Meyers v. the Texas Co.

59 P.2d 132, 6 Cal. 2d 610, 1936 Cal. LEXIS 562
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 27, 1936
DocketL. A. 14354
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 59 P.2d 132 (Meyers v. the Texas Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Meyers v. the Texas Co., 59 P.2d 132, 6 Cal. 2d 610, 1936 Cal. LEXIS 562 (Cal. 1936).

Opinion

THOMPSON, J.

The plaintiffs brought this action to impeach the accounting of defendant covering the period from September 9, 1924, to June 30, 1930, as lessee under an oil lease, and recovered judgment in the sum of $116,710.39. Both plaintiffs and defendant have appealed, the defendant from that part of the judgment which awarded plaintiffs a sum representing the quantity and gravity of royalty oil not accounted for, and the plaintiffs from that part of the judgment which denied them recovery of additional sums for casinghead gasoline royalty. We shall first dispose of the defendant’s appeal.

*613 The lease covered a ten-acre parcel of land in the Huntington Beach oil field and provided for a one-sixth royalty to lessors, which might, at lessor’s option, be taken in kind, and, if they did not so elect, the lessee was authorized, according to the provisions of paragraph IH-g of the lease, “to handle, market, sell and/or otherwise dispose of said royalty oil, with and as a part of the products belonging to the lessee, and pay to the lessors in money, the proceeds thereof, less cost of handling after leaving tank or container”. (Italics ours.) Section 1-1 of the lease reads as follows: “That it will at the request of said lessors, market in its original state the royalty oil or gas belonging to them, along with and upon the same terms as it markets its own oil or gas produced upon said premises, and pay to said lessors the proceeds therefrom, less the cost of handling after leaving the tank or container, but in no event shall it pay lessors less than the Standard’s posted market price.” The lessors at no time elected to take this royalty in kind. Rather, on September 9, 1934, the defendant then being known as and operating under the name of Petroleum Midway Company, Ltd., wrote plaintiffs as follows:

“Referring to the Vollmer-Meyers oil lease in the Huntington Beach field, now being operated by this company and of which you are one of the owners.
“You are hereby advised that the oil being produced from this lease contains such quantities of water and other foreign substances and is of such character as to render it necessary to treat same to make it marketable. The undersigned has erected a plant in the Huntington Beach oil field for the treatment of its own oil. The lease provides that in the event the lessee erects a plant for the purpose of treating such oil, it will, upon request, transport and treat the royalty oil of the lessors together with its own, charging therefor the actual cost of such transportation and treatment.
“If you advise us to transport and treat your oil with ours, please sign the enclosed request and return same to us at once.
“As there is no market for this oil until it has been treated, we will, until advised by you to the contrary, transport and treat your oil with ours, charging you your proportion of the actual cost therefor.”

*614 The letter refers to paragraph I-k of the lease, which reads: “That it (lessee) will, in the event it becomes necessary to treat any of the oil produced on said premises to make same marketable, and in the event the lessee erects a plant for that purpose, upon request, treat the royalty oil of the lessors together with its own, charging therefor only the net cost of such treatment.” For the period here involved, the oil was so treated at defendant’s plant, in common with oil from other properties, and, after being cleaned, either was sold by defendant or sent to its own refinery. The trial court concluded from its interpretation of the lease, under the circumstances in which the oil of lessors was handled and marketed, that defendant was obligated to account to plaintiffs for a one-sixth of the proceeds resulting therefrom. With respect to the claim of plaintiffs that defendant had not accounted for the proceeds of the full quantity of the oil, the court awarded plaintiff, as a part of the total judgment, the sum of $42,545.47, together with interest thereon in the sum of $13,504.69. This amount was arrived at by accepting the figure of 35 per cent of the “cut” (the amount or percentage calculated to be basic sediment and water) of the wet oil as recoverable oil, and was based upon testimony to the effect that the method of sampling followed by the defendant, together with the testing thereof by the benzol method, did not reflect the true quantity of recoverable oil, but that, instead, from 30 to 70 per cent of the “cut” would be recovered. One witness declared that the method of sampling, aside from the testing, would result in an error of “at least half to one third of the cut.” The method of sampling followed by defendant during the period involved is what is known as the “three point” method, which simply means that samples are taken from the tank at the bottom, the middle and the top. There was abundant testimony, as already indicated, that this method, although approximately correct when applied to dry or clean oil (oil containing less than 3 per cent basic sediment and water) is inaccurate when applied to wet oil. The proper method is known as “core” sampling, by which a core is extracted from the tank and reflects its true character. The court found that the methods of sampling and testing applied in determining the quantity of water and foreign substances in the oil produced were not those in general use by oil operators in the field *615 in which the leased premises were situated, and that many other companies used the correct and accurate methods referred to in the findings. There can be no doubt that, in so far as sampling is concerned, the finding is amply justified by the evidence, and, although the specific finding is not attacked, we might doubt the implied reference to the method of testing by benzol or carbon bisulphide during the period here in question, if the method were involved in the purchase of oil, but, as we have already observed, the trial court proceeded upon the theory that defendant here was bound to account for the proceeds of the oil, rather than being obligated to purchase.

Assuming that the lease agreement is ambiguous in this particular, we are not inclined to, and should not, where a question of facts enters into the construction, depart from the interpretation put upon it by the trial court. (Adams v. Petroleum Midway Co., 205 Cal. 221 [270 Pac. 668] ; Whepley Oil Co. v. Associated Oil Co., 6 Cal. App. (2d) 94 [44 Pac. (2d) 670] ; Kautz v. Zurich General A. & L. Ins. Co., 212 Cal. 576 [300 Pac. 34].) It seems obvious, however, that plaintiffs either had the right to demand a one-sixth part of the oil after dehydration and their payment of a one-sixth part of the cost or, in the event the whole was handled and marketed by defendant, to a one-sixth of the proceeds.

The appellant asserts that the part of the judgment rendered to represent the quantity which defendant should have accounted for is not supported by the evidence. Its argument in this respect, however, is largely addressed, in its last analysis, to the weight of the evidence and hence is not a proper subject of inquiry by this court.

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Bluebook (online)
59 P.2d 132, 6 Cal. 2d 610, 1936 Cal. LEXIS 562, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meyers-v-the-texas-co-cal-1936.