Minnelusa Oil Corp. v. De Larm

111 P.2d 107, 56 Wyo. 464, 1941 Wyo. LEXIS 9
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 11, 1941
Docket2178
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 111 P.2d 107 (Minnelusa Oil Corp. v. De Larm) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Minnelusa Oil Corp. v. De Larm, 111 P.2d 107, 56 Wyo. 464, 1941 Wyo. LEXIS 9 (Wyo. 1941).

Opinion

*468 Riner, Chief Justice.

This is a cause here by direct appeal from a judgment of the district court of Niobrara County. The real controversy is between two defendants therein, C. H. Kyte and Harry G. Twiford, made parties to the litigation through a petition in the nature of a bill of interpleader filed by the Minnelusa Oil Corporation. The trial was to the court without the intervention of a jury, and the facts are to be found in the admissions of the pleadings filed by the respective parties and a stipulation of submission of the cause to the district court upon an agreed statement of facts. As will hereinafter appear, the problem to be solved by the district court and by this court is the proper construction of an instrument designated “Assignment of Royalty Interest in the Buck Creek Oil Company, Incorporated in Wyoming” — and therefore simply a question of law. The judgment aforesaid was in favor of Twiford and against Kyte. The circumstances which led to the institution of this litigation are briefly these:

The locators of an oil placer mining claim on the Northeast Quarter of. the Northeast Quarter of Section 8, Township 35 North, Range 65. West of the 6th P. M., leased on December 30, 1919, and for a 12*4 per cent royalty the forty acres just described to the Buck Creek Oil Company, a Wyoming corporation. It was at the same time agreed between the lessors aforesaid and their lessee -corporation just mentioned that it should on behalf of said lessors make application to the proper authority for an oil and gas léase from the United States of America to said locators after the enactment of the so-called “Leasing Bill” authorizing the leasing of the public lands of the United States for drilling for oil and gas, and this application was in due time made. This agreement also provided that the royalty under the Buck Creek Oil Company lease, al *469 ready mentioned, should be 12% per cent “of the balance after deducting the royalty to be paid under” the lease from the United States.

January 23, 1920, the aforesaid locators conveyed to Twiford, the respondent herein, “an undivided one-ninth of nineteen-twentieths of a 12% per cent royalty in and to” the property above described. May 6, 1922, the United States of America gave a lease for the purpose of drilling for oil on that property and other lands to Twiford, together with other assignees of the original locators and the remaining locators, certain specified royalties “on all oil and gas produced from the land leased” being required to be paid to the lessor, the minimum of which royalties was 12% per cent, together with a rental of “one dollar per acre per an-num,” which rental was yearly credited on the royalty paid for that year.

July 21, 1924, Twiford made an assignment to one T. A. Larson, which reads:

“ASSIGNMENT OF ROYALTY INTEREST IN THE BUCK CREEK OIL COMPANY, INCORPORATED IN WYOMING
“I, Harry G. Twiford, of Casper, Natrona County, Wyoming, assignor, for and in consideration of One ($1.00) Dollar and other valuable consideration to me in hand paid by T. A. Larson of Casper, Natrona County, Wyoming, assignee, do hereby assign, transfer, convey and set over unto the said T. A. Larson, of Casper, Natrona County, Wyoming, assignee, all my right, title and interest in my royalty and in my royalty contract in and with the Buck Creek Oil Company, incorporated in Wyoming, consisting of 1/9 of 19/20 of 12% % of the gross oil production taken from the following described land, to-wit:
Northeast quarter of the Northeast quarter (NE%NE%) of Section Eight (8), Township Thirty-five (35) N. Range Sixty-five (65) West of *470 the 6th P. M., County of Niobrara, State of Wyoming
and I hereby authorize and direct the Buck Creek Oil Company, incorporated in Wyoming, to recognize this assignment and from this date to make all royalty payments accruing under the royalty and royalty contract above described to T. A. Larson, assignee.
(Signed) Harry. G. Twiford
Assignor”

The assignor’s signature to the instrument was duly attested, its execution acknowledged by Twiford, and it was recorded July 23,1924, in the office of the County Clerk of Niobrara County, Wyoming.

On January 28th of the year following, Larson assigned to one M. I. Olson all of the former’s “right, title and interest in and to that certain assignment from Harry G. Twiford'to him under date of July 21, 1924.”

Meanwhile, during all this period and until some time in the year 1927 the lease to the Buck Creek Oil Company, above described, remained in force. In that year — the exact date does not appear in the record— the Buck Creek Oil Company abandoned and surrendered its lease.

Active work on the land in question, except as required by the United States lease, seems to have ceased for approximately ten years. Then and on March 16, 1937, M. I. Olson áforesaid transferred to C. H. Kyte, the appellant herein, “all of my royalty interest and ail of my oil and gas rights in and to” the property described in the Twiford assignment and set forth above, together with other lands.. The following June 15th of that year Twiford, his co-lessees on the United States lease, or their assignees, gave to the J. M. Huber Corporation an assignment of the aforesaid, govern *471 ment lease, together with an operating agreement upon the lands covered thereby. This contract with the J. M. Huber Corporation provided for a 7% per cent overriding royalty “of the gross oil and gas produced from” the lands here involved, after payment of the royalty due the -United States. This contract was not signed nor ratified either by Kyte or by M. I. Olson, except so far as the last mentioned party is concerned, as hereinafter indicated. Thereafter and during the month of March, 1938, M. I. Olson,, as the “owner and assignee of certain interests of Charles C. Williams, named as one of the lessees” in the lease from the United States aforesaid, ratified and. confirmed the J. M. Huber Corporation contract mentioned above. Subsequently that contract was assigned to the Minnelusa Oil Corporation, which “is now the sole assignee of all the interests of said J. M. Huber Corporation * * * and as such is now engaged in the development of the oil and gas resources therefrom and has deposited in escrow in the Lusk State Bank, the amounts alleged by it to be due thereunder to the lessees under the lease from the United States and their respective assignees, as directed by a prior order of this Court, to await a determination of the parties entitled thereto and the amount of their respective- interests in the said land, lease, royalties and escrowed moneys.”

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Bluebook (online)
111 P.2d 107, 56 Wyo. 464, 1941 Wyo. LEXIS 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/minnelusa-oil-corp-v-de-larm-wyo-1941.