McMurrey v. Gray

45 So. 2d 73, 216 La. 904, 1949 La. LEXIS 1090
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedDecember 9, 1949
DocketNo. 39062.
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 45 So. 2d 73 (McMurrey v. Gray) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McMurrey v. Gray, 45 So. 2d 73, 216 La. 904, 1949 La. LEXIS 1090 (La. 1949).

Opinions

HAWTHORNE, Justice.

Plaintiffs, Bunyan J. Johnson, Clarence E. Swanson, Mrs. Beulah Johnson Mason, and Jim McMurrey, instituted this suit praying that they (other than McMurrey) be recognized as the owners of all mineral rights in a tract of land situated in Caddo Parish, containing 498.21 acres, subject to a valid oil and gas lease made by them to Jim McMurrey, and that the defendants be enjoined from slandering their title and from interfering with the exercise of the mineral servitude through the operations of McMurrey under the lease.

Defendants, Wilbur P..Gray and his wife, Mrs. Ruby Gillespie Gray, and Barney C. Hickey and his wife, Mrs. Willie Mae Perryman Hickey, contend that they are the owners of all the minerals in the property by virtue of the prescription liberandi causa, and in the alternative that, should the court hold that the operations by Mc-Murrey, plaintiffs’ lessee, were sufficient to constitute a good faith attempt to obtain production, they should nevertheless be recognized as the owners of an undivided 278.035/498.21 interest in and to the minerals, as servitudes representing this proportion of the mineral interest had expired by nonuse before McMurrey started operations under the lease.

The district court held that the plaintiffs Johnson, Swanson, and Mrs. Mason were the owners of an undivided 220.175/-498.21 interest in the oil, gas, and other minerals under the tract, .since the drilling operations of McMurrey were a bona fide attempt to obtain production and interrupted the running of the prescription, and granted unto plaintiffs an injunction permanently enjoining defendants from interfering with the further and continued exercise of the right of plaintiffs under the mineral servitude and the oil, gas, and mineral lease. From this portion of the judgment the defendants have appealed. The judgment of the district court also held that the alteimative plea of defendants was well founded, and that they were the owners of the fractional interest claimed in their alternative demand, clear and free of the McMurrey lease. Plaintiffs have answered defendants’ appeal, praying that they be recognized as the owners of all the minerals in the property.

On March 26, 1936, the Continental American Bank & Trust Company, fee simple owner of this tract of land, conveyed it by warranty deed to Bunyan J. Johnson and Clarence E. Swanson, two of the plaintiffs, reserving to itself an undivided one-half of all the minerals. Thereafter, between May 21 and May 25, 1936, Johnson and Swanson by six separate mineral sales sold a portion of the mineral interest which they had obtained from the bank. A little more than year after their *909 acquisition, that is, on March 29,1937, Johnson and Swanson conveyed the tract to the defendants by warranty deed which contains the following clause: “It is expresly stipulated and agreed that vendors reserve unto themselves all of the oil, gas and other minerals, in, to and under the property hereinabove described, together with all rights of ingress and egress upon and over said-property for the purpose of going upon the same, exploring and developing the same for the purpose of removing oil, gas and other minerals therefrom.”

For the purpose of clarity, we here point out that the undivided 220.175/498.21 interest in the oil, gas, and other minerals, recognized to be in plaintiffs (other than McMurrey) by the judgment of the lower court, is the interests of Mrs. Beulah Johnson Mason and the interest of Johnson and Swanson remaining unsold by them at the time they conveyed the land to defendants herein on March 29, 1937; and that the 278.035/498.21 interest, which the lower court held reverted to the defendants since the servitudes as to it expired in 1946 by nonuser for. a period of 10 years, is composed of the one-half interest reserved by the Continental American Bank & Trust Company and the total interest in tfye six mineral sales made by Johnson and Swanson to various vendees.

All parties to this suit admit and agree that the mineral servitudes of the Continental American Bank & Trust Company and the six vendees of Johnson and Swanson have expired by nonuse since no well was drilled on the property within 10 years from the dates of the creation of the servitudes in 1936. Plaintiffs Johnson and Swanson take the position that upon the expiration of these servitudes in 1946 the minerals conveyed or reserved by these various instruments reverted to them under the above-quoted reservation, although at that time the land was owned by the defendants herein. Plaintiffs contend that the drilling of the well on the premises by the lessee, McMurrey, as hereinafter set forth, was a bona fide attempt to produce oil and gas from the property and was an exercise of the servitudes of Johnson, Swanson, and Mrs. Mason, and interrupted prescription before it accrued on March 29, 1947.

The trial judge in his well written reasons for judgment concluded that the servitudes of the Continental American Bank & Trust Company and of the six vendees of Johnson and Swanson had reverted to the defendants, the owners of the land. We think this conclusion is correct, and we quote and adopt as our own his reasons therefor, in part, as follows: ■

“In determining who owned the minerals under said land on February 26, 1947, the date of the McMurrey lease, it becomes necessary to decide to whom inured the one-half of the minerals reserved by the bank in its sale to Johnson and Swanson on March 26, 1936, and the fractional mineral *911 interests sold by Johnson and Swanson in the six mineral deeds executed by them between May 21st and May 25th, 1936. It is not denied that these servitudes were lost by nonuser for ten years and defendants plead the prescription of ten years liberandi causa. The plea is good and is sustained.
“It is plaintiffs’ contention that, upon the lapsing of the mineral servitudes created by the reservation and the mineral sales referred to in the preceding paragraph, said mineral rights inured to Johnson and Swanson under the reservation in their deed to defendants on March 29, 1937, which reservation we quoted in the beginning of the opinion, because, by thus reserving ‘unto themselves’ all the minerals under the land, Johnson and Swanson, reserved ‘unto themselves’ all the mineral rights in the land including the ‘reversionary rights’ to the minerals covered by said servitudes. 'On the other hand, defendants contend that the mineral rights covered by said mineral servitudes reverted to them as the owners of the land at the time of the lapsing of said servitudes.”

The trial judg’e pointed out that this question was settled in the recent case of Gulf Refining Co. v. Orr et al., 207 La. 915, 22 So.2d 269, 270, in which the case of McDonald v. Richard et al., 203 La. 155, 13 So.2d 712, was compared and discussed. He then quoted the following extract from the Orr case:

“The question involved in this case cannot be distinguished in principle from the question involved in the case of McDonald v. Richard * * *.

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Bluebook (online)
45 So. 2d 73, 216 La. 904, 1949 La. LEXIS 1090, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcmurrey-v-gray-la-1949.