Olivier v. Humble Oil & Refining Co.

282 F. Supp. 655, 29 Oil & Gas Rep. 253, 1968 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10036
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Louisiana
DecidedMarch 11, 1968
DocketCiv. A. No. 13496
StatusPublished

This text of 282 F. Supp. 655 (Olivier v. Humble Oil & Refining Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Olivier v. Humble Oil & Refining Co., 282 F. Supp. 655, 29 Oil & Gas Rep. 253, 1968 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10036 (E.D. La. 1968).

Opinion

COMISKEY, District Judge.

Nicholas D. Olivier, plaintiff, holds an overriding royalty in a lease wherein Humble Oil & Refining Company is named the lessee and Dr. Noah S. Cutrer is the lessor. The lease is dated December 19, 1953 and covers certain property in Plaquemines Parish, Louisiana, part of which property consists of 57.36 acres of land which is the area disputed in this case.

Four years before Humble got its lease from Cutrer on October 31, 1949, a lessor, referred to as the “Perez group”, leased the identical property to William Helis, now deceased, who in turn granted overriding royalties which are now held by William Helis, Jr., Elmo Laudumiey and Mrs. Lillian C. Stevens, Testamentary Executrix of the Succession of Dr. Noah S. Cutrer. In the latter part of 1958, lessee Humble and lessee William Helis (now known as the Estate of William G. Helis) entered into an operating agreement with the Gulf Oil Corporation wherein Humble contributed its lease, Helis contributed its lease (both covering the same property) and other leases held by these parties and named Gulf the operator. Gulf commenced drilling operations and completed a well on the disputed acreage on December 18, 1958 from which production has continued to date.

Plaintiff Olivier filed this suit against Humble for payments on his overriding royalty and Humble obtained an inter-pleader bringing in various parties. Accordingly, lessee, Estate of William G. Helis, and overriding royalty claimants William G. Helis, Jr., Elmo Laudumiey, and Mrs. Lillian C. Stevens, Testamentary Executrix of the Succession of Noah S. Cutrer were made parties, along with Gulf. This interpleader places before the court the two conflicting lessees, i. e., Humble and the Estate of William G. Helis, and the two sets of conflicting overriding royalty claimants, namely, plaintiff Olivier under the Humble lease and impleaded parties Elmo Laudumiey, William G. Helis, Jr. and Mrs. Lillian C. Stevens, Testamentary Executrix of Succession of Dr. Noah S. Cutrer under the Estate of William G. Helis lease. The dispute has been previously recognized to be which lease is superior, i. e., the lease to Humble or the lease to Estate of William G. Helis. To decide which lease is superior requires an examination of which lessor — Cutrer or the “Perez group” had title at the time the respective leases were granted.

The title of lessor, Dr. Noah S. Cutrer is based on his acquisition of the subject property by act under private signature dated December 27, 1938 from the Plaquemines Land Company registered in C.O.B. 103, folio 322 on May 16, 1941 in the Parish of Plaquemines.

It is undisputed that the “Perez group” acquired what title, if any, it had to grant its lease to Estate of William G. Helis in a tax sale held in the Parish of Plaque-mines on February 17, 1945 wherein the LaGrange Realty Company, Inc. bought the property for the unpaid 1943 state taxes. LaGrange Realty Company Inc. is the predecessor of the “Perez group” who appears as lessor to Helis. This tax sale was recorded on March 2,1945 in the records of the Clerk of Court for the Parish of Plaquemines, ex officio Register of Conveyances, at C.O.B. 114, folio 53.

On March 1, 1948, one day before the three year preemptive period expired during which period the property could be [657]*657redeemed1 by the tax debtor who appears as Mrs. Noah S. Cutrer, Dr. Noah S. Cutrer, the tax debtor’s husband, sought and obtained a redemption of the tax sale. The redemption recites the payment of back taxes, interest, and penalties and effectively redeemed the property for the tax debtor shown as Mrs. Noah S. Cutrer in the tax sale. While there is nothing in the record to show that Dr. Noah S. Cutrer was acting for his wife, there is in the record evidence that at this time Dr. and Mrs. Noah S. Cutrer were married, not judicially separated, and were presumptively living under the benefits of the community property laws of Louisiana, with Dr. Cutrer as head and master of the community.

As previously stated, the “Pere2; group” granted on October 31, 1949 a lease (known too as the Upper Realty Inc. lease) to William Helis and the rentals were regularly paid until exploration was commenced with the first well completed on December 18, 1958. Dr. Noah S. Cutrer, on the other hand, on December 19, 1953, presumably relying on the validity of the redemption of March 1, 1948, granted the conflicting lease (known too as the Cutrer lease) on the identical property to Humble. Humble in turn granted the overriding royalty which is the basis of plaintiff’s claim.

So that exploration could go forward, the operating agreement naming Gulf as operator took care of this conflict between conflicting lessees, namely Humble and Helis, but did not resolve the conflicting overriding royalties each lessee had granted. The operating agreement, rather, merely provided that each party to the agreement shall pay its own overriding royalties and presumably relegated the question of who should pay and who should receive overriding royalties to this day when finally the conflicting overriding royalty owners’ claims would be resolved. The following language is found in the operating agreement:

Paragraph XX
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
“(b) Each party hereto shall pay or arrange for the payment of all royalties, overriding royalties and other payments out of or measured by production attributable to the lease or leases contributed by such party to the Contract Area; however, the royalties, overriding royalties and other payments out of or measured by production payable under the leases covered hereby shall be borne by the parties hereto in the following manner:
Louisiana State Lease 195 Gulf ½

Helis ½

Noah S. Cutrer Lease and Upper Realty Inc. et al Lease Humble ⅚
Gulf Va
Helis Vi2
Murray Sawyer Smith Lease Humble All.”
* * * * * * * *

In July of 1958, Dr. Noah Cutrer and his co-owner, more than thirteen years after the tax sale to the “Pere2; group”, filed a suit in the State Court of Plaque-[658]*658mines Parish to annul the tax sale and cure the Cutrer title apparently convinced that Dr. Cutrer’s redemption on March 1,1948 was not too valid coupled with the fact that the tax title was still of record and certainly clouded Dr. Cutrer’s title. Probably that suit came too late, namely, more than five years, from the date of the recordation of the tax deed.2 The suit was never tried in regular fashion. Instead, Dr. Cutrer and his co-owner obtained a “quit-claim” 3 from all members of the “Perez group” to the contested property and then obtained a consent judgment on January 30, 1959 with the hope that this would perfect Dr. Cutrer’s title. This “quit-claim” and consent judgment therefore merged the outstanding tax title back into the chain of title on which Dr. Cutrer relies. However, this was the second time the “Perez group” tax title was merged back into the chain of title on which Dr. Cutrer relies. The first time was the redemption of the tax title by Dr. Cutrer on March 1. 1948.

Olivier demands payment of his overriding royalty from lessee Humble. William Helis, Jr., Elmo Laudumiey, and Mrs. Lillian C.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
282 F. Supp. 655, 29 Oil & Gas Rep. 253, 1968 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10036, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/olivier-v-humble-oil-refining-co-laed-1968.