Midstates Oil Corp. v. Waller Waller v. Midstates Oil Corp

207 F.2d 127, 2 Oil & Gas Rep. 1081, 1953 U.S. App. LEXIS 3991
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedAugust 31, 1953
Docket14436_1
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 207 F.2d 127 (Midstates Oil Corp. v. Waller Waller v. Midstates Oil Corp) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Midstates Oil Corp. v. Waller Waller v. Midstates Oil Corp, 207 F.2d 127, 2 Oil & Gas Rep. 1081, 1953 U.S. App. LEXIS 3991 (5th Cir. 1953).

Opinion

BORAH, Circuit Judge.

This suit involves a provision in an oil and gas lease and calls for the interpretation of an overriding royalty clause and a unitization and pressure maintenance agreement. The plaintiff lessee, Mid-states Oil Corporation, has appealed from a judgment on the pleadings entered by the District Court holding that the defendant lessors, Paul Dale Waller, et al., are entitled to an overriding royalty and ordering an accounting. The defendants have also appealed from that portion of the judgment which rejected their demands for attorneys’ fees, cancellation of the lease, and for the full amount of interest claimed.

The material and undisputed facts set forth in the pleadings are these. On July 20,1942, the defendants or their authors in title executed an oil and gas lease to the plaintiff on land in the Haynesville Oil Field described as the Northeast Quarter and the East Half of the Northwest Quarter of Section Three, Township 23 North, Range Eight West, Claiborne Parish, Louisiana. By the terms of the lease the lessors reserved the usual %th royalty and further reserved Ysth of %ths of all oil which may be produced, saved and marketed until such time as there shall have been delivered to lessors oil of the total market value of $150 for each acre of the Northeast Quarter of Section Three, and $250 for each acre of the East Half of the Northwest Quarter of Section Three. The lease further provides that upon payment of these amounts, out of oil the reservation shall be modified and become an overriding royalty of %eth of %ths of all oil which may be produced, saved and marketed, provided, however, that said overriding royalty as to any particular unit, “shall cease and ipso facto without further act, pass to and become absolutely vested in Lessee when the well, or wells, on any such particular unit ceases to flow by natural means, it being understood that oil produced artificially whether it be by conventional pumping method, or by recycling and repressuring, does not constitute natural means.” In compliance with the terms of the lease wells were drilled within the year and oil production by natural means was obtained.

On January 10, 1944, all interested ■parties herein including the plaintiff and defendants executed an agreement known as the Haynesville Unitization and Pressure Maintenance Agreement. This agreement provided among other things for recycling or repressuring 1 the unit area in the Haynesville Field by “killing” a number of producing wells and using those wells to inject compressed gas and water into the oil producing strata for the purpose of maintaining the bottom hole pressure. In order to perfect this objective it was necessary to make some provision in the pressure maintenance agreement in respect to any production units in the unit area affected by overriding or excess royalties. Accordingly, it was provided in Article IX of the agreement that said excess royalties shall either be adjusted by mutual agreement or reduced in the manner therein pre *129 scribed 2 in the event the net revenues to the working interest, after provision for excess royalties, will be exceeded by operating expenses. The agreement specifically provides that this method of adjustment or reduction is to be applied in the procedural manner prescribed notwithstanding anything anywhere contained in the agreement, or in any lease, assignment or other contract to the contrary. Here it is conceded that neither the plaintiff nor any one else has ever given defendants or any one of them the requisite notice prescribed in Article IX that the operating expenses exceeded the revenues payable to the operators.

On May 1, 1944, the pressure maintenance agreement went into effect. Thereafter, the Operators Committee, of which plaintiff was a member, “killed” the naturally flowing wells on defendants’ lands and began using them as water injection wells. At that time the reserved oil payments of $150 and $250 per acre had not been paid out on the two tracts and plaintiff continued the payout after the wells were converted and until the amounts due thereunder had been liquidated. However, plaintiff refused thereafter to pay defendants an overriding royalty and caused the royalty to be paid to itself. On August 10, 1951, following the termination of certain state court litigation between the same parties and to which we shall subsequently refer, defendants made written demand on the plaintiff for payment of the overriding royalty within sixty days under penalty of forfeiture of the lease. Their demand was not answered by the plaintiff and on October 17, 1951, defendants in a second written demand insisted that plaintiff furnish them with an acknowledged instrument directing the cancellation of the lease on the records in accordance with the provisions of LSA-R.S. 30:102 and advised that in the event plaintiff failed or refused to comply defendants would proceed against plaintiff for a cancellation of the lease, for reason *130 able attorneys’ fees and for damages. Without replying, plaintiff instituted this suit in the United States District Court for the Western District of Louisiana.

The complaint filed in the District Court on the ground of diversity of citizenship sought among other things a declaratory judgment decreeing that the overriding royalty stipulated in the lease never came into existence, or if it did, that it terminated when recycling and re-pressuring became effective. The defendants filed an answer and counterclaim in which among other particulars they alleged facts 3 to show that the case of Waller v. Midstates Oil Corporation, 218 La. 179, 48 So.2d 648, was controlling. The prayer was that the lease be declared null and void as of midnight, October 10, 1951; that plaintiff be ordered to file a complete accounting for %6th of %ths of the oil from that date and that there be judgment in favor of the defendants for the amount shown by the accounting; that reasonable attorneys’ fees be allowed; and for costs. In the alternative and in the event that the court did not cancel the lease it was prayed that defendants be decreed to be entitled to an overriding royalty of Viath of %ths of the oil allocated to the property under the unitization agreement and that an accounting on that theory be ordered. The plaintiff answered the counterclaim reiterating in substance the position it had taken in the original complaint. The defendants thereupon filed a motion for judgment on the pleadings and the motion was granted. The court below in its reasons for judgment adopted the opinion of the Supreme Court of Louisiana in Waller v. Midstates Oil Corporation, supra, as part of its opinion and held that defendants were entitled to the specified overriding royalty, subject to the provisions of the pressure maintenance agreement and to an accounting on the overriding royalty within ninety days from the date of the judgment. Further, that the lease as amended by the pressure maintenance agreement is valid between the parties; that no attorneys’ fees should be allowed; and that defendants were entitled to the unpaid amounts of the royalty payments together with legal interest thereon at the rate of five per cent per annum from the date of entry of judgment until paid.

The important question here is whether this case is controlled by the decision of the Supreme Court of Louisiana in Waller v. Midstates Oil Corporation, supra.

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Bluebook (online)
207 F.2d 127, 2 Oil & Gas Rep. 1081, 1953 U.S. App. LEXIS 3991, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/midstates-oil-corp-v-waller-waller-v-midstates-oil-corp-ca5-1953.