Patton v. Frost Lumber Industries, Inc.

147 So. 33, 176 La. 916, 1933 La. LEXIS 1625
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 30, 1933
DocketNo. 31356.
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 147 So. 33 (Patton v. Frost Lumber Industries, Inc.) 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
Patton v. Frost Lumber Industries, Inc., 147 So. 33, 176 La. 916, 1933 La. LEXIS 1625 (La. 1933).

Opinion

ODOM, Justice.

The plaintiff, Patton, owns the N. E. % of N. W. Vi, Sec. 32, T. 20 N. R. 3 East, which he purchased from Frost-Johnson Lumber Company on August 10, 1918. The other plaintiff owns the N. E. % of the S. E. %, Sec. 29, same township and range, • which he acquired by purchase from H. L. Pace on September 9, 1926, Pace having acquired the same from Frost-Johnson Lumber Company on October 6, 1919.

Patton is now and has been in peaceable possession of the property since the day he purchased it. McLeod has held possession since he purchased from Pace, and Pace held possession from the day he purchased from Frost-Johnson to the day he sold to McLeod.

Plaintiffs allege that they are the sole owners of the land above described, together with the oil, gas, and other minerals beneath its surface; that whereas Frost-Johnson Lumber Company, their author in title in the deed whereby it parted with title to the lands, did not sell, but reserved for itself and assigns *919 all the oil, gas, and other minerals in and under the lands, such reservation amounted to nothing more than a servitude upon the land for the purpose of exploring it for such minerals, and that, inasmuch as neither the Frost-Johnson Lumber Company nor its assigns has explored, or attempted to explore, their lands for the purpose of reducing such minerals to possession, and more than ten years having elapsed since the reservation was made, the servitude has prescribed.

They allege further that in 1920 the Frost Lumber Industries, successors to Frost-Johnson Lumber Company and the Federal Petroleum Company, sold .the gas and gas rights in all of said land to the Union Power Company, which in turn assigned said gas rights to the Interstate Natural Gas Company, and that each of said acts of transfer is recorded in the notarial records of Union parish where the land is situated, and are clouds upon their title.

They pray for judgment recognizing them to be the owners of the oil, gas, and other minerals in and under said lands; that their plea of prescription be maintained and for cancellation of said reservation and all such contracts and assignments relating to the oil and gas as may have been made by Frost-Johnson or its assigns.

Defendants in answer set up that the reservation of the minerals made in the deeds by Frost-Johnson was not intended to be, and did not create, a servitude on the lands, but was merely a reservation to protect a servitude on the lands which Frost-Johnson had created thereon in favor of the Federal Petroleum Company, previous to the date on which the lands were sold to plaintiffs. They further alleged that the servitude thus created on the lands was exercised within a period, of ten years, and was then being exercised,, and therefore not prescribed.

Plaintiffs’ demands were rejected by the-trial court, and they appealed.

1. The Frost-Johnson Lumber Company-owned approximately 30,000 acres of land in-townships 20 and 21, ranges 3 and 4 east, in. Union parish, including the lands now owned-by these plaintiffs. The lands were not in a-solid block, but formed one continuous tract, so that one could go from any portion of the-tract to any other portion of it without passing over the lands of another. Lee v. Giauque, 154 La. 491, 97 So. 669.

On January 12, 1917, prior to the date on-which Frost-Johnson sold the lands now owned by these plaintiffs, it established by convention a mineral servitude on all the-lands it owned, including that now owned by-plaintiffs, in favor of the Federal Petroleum. Company. On December 23, 1920, the Federal Petroleum Company, in conjunction with the Frost-Johnson Lumber Company,' or its assigns, conveyed to the Union Power Company the gas and gas rights to the same land, and in turn the Union Power Company assigned the same to the Interstate Natural Gas Company, the present owner.

Plaintiffs in their pleadings make no mention of the servitude created by Frost-Johnson in favor of the Federal Petroleum Company on January 12, 1917, before they acquired their -lands. The servitude they refer to is one alleged to have been created by the reservation made by Frost-Johnson in its deed to them, which is as follows:

*921 “The grantor does not sell but reserves for 'itself and assigns, all of the oil, gas and other minerals and mineral rights, whether metalie ■or non-metalie, in and under the lands described herein, with the perpetual right of .ingress and egress to and from said land for the purpose of drilling, exploring and mining and in every way operating for such minerals -and removing the same.”

Then follow stipulations with reference to rights of way, buildings, derricks, etc., and .finally the following:

“This sale is also made subject to all the 'terms, conditions and rights in a certain operating contract of date of Jan. 12, 1917, between Frost-Johnson Lbr. Co. of Missouri, the Frost-Johnson Lumber Company of Texas •and the Union Saw Mill Company of Arkansas -of the one part, and the Republic Production Company of Texas and the Federal Petroleum ■Company of Louisiana of the other part.”

The “operating contract” referred to was ■entered into on the same day that Frost-■Johnson created the servitude in favor of the Federal Petroleum Company and was attached to that instrument, but not recorded "with it.

Mineral servitudes may be established by reservations such as the above, but, in view of the second paragraph quoted, it is •clear that Frost-Johnson, plaintiffs’ vendor, ■did not intend by that reservation to establish a servitude, but to protect the one already established. In fact, it could not, if it had so intended, create one in favor of itself to the prejudice of the one it had theretofore granted. Therefore the servitude which now covers plaintiffs’ lands, if any, is the one created thereon by Frost-Johnson pri- or to the date on which he sold to plaintiffs. That is the one which defendants claim they have exercised by drilling.

The servitude created by Frost-Johnson Lumber Company on January 12, 1917, in favor of the Federal Petroleum Company, and which has passed by mesne conveyances to the present owners, covered this entire 30,000-acre tract. Every 40-acre subdivision of it, including the lands now owned by plaintiffs, was incumbered by that servitude the moment it became effective between the grantor and the grantee. From that moment the grantee and its assigns were vested with the absolute right to develop for minerals all or any part of the land. The owner of the servitude had ten years in which' to exercise its right. If not exercised within that time, the right or servitude was lost. If exercised within that time by exploring for and producing minerals, the servitude was perpetuated, at least for so long a time as used.

The owners of this servitude did exercise it by drilling and producing gas within the ten-year period. While no well was ever drilled on the particular land owned by these plaintiffs, yet at least ten producing gas wells have been drilled on other portions of this large continuous tract, eight of which within ten years from the date on which the Federal Petroleum Company acquired its servitude on January 12, 1917. The nearest producing well to plaintiffs’ property is approximately three miles. The others are from four to ten miles away.

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Bluebook (online)
147 So. 33, 176 La. 916, 1933 La. LEXIS 1625, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patton-v-frost-lumber-industries-inc-la-1933.