Mondakota Gas Co. v. Reed

244 F. Supp. 327, 1964 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8210
CourtDistrict Court, D. Montana
DecidedAugust 3, 1964
DocketNos. 354-356
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 244 F. Supp. 327 (Mondakota Gas Co. v. Reed) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Montana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mondakota Gas Co. v. Reed, 244 F. Supp. 327, 1964 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8210 (D. Mont. 1964).

Opinion

MURRAY, Chief Judge.

These actions, all involving similar issues, are pending before the court on various motions, and objections to interrogatories. The plaintiff in each case has filed a motion to modify pretrial orders entered on October 23, 1963; and defendants have pending Motions for Bonds for Costs, Motions for Summary Judgment and objections to plaintiffs’ interrogatories. All of the pending motions and objections have been treated together in the briefs of the parties, and the court finds that its ruling on the de[329]*329fendants’ Motions for Summary Judgment will dispose of all pending matters.

All of the actions were commenced in the District Court of the Sixteenth Judicial District of the State of Montana, in and for the County of Fallon, with the filing by the respective plaintiffs of short form complaints to quiet title, in which they alleged they were owners and holders of certain oil and gas leases, operating agreements and gas interests covering lands in Fallon County, and alleging the defendants claim or may claim an interest in said lands adverse to the ownership of the plaintiffs, and praying that their title to said interests in the lands be quieted. The cases were removed to this court on the ground of diversity of citizenship.

In each of the cases, defendant Shell Oil Company has filed a separate answer. In Cause No. 354, the defendants Collins G. Reed, Fidelity Gas Company and Montana-Dakota Utilities Company have jointly filed a separate answer. In cases Nos. 355 and 356 defendants Fidelity Gas Company and Montana-Dakota Utilities Company have jointly filed separate answers. In their answers defendants either deny that plaintiffs are the owners and holders of the interests described in the respective complaints and entitled to possession thereof, or allege that whatever interests the respective plaintiffs may have, they are subject to and subordinate to the interests of the defendants. The answers then go on and allege the various instruments and documents under which defendants claim their interests described in the complaints.

In a pretrial memorandum, the plaintiffs submitted a list of the documents and instruments of title under which they claim their interests in the lands in question. Subsequently, by stipulation, copies of the various documents under which defendants claim their interests were submitted to the court in support of the motions for summary judgment.

From the list of documents upon which plaintiffs indicate they rely to establish their claimed interests in the lands involved, it is apparent that each of the plaintiffs in the instant action either was a plaintiff, or is a successor in interest to a plaintiff, in the case of Cedar Creek Oil and Gas Company, et al., v. Fidelity Gas Company, et al., in which case judgment was entered in this court on July 2, 1956, and affirmed by the Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, December 12, 1957, Cedar Creek Oil and Gas Co. v. Fidelity Gas Co., 249 F.2d 277. The decision in the Cedar Creek case upheld the validity of the Fidelity Operating Agreements, and Gas Purchase Agreements, which are the instruments under which defendants in the present case claim-their interests. It also held in effect that the interests of the defendants under those instruments were superior to any interests which the plaintiffs might have had. Thus, it would seem that the Cedar Creek case is res judicata of the plaintiffs’ claims in the present actions.

Plaintiffs here in effect concede this but contend their present claims are based on breaches of the Fidelity Operating Agreements arising subsequent to the decision in the Cedar Creek case. Plaintiffs’ contentions in the present cases are stated in their pretrial memorandum as follows:

“Plaintiffs contend, however, that while the judgment in the Cedar Creek case determined the rights as between the parties to said action at the time of its rendition, it is not res judicata as to the rights of these plaintiffs which may have been breached subsequent to the date of said judgment or in the event of changed conditions subsequent thereto. * * *
“Plaintiffs concede that their lands may be bound during the exploratory period under the Fidelity Operating Agreement, but that subsequent to that period they were either entitled to a share of the production or to a release of their lands from the provisions of the agreement. Plaintiffs, therefore, contend that because of the failure to either unitize the lands below a depth of [330]*3302,000 feet or to pay the plaintiff from the production the operating agreement has been abandoned in- , sofar as these lands are concerned. Since the substance of the decision in the Cedar Creek case is to the effect that the lands may be bound during the exploratory and development period, that because of this failure to either unitize the lands below a depth of 2,000 feet or to pay plaintiffs for production, it becomes clear that the Cedar Creek case is not res judicata.”

The court cannot agree with this conclusion of plaintiffs that the Cedar Creek case is not res judicata of the present claims. These claims are based on the alleged failure of defendants to either unitize the properties under the Fidelity Operating Agreements, or release the property from the agreement, as provided in Section 30 of the Agreement, and the alleged failure to operate the properties and distribute the proceeds of production as a unit until a formal unit agreement had been consummated, as required by Section 38 of the Agreement. Because of those alleged breaches of paragraphs 30 and 38 of the Fidelity Operating Agreements, plaintiffs here seek to terminate that agreement. In the Cedar Creek case, the plaintiffs likewise sought to terminate the Fidelity Operating Agreements. In other words, in both the instant cases and the Cedar Creek case, plaintiffs had as their objective the termination of the Fidelity Operating Agreement, although the grounds for termination urged in the present cases are different grounds than were urged in the Cedar Creek case. A prior judgment is conclusive upon the issues made or tendered, and as far as those issues are concerned, the judgment is conclusive of everything that might have been urged for or against them. Brennan v. Jones, 101 Mont. 550, 55 P.2d 697; Swaim v. Redeen, 101 Mont. 521, 55 P.2d 1; Sherlock v. Greaves, 106 Mont. 206, 76 P.2d 87; Dern v. Tanner, 96 F.2d 401 (CA. 9). The operation of this rule as it applies to this case is illustrated by the following quotation from the American Law Institute’s Restatement of the Law on Judgments, Section 63(d):

“d. Successive actions to cancel a contract or deed. Where an action is brought for the cancellation of a contract or deed, and the plaintiff in his complaint alleges certain grounds for cancellation, and at the trial he is unable to prove these grounds and a verdict and judgment are given for the defendant, the plaintiff is precluded from maintaining a subsequent action for cancellation of the contract or deed, although in that action he alleges other grounds for cancellation not alleged in the first action although then existing.”

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Bluebook (online)
244 F. Supp. 327, 1964 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8210, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mondakota-gas-co-v-reed-mtd-1964.