to 12% per cent. The petition alleged that the company had complied with the terms of the lease form of April 20, 1908, by paying the 12% per cent, royalty and was of the opinion that the stipulation had been filed consenting to the increase in royalty, but had been unab|le to find such a *244 stipulation, but if one had not been filed, it was .through inadvertence and mistake; that the company had always acted upon the theory that such stipulation had been filed, and had developed the property relying upon that fact, and had paid the increased royalty believing it had been filed. There was considerable correspondence between the Commissioner of the Five Civilized Tribes and the Secretary of the Interior, and the Legal Department of the Secretary. The correspondence discloses the plaintiffs herein filed objections, protested against granting the relief. Neither the application nor the correspondence mentions’ the fact that the lease docket of the Commissioner of the Five Civilized Tripes contained the notation or entry that the lessee had filed its consent to the increase in royalty in. 1908. The Department in its decision stated as follows:

“While the regulations provide that .the lessee must give notice in writing to the lessor of intention to increase royalty, there is no provision therein requiring the written consent of lessors.”

The Secretary further held, or stated, in substance:

“That the increased royalty constituted the real consideration for the benefits under the new lease form.”

The Department then' considered whether the Secretary of the Interior could waive the provision of the rules that required the lessee to file its consent in writing, and the Legal Department advised the Secretary that as he was given the power and authority to promulgate the rules and regulations, he would likewise have power and authority to waive a technical compliance with the same, if they had been substantially complied with. The Department held the lessee had substantially complied with the rules and regulations of April 20, 1908, and the Department would waive the fact thac the lessee had not stipulated in writing to pay the increased royalty, in view of the fact that lessee had paid the increased royalty for a number of years, and the Secretary made an order extending the lease in compliance with the form of April 20. 1908, being as long as oil and gas was produced.

In; December, 1922, the plaintiffs commenced these suits, and they were tried as one case, but separate judgments were rendered therein in favor of the plaintiffs and againsit the defendant. From said judgments the defendant has appealed. The case here involves more, a question of law than of fact, or the construction of the oil and gas lease, and the rules and regulations of the Secretary of the Interior. The Department of the Interior has construed its rules and regulations and held the lessee had substantially complied with the same, and the lease is in full force, and under the terms of the lease it is collecting the royalties. It has been held in Sutherland v. U. S., 266 U. S. 226, and Privett v. U. S., 256 F. S. 201, that any judgment this court can render will not be binding on the government, as it is not a party to this proceeding.

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Bluebook (online)
1924 OK 1153, 241 P. 804, 113 Okla. 242, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 794, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/march-oil-co-v-lee-okla-1924.