Merrill Engineering Co. v. Capital Nat. Bank

5 So. 2d 666, 192 Miss. 378, 1942 Miss. LEXIS 5
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 26, 1942
DocketNo. 34800.
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 5 So. 2d 666 (Merrill Engineering Co. v. Capital Nat. Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Merrill Engineering Co. v. Capital Nat. Bank, 5 So. 2d 666, 192 Miss. 378, 1942 Miss. LEXIS 5 (Mich. 1942).

Opinion

*386 McGehee, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The question involved on this appeal is whether the sale of a tract of land in a city subdivision which has been leased to be drilled for oil and gas has the effect of passing to the grantee the one-eighth unaccrued royalty theretofore reserved by the grantor under an oil and gas lease thereon, where such royalty is derived from a producing gas well located on an entirely different tract in close proximity thereto, and the royalties on both tracts have been pooled or consolidated along with the royalties reserved by the grantors in other leases on adjacent tracts under and by virtue of a written agreement among the respective owners of the fee in the several tracts for them to be developed as a unit under the facts and circumstances hereinafter mentioned.

During the month of April of the year 1930', F. A. Johnson et al., as owners of Blocks “V” and “W” of the Mill-saps College Addition to the City of Jackson, executed an oil and gas lease thereon in favor of the Oil & Gas Corporation of Mississippi, which required the lessee to drill for oil and gas thereon within a period of one year, *387 the lease to remain in force for a period of five years from date, and as long thereafter as oil or gas or either of them shall be produced, a one-eighth royalty being reserved to the lessors. A similar lease was executed in favor of the same lessee by certain other persons as owners of Blocks “L” and “M” of the Howie-Roell Resurvey of the said Millsaps College Addition to the City of Jackson; likewise, by the owners respectively of Blocks “H,” “N,” “O'” and “P” of the said Howie-Roell Resurvey, and all of which several separate leases were thereupon duly recorded.

On the 19th of December, 1930, the several lessors in the leases hereinbefore mentioned entered into a written agreement among themselves, reciting the execution of such several leases, describing the land involved, and providing that “Whereas it is desired by each of the lessors that their royalties of one-eighth interest reserved in the several leases above mentioned shall be consolidated and pooled so that such well or wells as may be drilled upon any of the above mentioned properties for gas or oil shall be divided among the several lessors according to the proportionate area of each of their several plots of land;” that therefore, in consideration of the mutual benefits to accrue thereunder, it was mutually agreed that the interest of the several lessors respectively, naming them, should be a certain amount, stating the same. This community agreement among these several lessors then takes cognizance of an assignment of their several leases by the' Oil & Gas Corporation of Mississippi to the Love Petroleum Corporation, then about to be entered into, wherein the assignee obligated itself to drill.only two gas or oil wells on all of the several blocks of land as an entirety, within eight months from that date, and agreed that such action on the part of the Love Petroleum Corporation shall constitute a compliance with the several provisions contained in their original leases to the said Oil and Gas Corporation. In other words, it was agreed that instead of the original lessee being required to drill *388 a well on the land covered by each lease, its assignee Love Petroleum Corporation should be required to drill only two wells on all of the several blocks when considered as a unit.

The agreement further provided for the conveyance to the Oil & Gas Corporation as trustee of that part of the land of any one owner which was selected as a well site. The size and value of any prospective well site was therein specified and agreed upon; and it was further provided that each of the parties to the agreement should contribute his proportionate part of the cost of purchasing the well site from its original owner. The well site was to be held in trust for the benefit of the parties to the agreement so long as oil or gas was' produced therefrom.

As contemplated in the pooling or community agreement described above, the Oil & Gas Corporation of Mississippi assigned all five of the leases included in the pooling agreement to the Love Petroleum Company. Following this assignment, the Love Petroleum Company proceeded to drill a well upon Lot Six (G) of Block “M” of the Howie-Roell Resurvey. The well was successfully completed as a producer of natural gas. The gas produced from this well, which was known as the Love Petroleum-Homestead Development Well No. 1, was sold by the Love Petroleum Company to the United Gas Public Service Company under a gas purchase contract, dated January 31, 1931. This gas purchase contract was subsequently assigned, on September 25, 1937, by the United Gas Public Service Company to the United Gas Pipe Line Company, the original complainant by a bill of interpleader in the court below.

On January 22, 1931, F. A. Johnson and his co-owners of Blocks “V” and “W” sold and conveyed by a warranty deed all of the said Block “ W ” unto the appellant Merrill Engineering Company, “subject to the oil and gas lease given' by the grantors to the Oil and Gas Corporation of Mississippi . . .,” and the conveyance further provided that ‘ all rights of every kind and char *389 acter of said grantors in and to said lease are hereby conveyed to the grantee insofar as those rights pertain to the property hereby conveyed,” the lease referred to in favor of the Oil and Gas Corporation having embraced both Blocks “V” and “W ” as hereinbefore stated. No mention was made in this conveyance in regard to the pooling or community agreement theretofore entered into between the grantors in this deed and the lessors of the other blocks of-land on which the royalties had been consolidated and pooled. Nor had the said agreement been placed of record at the time of the execution of this conveyance of Block “W” to the Merrill Engineering Company, but no point is made on this appeal in regard to whether or not the said grantee had actual notice of the existence of the said pooling or community agreement which was thereafter placed of record on June 1, 1931.

After acquiring the title of the said Block “W,” the Merrill Engineering Company executed a deed of trust thereon in favor of the Capital National Bank as security for a loan, wherein the said grantor conveyed to the trustee its rights in the lease executed by said P. A. Johnson, et ah, to the Oil and Gas Corporation of Mississippi. This deed of trust was executed and recorded on March 31, 1931, also prior to the recordation of the said pooling or community agreement, but the deed of trust was thereafter renewed subsequent -to the recordation of the said agreement and both deeds.of trust were thereafter foreclosed by the trustee, when the land was purchased by the said Capital National Bank, but without any mention being made in the trustee’s deed in regard to the oil and gas lease, agreement, or the royalties.

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Bluebook (online)
5 So. 2d 666, 192 Miss. 378, 1942 Miss. LEXIS 5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/merrill-engineering-co-v-capital-nat-bank-miss-1942.