Pace Lake Gas Co. v. United Carbon Co.

148 So. 699, 177 La. 529, 1933 La. LEXIS 1718
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 29, 1933
DocketNo. 32269.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 148 So. 699 (Pace Lake Gas Co. v. United Carbon Co.) 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
Pace Lake Gas Co. v. United Carbon Co., 148 So. 699, 177 La. 529, 1933 La. LEXIS 1718 (La. 1933).

Opinion

OVERTON, Justice.

This suit was brought by plaintiff as the owner of certain lands, located in the parish of Ouachita, for the cancellation and erasure of the inscription of an oil and gas lease, affecting an undivided half interest in and to the minerals in the land.

The lease sought to be canceled is dated May 2, 1924, and was granted for the term of five years to Oscar Nelson by Myron II. Spades and others. Nelson assigned his rights to the United Carbon Company, the defendant herein. The reason alleged for demanding the cancellation of the lease is that the lease has expired by its own limitation.

There was in the suit, while it was pending in the trial court, another demand, calling for a decree' annulling the reservation of an undivided half interest in the mineral rights in the land, under which reservation the lease was made, and there was also in that court a,plea that the mineral reservation under which the lease was granted was extinguished by the prescription, liberandi causa, of ten years.

*531 The demand of nullity and the plea of prescription of ten years were decided adversely to plaintiff below, and have since been abandoned by it. Therefore, of plaintiff’s original demand, there remains only the demand for the cancellation of the lease on the ground that it has expired by its own terms.

In outlining the case, it is necessary to go back of the date on which the lease, sought to be canceled, was granted; that is, back of May 2,1924. On February 26, 1918, Myron H. Spades and several others of the Spades family were the full owners of the lands leased. On that date Spades and his associates executed an oil and gas lease on the lands here involved and other lands, to W. B. Clarke, for a period of five years, subject to the payment of certain rentals. Clarke assigned the lease to the Standard Oil Company. This company paid the rentals until February 26, 1923, on which date the lease expired, and then executed a release of all - of its rights thereunder.

On August 1,1919, while the lease to Clarke was still in force, Spades and his associates sold to Abe Arent the land, here involved, the deed containing the following reservation, to wit:

It is “agreed and understood that the said Myron H. Spades and his associate vendors save and except from this sale and transfer the entire mineral rights until the expiration of the lease to W. B. Clarke and his assigns, which terminates February 26, 1923, and if nothing develops to continue the lease to W. B. Clarke and his assigns, then the mineral rights are to be owned by said Abe Arent and his assigns and Myron H. Spades and associate vendors and their assigns, in the proportion of one-half each.”

When the Standard Oil Company surrendered its rights under the lease to Clarke, granted by Spades and his associates, Arent and Spades and his associates became, by virtue of the foregoing reservation, the owners of the mineral rights in the proportions of one-half to Arent, who had'acquired the surface of the land, and one-half to Spades and his associates.

Matters remained in this situation until May 2, 1924, when Spades and his associates executed an oil and gas lease, in favor of Oscar Nelson, to run for a period of five years, on the payment of delay rentals in lieu of drilling, covering their one-half interest in the mineral rights in the land that they had sold to Arent, and also the entire mineral rights in.other lands. Nelson assigned this lease to defendant on March 28, 1925. This is the lease that it is sought to cancel. On January 23, 1926, without mention of the lease to Nelson, although it was of record and still in force, Spades and his associates sold the half interest in the minerals, reserved by them, to Arent; the former having, when the reservation was made, sold the land to the same vendee. On January 19, 1928, Arent conveyed the land in full ownership to plaintiff, of which company he was president.

On February 8, 1929, while defendant’s lease, acquired from Nelson, covering a half interest in the lands, conveyed to plaintiff, was in force, defendant commenced a well on a noncontiguous tract, in which plaintiff had no interest, but which was covered by *533 the same lease as that covering plaintiff’s property, namely, the lease by Spades and his associates to Nelson, of date May 2,1924. Approximately six weeks later defendant brought in a well on the noncontiguous tract, capable of producing commercial gas in large quantities, but did not withdraw any gas therefrom until March 12, 1930, which was nearly a year after the five years, specified as the term of the lease, had elapsed.

On March 2, 1929, while the foregoing well was being drilled, and while the lease to Nelson, acquired by defendant, was still in effect, defendant wrote Arent, who was plaintiff’s president, that it had located a well on the land, acquired by plaintiff, in which plaintiff, by the deed to Arent and by the one from Arent to it, had a one-half interest in the mineral rights, asking plaintiff for its approval of the location, and for its assistance in drilling the well. This approval and assistance was refused. Some further correspondence passed between the parties regarding the matter, in which it appears that plaintiff objected to the drilling of the well on its land. Notwithstanding plaintiff’s objection, defendant undertook to drill. Defendant’s persistence resulted in plaintiff’s filing suit for a writ of injunction to restrain, defendant from proceeding with the drilling of the well, the suit being based on the ground that defendant’s lease was invalid, and on the ground of plaintiff’s objection, resting upon its interest in the minerals, to the drilling of the well. The injunction issued and, after a hearing had, judgment was rendered perpetuating it, on the ground, it is conceded, of plaintiff’s objection to the drilling of the well, coupled with its interest in the mineral rights. An appeal was taken from the judgment to this court, but was dismissed by defendant with the consent of plaintiff. This dismissal made the judgment of the district court final, and, as observed by the trial judge, no matter what may be the result of this appeal, defendant stands enjoined from drilling on the land.

This judgment has given rise to two pleas of res adjudicaba, one of which was filed by defendant and is directed against plaintiff’s attack of nullity on the lease, held by defendant. Since the trial court sustained defendant’s plea of res judicata, and since plaintiff has acquiesced in that ruling, defendant’s plea need not be considered, for it has passed out of the case. The second plea-was filed by plaintiff, and is directed to the support of its allegation that defendant has no right to go upon its lands, and explore for gas or oil, or to produce either therefrom, over its objection. This plea was sustained by the trial judge, although he expressed doubt as to the correctness of the judgment upon which the plea rests, by reason of the ruling of this court in Clark v. Tensas Delta Land Co., 172 La. 913, 136 So. 1.

The plea of res judicata does not depend upon the correctness of the judgment on which the plea is based, for the power to decide includes the power to decide incorrectly as well as correctly. Such being true, it is not important here whether the injunction suit was decided correctly or not. Suc. of Whitner, 165 La. 769, 116 So. 180; Barbarich v. Meyer, 154 La. 325, 97 So.

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Bluebook (online)
148 So. 699, 177 La. 529, 1933 La. LEXIS 1718, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pace-lake-gas-co-v-united-carbon-co-la-1933.