McLachlan v. Stroube

324 S.W.2d 279, 11 Oil & Gas Rep. 98, 1959 Tex. App. LEXIS 2417
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 8, 1959
Docket3408
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 324 S.W.2d 279 (McLachlan v. Stroube) 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
McLachlan v. Stroube, 324 S.W.2d 279, 11 Oil & Gas Rep. 98, 1959 Tex. App. LEXIS 2417 (Tex. Ct. App. 1959).

Opinion

GRISSOM, Chief Justice.

Harry McLachlan and others sued H. R. Stroube and others for the purpose of having construed a royalty reservation in an assignment of an oil and gas lease *280 from the McLachlans to the Stroubes, to have determined the effect of commitment of the tract to a unit operation and water flooding program and to recover engineering expenses alleged to have been required by improper conduct of defendants. The McLachlans asserted a right to recover royalty from oil produced by a water flood unit and allocated to the tract in which they own royalty based on %eths of the oil which was being produced from fourteen wells and a %2nds from two other wells when said unit began water flooding. The court disregarded certain answers of a jury and rendered judgment that the McLachlans recover nothing on their claim for engineering expenses; that they recover nothing on their claim for an additional %2nds overriding royalty on well number 8 from June 1, 1955, to January 1, 1957 and that the McLachlans recover after January 1, 1957, when the McLachlans joined the unit, only %2nds of the oil produced from the unit and allocated to “Tract 5”, (on which the Mc-Lachlans had assigned an oil and gas lease to the Stroubes,-) until the gross monthly production allocated to Tract 5 is less than 14,400 barrels, when the McLachlans will recover only %4ths thereof. The McLach-lans have appealed.

In December, 1949, the McLachlans assigned to the Stroubes an oil and gas lease on “Tract 5” for a consideration of $125,-000.00 cash, a development contract and a royalty exception in the assignment as follows :

“There is, however, reserved unto the Assignor, Leonard McMahon, Trustee, his successors and assigns, and excepted from this assignment and not conveyed hereby:
“(a) Seven-sixteenths (%6ths) overriding royalty from the total eight-eighths (%ths) production of oil from the lands in said lease described if, as and when produced, saved and marketed, but subject to the other provisions herein contained.
“I (b) If at any time any well on said lands does not by its natural flow produce its oil allowable after a thirty-day test period, then the seven-sixteenths (%eths) over-riding royalty herein reserved shall be reduced and there shall then only be reserved by and payable to assignor hereunder from such well or wells a seven-thirty-seconds (%2nds) over-riding royalty; I and provided any well on said lands produces less than thirty (30) barrels per day for thirty (30) consecutive days, then in such event the over-riding royalty reserved by and payable to assignor from any such well or wells shall be reduced and there shall only be reserved by and payable to assignor hereunder from any such well or wells a seven sixty-fourths (%<tths) over-riding royalty.”

The development contract referred to said assignment. It recited that the consideration for said assignment was as follows :

“Payment in cash to said Trustee by Second Parties of the sum of $125,-000.00 in cash, the receipt of which is hereby acknowledged and confessed; and (1) %eths over-riding royalty from the total %ths production of oil from the lands in said lease described, if, as and when produced, saved and marketed ; (2) %eths over-riding royalty from the total %ths production of any liquified oil by-product which has a market value at the well and can be produced and sold at the well without any additional cost or expense to produce, sell and market same; and the further consideration of the following agreement on the part of said Second Parties to drill on said lands for the purpose of oil, gas and other minerals and to develop said lands according to the following agreement.”

There followed an agreement that the Stroubes would commence drilling a well *281 within thirty days after title was approved; that, if production were obtained from the first well, the Stroubes would cause the well to be tested by the Railroad Commission and if, “after 30 days from such test”, said well would produce 25 barrels of oil of a certain gravity under stated conditions, “then and in such event the production of oil from said first well meets the foregoing requirements, then Second Parties shall, within 30 days from the completion of such test”, commence drilling another well and that successive wells should be drilled, provided the last met all said requirements. It provided that all taxes assessed against the minerals, other than the land owners’ one-eighth royalty, should be paid by the respective parties on their proportionate interest. The development contract then contained the following provision which, considered with the first paragraph quoted therefrom and the royalty exception in the assignment, are very material on the chief question presented.

“If at any time any well on said land will not by its natural flow produce its allowable, Second Parties shall run a test for a 30-day period and if at the end of said test said well has so failed to produce its allowable by its natural flow, then and in such event the %6ths over-riding royalty from any such well shall be reduced and there shall only be payable to the First Party hereunder a Vs2nds over-riding royalty; provided, however, should any well on said lands produce less than 30 barrels per day for 30 consecutive days, then and in such event the overriding royalty payable from any such well or wells shall be reduced to %4ths over-riding royalty.”

It is undisputed and the Stroubes testified, in effect, that the requirement of a 30 day test before there was a reduction of Mc-Lachlans’ %eths royalty was written into the assignment and development contract because the producing capacity of a well fluctuates from day to day and they wanted to avoid the necessity of frequently changing the percent of McLachlans’ overriding royalty and such requirement was written therein so that the McLachlans might know they were being treated fairly and know when their overriding royalty should be reduced. For said reasons it was agreed that no reduction would be made in Mc-Lachlans’ %6ths overriding royalty until a 30 day test showed that a provision for reduction was then applicable. Mr. H. R. Stroube testified:

“Then, they (the McLachlans) were talking about ‘How will we know that we are being treated fair and how do we know when to reduce these wells.’ Well, I think I coined that phrase, too —what would you think about a 30-day test, because I had in mind that when a well got down to just making its allowable one day and a barrel or two under the next day, just rocking backwards and forth right on the line. We didn’t want to be in a position of cutting — trying to cut the overriding royalty and have it come back the next day; so, I am pretty sure that I suggested ‘What do you think about a 30-day test?’ And, they said ‘We think that is all right.’ ”

One of the Stroubes’ counsel, who was present when the trade was being made, testified that a lawyer told McLachlans’ representative that a provision for a 30 day test before reduction of the reserved royalty would give the McLachlans protection and that Mr. Stroube said, “ * * * ‘that was all right’ * * * and, that was worked out in the deal, about this 30 day test.” But, regardless of such admissions by the Stroubes, such was the effect of their contracts.

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Bluebook (online)
324 S.W.2d 279, 11 Oil & Gas Rep. 98, 1959 Tex. App. LEXIS 2417, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mclachlan-v-stroube-texapp-1959.