Ohio Oil Co. v. Cox

198 So. 902, 196 La. 193, 1940 La. LEXIS 1164
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedNovember 4, 1940
DocketNo. 35782.
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 198 So. 902 (Ohio Oil Co. v. Cox) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ohio Oil Co. v. Cox, 198 So. 902, 196 La. 193, 1940 La. LEXIS 1164 (La. 1940).

Opinion

LAND, Justice.

Warren Cox is the owner of 60 acres of land in Webster Parish, described as the S.E. % of S.E. % and E. % of S.Wi % of S.E. 14 of Section. 23, .Township 21 North, Range 10 West. September 11, 1922, Warren Cox, the landowner, executed a mineral lease on the whole of this property to J. Y. Snyder for a term of three years, or until September 11, 1925. Tr. p. 62. February 19, 1924, this lease was transferred by J. Y. Snyder to The Ohio Oil Company. Tr. p. 67.- In October of 1925, Cox, and others then owning the minerals under sales out of Cox, executed an extension of the oil and gas lease in favor of The Ohio Oil Company for a period of five years, from September 11, 1925, to September 11, 1930, and The Ohio Oil-Company obligated itself immediately toi *197 begin the drilling of a well to the depth of 4300 feet. Tr. pp. 67 to 71.

The well was begun on November 21, 1925, and was drilled to a depth of 5,957 feet, when it was abandoned as a dry hole on September 16, 1926. Tr. p. 248. A release was executed by The Ohio Oil Company on August 13, 1929. Tr. p. 249.

The Ohio Oil Company acquired, from 1934 to 1936, oil, gas. and mineral leases from all of the claimants to the mineral rights and from Warren Cox, the landowner (Tr. pp. 80 to 122 inclusive), and thereafter secured a pooling agreement from all of said mineral claimants and Warren Cox, the landowner (Tr. pp. 123 to 141 inclusive), but in this pooling agreement it was expressly stipulated that the rights of all parties thereto were reserved to contest the rights of any adverse claimants to the minerals. Tr. p. 126. Under these leases and pooling agreement, The Ohio Oil Company commenced drilling operations for a well which was completed as a gas distillate well on November 6, 1937 (Tr. p. 250), and thereafter, on January 28, 1938, completed another gas distillate well thereon. These two wells have been producing oil commercially ever since. Tr. p. 251.

Thinking that the rights between the mineral claimants on the one hand and Warren Cox, the landowner, on the other, were adverse, The Ohio Oil Company provoked this concursus, depositing in the registry of the court some $5,599 for distribution among the claimants. In response to this concursus the several mineral claimants advanced their contentions to their respective minerals (Tr. pp. 9 to 49) and Warren Cox, the landowner, advanced his (Tr. pp. 50 to 60), claiming that the several servitudes, under which the mineral claimants held, had prescribed because of non-use for more than ten years. Tr. p. 60, paragraph 33.

Pursuant to these issues, the case was tried. All of the facts were stipulated (Tr. pp. 248 to 249) excepting such as were supported by documentary evidence and, as to these, the documents themselves were introduced.

The case was submitted to the trial court on briefs and the trial judge prepared an opinion, in which he concluded that the prescription urged by Warren Cox, the landowner, had been suspended by minority of some of the co-owners in each of the servitudes created by the landowner; that, consequently, there should be judgment for the mineral claimants. Tr. pp. 233-242. Judgment was, in accordance with this opinion, entered (Tr. pp. ¿43-245), and this appeal was brought here by Warren Cox, the landowner.

While it is true that Warren Cox created the servitude to Glen E. McFadin on September 21, 1922 (Tr. p. 142), it is also true that the property was then' under lease to one J. Y. Snyder and the minerals sold to McFadin were sold subject to said lease; that, subsequently, Snyder assigned same to The Ohio Oil Company, and that company commenced drilling operations under its said lease on November 21, 1925, and drilled a well to a depth of 5,957 feet, at which depth it was abandoned on September 16,1926, as a dry hole; that the said depth was such that the well was- consid *199 ered at that time a deep test, and was drilled below the then presently producing horizons, and was drilled in good faith by The Ohio Oil Company with reasonable expectation that said well would be a producer. Tr. pp. 248, 249.

This operation interrupted the running of prescription then accruing against the claims of the mineral claimants. Lee v. Giauque, 154 La. 491, 97 So. 669; Keebler v. Seubert, 167 La. 901, 120 So. 591; Palmer Corporation v. Moore, 171 La. 774, 132 So. 229; Arent v. Hunter, 171 La. 1059, 133 So. 157; Louisiana Petroleum Co. v. Broussard, 172 La. 613, 135 So. 1; Superior Oil Producing Company v. Leckelt, 189 La. 972, 181 So. 462; Lynn v. Harrington, 193 La. 877, 192 So. 517.

In their answers filed to the interpleader suit brought by The Ohio Oil Company, defendant R. O. Roy claims one-sixth (1/6) interest in the minerals in the land, and defendant John P. Wemple, tutor for .the minor, Imogen Mading, claims one forty-eighth (1/48) mineral interest therein (Tr. p. 19) ; and both defendants assert that the respective mineral interest so claimed is a part of the mineral servitude created by the landowner, Warren Cox, oh September 21, 1922, in favor of Glen E. McFadin when, under said date, Warren Cox sold to McFadin an undivided one-half (%) interest in the minerals in and under the sixty acres, Tr. p. 142.

The defense relied on by Roy and by the tutor of the minor is that when Warren Cox, the landowner, sold to Glen E. McFadin a one-half interest in the minerals in the land, on September 21, 1922, he created a mineral servitude, indivisible in its nature, and covered the sixty acres of land as a whole. That said mineral servitude by mesne conveyances passed out of the said Glen E. McFadin and is now owned by the following parties in the following proportions:

R. O. Roy................. 1/6 M. I.
John' P. Wemple, Tutor for Imogen Mading.......... 1/48 M. I.
W. J. Hobby Jr., a minor.... 21/256 M. I.
Harry E. Oliver........... 27/256 M. I.
J. C. O’Brien, administrator of, the estate of Margaret Mary O’Brien and Caroline Ann O’Brien........ 1/12 M. I.
Edward L. Wagon, tutor for
Edward C. Wagon....... 1/48 M. I.
Edward L. Wagon, individually .................... 1/48 M. I.
Total .................128/256 M. I.

representing the whole of the original servitude covering one-half of the minerals. ^

R. O. Roy acquired his one-sixth (1/6) interest out of the original servitude from Glen E. McFadin direct, under date of November 16, 1923. Tr. 'p. 148.

The minor, Imogen Mading, acquired her interest in the servitude in the following manner: Glen E. McFadin sold to J. P. Evans and H. E. Oliver, one-third (1/3) of the minerals in the sixty acres on December 4, 1922 (Tr. p. 143), and J. P. Evans and H. E. Oliver on November 14, 1923, sold a 1/48 mineral interest in the land to A. D. Mading (Tr. p.. 146); *201 A. D. Mading was then married to Imogen Wemple and the interest so acquired fell into the community existing between them. Tr. p. 254.

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Bluebook (online)
198 So. 902, 196 La. 193, 1940 La. LEXIS 1164, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ohio-oil-co-v-cox-la-1940.