Phillips Petroleum Co. v. Williams

158 F.2d 723, 1946 U.S. App. LEXIS 3274
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedDecember 27, 1946
Docket11511
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 158 F.2d 723 (Phillips Petroleum Co. v. Williams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Phillips Petroleum Co. v. Williams, 158 F.2d 723, 1946 U.S. App. LEXIS 3274 (5th Cir. 1946).

Opinions

HUTCHESON, Circuit Judge.

Brought for an accounting as to, and recovery of, royalties due plaintiffs as lessors under the gas' royalties provision1 of an oil and gas lease,2 this is another of the growing number of suits against Phillips Petroleum Company3 arising out of controversies as to amounts due as royalties for gas taken under leases in the Panhapdle Texas field.

The claim primarily put forward by plaintiff was: that, within the meaning of [725]*725the royalties provision, the gas was “used off the premises,” it was not “used in the manufacture of gasoline; ” that the royalty due, therefore, was “one-eighth of the gross proceeds” and not “one-eighth * * * at the prevailing market rate for gas; ” and that the defendant owed plaintiffs a duty to account to them fully and to pay them one-eighth of the gross proceeds of the gas taken under lease from plaintiffs.

There was an alternative claim that if the gas taken should be regarded as “used in the manufacture of gasoline” and the royalty payment of “one-eighth of the prevailing market rate” as applicable, plaintiffs were entitled to recover the fair and reasonable value, which they alleged was 6^ per m.c.f., since, as plaintiffs alleged, during the period in question there had been no prevailing market price.

The defendant, alleging that none of the gas was sold at the mouth of the wells or used off the premises, but all of it was used “in the manufacture of gasoline” within the meaning of the royalty covenant in the lease, moved to dismiss the claim for an accounting and recovery on the basis of the gross proceeds of the gas. That motion was denied, and defendant by answer asserted several defenses: (1) A denial that any of the gas was used off the premises, and an affirmation that all of it was used for the manufacture of gasoline, some going directly to the gasoline plant and some being exchanged for equivalent amounts of gas which were so used; (2) a denial that during the period in question there had been no prevailing market rate for gas and that the value of the gas was 6$ per m.c.f. or any other such sum; (3) that plaintiffs and defendant had agreed in writing that the royalty for the gas taken should be computed upon the market value of such gas at the mouth of the well, determined in the manner set forth in the division and transfer orders, that all gas had been accounted for scrupulously in accordance with the provisions of those orders, and that there was now tendered to plaintiffs the amounts due in accordance with their provisions; (4) the statutes of limitations as to all royalties accrued more than four years prior to August 13, 1943.

Owners of fractional royalty interests under the lease intervened on the side of plaintiffs, putting forward substantially the same claims and taking substantially the same positions, and defendant replied substantially as it had done to plaintiffs’ claims. Plaintiffs and intervenors filed full replications, setting out why the gross proceeds provision of the lease rather than the prevailing market rate provision applied, and those plaintiffs and intervenors, who had signed division orders alleging that they were without consideration, denied their binding force.

As to the defense of limitation, they all alleged that fraud and concealment on defendant’s part had tolled the statute, while plaintiffs, whose funds had been impounded, pleaded the agreement for and the impounding as preventing the running of the statute.

A jury was demanded by and allowed defendant over the objection of plaintiffs. The appointment of a master was requested and allowed plaintiffs over objection of defendant. Defendant’s theory that the prevailing market rate clause of the royalty provision was controlling was rejected, and, over its objections, the cause was extensively heard before the master and submitted on special issues4 to the jury on plaintiffs’ [726]*726theory that the gross proceeds clause of the royalty provision controlled. Judgment was entered for plaintiffs and intervenors on the verdict of the jury in the aggregate sum of $155,331.50, and defendant has appealed.

Appellant’s main and primary contention here is that the applicable royalty provision of the lease was that obligating the defendant to pay as royalty one-eighth of the prevailing market price, and that the record having been made, the verdict returned, and the judgment entered on the entirely erroneous theory advanced by plaintiff that the applicable provision was that for payment of gross proceeds, the judgment must be reversed with directions to enter judgment for defendant or for trial anew.

Subordinate contentions urged by appellant are: (1) That the payments made by defendant directly to intervenors -and into the impounded account for the benefit of plaintiffs, on the basis prescribed in the division and transfer orders, constituted full and final payment of all amounts then due; (2) that, assuming that the district court correctly construed the royalty covenant, the evidence does not support the jury’s finding; (3) that the court erred in admitting the master’s report as evidence for the consideration of the jury; (4) that the statute of limitations bars the claims of intervenors for gas produced more than four years prior to the filing of their interventions; and (5) that plaintiffs were not entitled to recover interest on royalties held to be due and unpaid.

Appellees do not deny that the gas in question or its equivalent received in a swap was carried to defendant’s gasoline extracting plants where the gasoline was extracted from it and the residue made use of for other purposes. They insist, however: That the expression in the lease “use of gas for manufacture of gasoline” has the special and peculiar meaning, of “used only; ” that this meaning limits its application to situations where the gas is used only in the manufacture of gasoline, that is where, after the gasoline is extracted, the residue is popped off or wasted into the air; and that where, as here, after the gasoline is extracted, the residue is applied to other uses, it may not be said that the gas was “used” in the manufacture of gasoline within the meaning of the clause.

A careful examination of the record as to what was done with the gas and of appellees’ evidence and arguments in support of their theory leaves us in no doubt that there is no basis whatever for the restricted and special meaning appellees would place upon the clause in question. The gas, for the royalty on which they sue, was used„ for the manufacture of gasoline, the applicable royalty provision, therefore, is that for the payment of the “prevailing market rate for gas” and not that for "the payment of gross proceeds.”

On careful consideration of a royalty clause identical in language with the clause in question here and of facts as to the use of the gas identical with those [727]*727shown here, we so held in Phillips Petroleum Co. v. Record, 5 Cir., 146 F.2d 485. Nothing in the record in this c^se, nothing in appellees’ arguments, causes us to withdraw or in anywise modify the views we there expressed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
158 F.2d 723, 1946 U.S. App. LEXIS 3274, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phillips-petroleum-co-v-williams-ca5-1946.