Peter Fox Brewing Co. v. Sohio Petroleum Co.

189 F. Supp. 743, 14 Oil & Gas Rep. 710, 1958 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4364
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedApril 25, 1958
DocketNo. 54 C 586
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 189 F. Supp. 743 (Peter Fox Brewing Co. v. Sohio Petroleum Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Peter Fox Brewing Co. v. Sohio Petroleum Co., 189 F. Supp. 743, 14 Oil & Gas Rep. 710, 1958 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4364 (N.D. Ill. 1958).

Opinion

CAMPBELL, Chief Judge.

It is clear from the complaint, from the copious briefs filed by both parties, and from the argument of counsel, that the legal issues presented by this case are of considerable complexity.

In Count I of their complaint in equity, plaintiffs pray that the agreement of August 20, 1943, be modified and altered, as of October 1, 1947, to eliminate the fixed per-well deduction as to all wells whether operating or not. They also pray for such other relief as in equity shall deem meet.

In Count II, at law, plaintiffs pray that judgment be entered in their favor in the amount of $28,520, representing fixed' per-well deductions retained by defendants in respect of wells which had been plugged.

The parties have filed a stipulation of fact, with the declared intention of submitting certain issues of law for determination at this stage.

I have read the stipulation and I have read the briefs, and I confess that I am at a loss to see just what issues of law have been submitted for my determination at this stage.

Plaintiff, Tek Oil Corporation, states those issues to be:

(a) That the compulsory unitization of the assigned properties pursuant to the Oklahoma Statute has, by operation of law, modified the agreements between the parties to the extent necessary to make them compatible with the conditions of unitized operation;

(b) That the provision for monthly per-well deductions contained in the Agreements is incompatible with unitized operation and, therefore, became inapplicable upon the creation of the Unit; and

(e) That the plaintiffs are, therefore entitled to the recovery of the amounts of all the monthly per-well deductions made by the defendant [746]*746since the effective date of unitization, and to the reformation of the Agreements in accordance with the intent of the Oklahoma statute.

Plaintiffs Schmitz, Northern Trust Company, and Dangler state:

“The main question to be determined is whether or not Section 4(b) of the Agreement of August 20, 1943, and a similar provision in the Agreement of February 15, 1944, providing for deduction from the overriding royalty interest has been superseded by the creation and the operation of the West Edmond Hun-ton Lime unit * * * ”

The defendants, on the other hand, say that:

“the parties hereto have filed a stipulation of facts so that the Court may make a determination of the preliminary question whether the plan of unitization signed by the plaintiffs or their predecessors precludes them from maintaining this action.”

Whether defendants’ statement of the issue presented at this stage is accurate or not, (and I should say here that in view of the length and complexity of the arguments presented in the brief I would be inclined to doubt this), the fact remains that, on the stipulation of facts filed in this case, that issue and that issue alone can be determined at this time. There is not enough before me in your stipulation to determine any of the other things referred to.

The stipulation of fact barely recites the salient features of the agreements of August 20, 1943, and February 15, 1944; it states the history which brings the various parties into the case; it states that a plan of unitization involving plaintiff’s leasehold interest became effective October 1, 1947; and finally, the stipulation states that since October 1, 1947, Sohio Petroleum Company has computed payments accruing to the overriding royalty interest now owned by the plaintiffs on the basis of the quantities of oil and gas allocated, in accordance with the plan, to the tracts of land that are subject to said overriding royalty interest, by deducting $200 per month for each quarter-quarter section or tract of approximately forty acres and that the computation was continued as to those tracts on which wells have been abandoned.

On the basis of this stipulation and on a reading of the Oklahoma statute and of the plan adopted thereunder, I am prepared to hold:

That there is nothing in the statute or the plan which requires that a fixed per-well deduction be transmuted in a fixed per-tract deduction. The first paragraph of Section 287.9 of the statute (Title 52, Oklahoma Statutes, 1951), provides:

“Property rights, leases, contracts, and all other rights and obligations shall be regarded as amended and modified to the extent necessary to conform to the provisions and requirements of this Act and to any valid and applicable plan of unitization or order of the Commission made and adopted pursuant hereto, but otherwise to remain in full force and effect.”

Defendants argue that this provision requires that a fixed per-well deduction be transmuted into a fixed per-tract deduction when read with the following paragraphs of Section 287.9.

Paragraph 4:

“Operations carried on under and in accordance with the plan of unit-ization shall be regarded and considered as a fulfillment of and compliance with all of the provisions, covenants, and conditions, express or implied, of the several oil and gas mining leases upon lands included with the unit area, or other contracts pertaining to the development thereof, insofar as said leases or other contracts may relate to the common source of supply or portion thereof included in the unit area. Wells drilled or operated on any part of the unit area no matter where located shall for all purposes be regarded as wells drilled on each sepa-
[747]*747rately-owned tract within such unit area.”

This provision is clearly intended to relieve the person whose duty it is to drill wells from forfeiture for failure to perform a pre-unitization obligation to drill. To interpretet this provision as requiring that a pre-unitization fixed per-well deduction be transmuted into a per-tract deduction is in my opinion absurd.

With reference to the last portion of this provision, defendants say:

“Realizing the importance of wells in applying the provisions of leases and other contracts (such as the agreement under which plaintiffs’ claim) the Legislature further provided that so long as wells are being drilled or operated anywhere within the unit area, each tract within the unit area shall be deemed conclusively to have a well located thereon.”

There is no reference to a “well” in this provision. The provision says:

“Wells driven or operated on any part of the unit area * * * shall be regarded as wells drilled on each separately-owned tract.”

It seems to me that the Legislature of Oklahoma at least intended that each tract should be deemed to have as many wells drilled thereon as is necessary to discharge the obligations of the lessee. The obligations of the lessee might be to drill two or more wells in each tract.

Obviously, to protect him effectively, this provision must envisage that as many wells will be deemed to have been drilled on the tract as it is his obligation to drill. In fact, the wording of the provision is that all the wells drilled elsewhere in the unit will be deemed to have been drilled on the tract.

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Related

Tri-County Electric Ass'n, Inc. v. City of Gillette
525 P.2d 3 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1974)
Peter Fox Brewing Company v. Sohio Petroleum Company
296 F.2d 274 (Seventh Circuit, 1961)

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189 F. Supp. 743, 14 Oil & Gas Rep. 710, 1958 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4364, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peter-fox-brewing-co-v-sohio-petroleum-co-ilnd-1958.