Phillips Petroleum Company and Geophysical Services, Inc. v. Elliott F. Cowden

241 F.2d 586
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedMarch 18, 1957
Docket16039
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 241 F.2d 586 (Phillips Petroleum Company and Geophysical Services, Inc. v. Elliott F. Cowden) 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 Company and Geophysical Services, Inc. v. Elliott F. Cowden, 241 F.2d 586 (5th Cir. 1957).

Opinion

TUTTLE, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the trial court, sitting without a jury, awarding; $53,640.00 in damages for trespass to the mineral estates of appel-lees upon a finding that a reflection seismograph survey on. lands in which appellees owned the mineral rights amounted to a trespass as to them, and that the damages awarded represented the market value and also the value to appellants ' of the exploratory right wrongfully appropriated.

' The facts necessary to a decision of the case are not seriously in dispute, except as to the element of damages. As ■to this the dispute is primarily one of the measure to be used and is thus also a question of law. These facts are:

Plaintiffs below are the owners of the mineral estate in the lands in question, 2682 acres of land in Ector County, Texas, in which county defendant Phillips has important oil interests. Neither Phillips nor Geophysical Services, Inc. has any interest or estate of any kind in the lands or minerals in- the said 2682 acres.

In August, September, and October of 1953, appellant Phillips, through the employment of appellant Geophysical, caused a seismic survey by the reflection method to be made in the vicinity of the Harper Field, Ector County, Texas. Appellants’ entry and activity at six locations ranging east-west across 'Sections 31 and 32, Block 43, form the basis of the District Court’s findings and award for appellees. Appellants made no physical entry upon any of the other tracts comprising the 2682 acres in which ap-pellees owned the minerals.

While the legal effect of the conveyances which severed the surface estate from the mineral estates is in question, the facts as to ownership of the land at all times pertinent to suit were stipulated and undisputed. The mineral estate in 1630 acres was owned jointly by appellees Wright E. Cowden and .Ida Elizabeth Oliver, and the mineral estate in 1,052 acres was owned by appellee Elliott F. Cowden. The surface estate in Sections 31 and 32 upon which entry 'was made, and also in all the remaining ■land except a portion in Section 28, was owned by Paul Moss, under whom appellants claim legal authority to conduct ;the kind of survey which was made.

On August 20, 1953, and prior' to commencement of the survey, appellant Phillips obtained the verbal permission of Paul Moss to use the land owned by him ■for conducting the survey in consideration of damage payments .of $50.00 for each single hole shot and $100.00 for each pattern hole shot. Moss did not purport to act for the mineral owners insofar as their rights might be affected.

Also, prior to commencement of the .survey, Phillips sought to obtain permission of the mineral ownership. It was stipulated that on or about August 20, 1953, an employee of Phillips, Fred Forward, communicated with Elliott F. Cowden in a telephone conversation with *589 regard to the seismic work which Phillips desired to conduct on or in the vicinity of the lands involved. The testimony relative to the substance of the telephone conversation was conflicting. Accepting Mr. Cowden’s version of the conversation, the trial court found that the seismograph operation on lands in Block 43 was conducted without appel-lees’ permission.

It was shown by uncontradicted testimony that the purpose of the survey as a whole was to evaluate the deeper horizons underlying the Harper Pool area located generally in the central part of Block 44, not the lands in dispute. The specific purpose of the six locations in Block 43 was to project a single line or profile eastward into Sections 31 and 32, the land in dispute, in order to identify the detailed work in Block 44 with the known depth of a well known as the “Stanolind 1-E Cowden” located in the Southeast Quarter (SE/4) of Section 32, which was referred to in the testimony as an attempt to obtain “well control” for the survey.

The physical and mechanical features of the survey appeared also without dispute. The seismograph crew and equipment consisted of 16 men, 14 trucks, 3 trailers and other equipment. The entire survey consumed 34 working days, 29 of which were spent on land in Block 44, not here involved, and 5 of which were spent on Sections 31 and 32, Block 43, appellees’ tracts. In the entire survey there were 47 shot point locations, 6 of which were on appellees’ tracts in Block 43, the remaining 41 locations being on lands in Block 44. At the six locations in Sections 31 and 32, Block 43, the crew made 15 seismic shootings, one of such shots being a single shot and the other 14 being pattern shots; when these shots were made, vibrations traveled in ail directions from each shot point and the vibrations traveling downward through the earth were reflected by various geological formations back to the surface and the impulses were received on recording instruments called geophones or seismometers.

Appellants contend that the actual area “occupied” by the vibrations to the extent that they were theoretically or probably reflected and received in the recording devices to produce a single reading at intervals along the east-west line •of the shots was restricted to a calculated 81.8 acres of the total of 2682, but the court apparently accepted appellees’ contention that the data from these shots could be correlated with geological information from other sources so as to permit interpretations as to the entire property.

The contention of appellants that the uncontradicted testimony of expert geophysicists was that the seismograms were so poor in quality that they were unreliable and essentially worthless, and thus the results of the alleged trespass proved to be of no value to appellants, is unavailable as a basis for review in the view we take of the case.

Whether or not the tests were designed or calculated to evaluate appellees’ minerals or would have evaluated them if the records had been good were disputed and contradicted issues. These facts were decided against appellants and, not being clearly erroneous, these findings cannot be disturbed.

The district court found that appel-lees owned the minerals in their respective tracts with the exclusive right to use the surface thereof for the purpose ,of conducting seismograph exploration and with the exclusive power to permit or deny others such right; that Paul Moss as the surface owner had no right to permit seismograph exploration of the land and that appellants had no legal right to conduct seismograph exploration on the land; that by entering upon the lands for the purpose of conducting seismograph exploration appellants unlawfully trespassed on the land and ap-pellees’ rights therein; that the seismograph work done on appellees’ land constituted and was calculated to result in investigation and exploration, and was such as to be reasonably expected to reveal geophysical and geological information as to all of the 2682 acres involved *590 in the action; that the market value of the right to conduct said seismograph explorations and also the reasonable value to appellants of exercising such right was the sum of $53,640.00. Upon these findings, and others not deemed pertinent here, judgment was entered for $53,640.00, apportioned on an acreage basis among the appellees.

As we view it this appeal involves several important questions.

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Bluebook (online)
241 F.2d 586, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phillips-petroleum-company-and-geophysical-services-inc-v-elliott-f-ca5-1957.