Placid Oil Co. v. George

49 So. 2d 500, 1950 La. App. LEXIS 800
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 5, 1950
DocketNo. 7582
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 49 So. 2d 500 (Placid Oil Co. v. George) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Placid Oil Co. v. George, 49 So. 2d 500, 1950 La. App. LEXIS 800 (La. Ct. App. 1950).

Opinion

HARDY, Judge.

Plaintiff provoked this eoncursus proceeding for the purpose of procuring judicial pronouncement as to ■ the rights of the several defendants in and to certain accrued royalties in the sum of $140.31 derived from the production of gas from plaintiff’s well located in Section 36, Township 16 North, Range 7 West, Bienville Parish, Louisiana. The defendants, who are claiming interests in the royalties, as hereinafter more specifically set forth, are Walter L. George, the Oil Investments, Inc., and Polly Davis, joined by her husband, John Davis, Sr.

The defendant, George answered plaintiff’s petition and prayed for judgment declaring him to be the owner of one-half of the minerals in and to the property involved, and to the sums and proceeds due and to become due therefrom.

Defendant, Oil Investments, Inc., also answered arid prayed to be recognized as the owner of one-fourth interest in the [501]*501minerals and to one-half of all royalties accrued or which might in future become due and payable.

Defendant, Polly Davis, and her husband, John Davis, Sr., answered plaintiff’s ■petition and prayed for judgment sustaining a plea of prescription of ten years li-berandi causa, ordering the cancellation of •certain instruments and rights thereunder specifically described, and further .judgment recognizing the defendant, Polly Davis, as the owner of the entire sum here involved.

During, trial, which 'Consisted principally ■of the introduction of a mass of documentary evidence on behalf of the several parties involved in the litigation, the attempt was made on behalf of the Davis defendants to introduce parol evidence for the purpose of explaining an instrument executed between Polly Davis and her husband and the plaintiff, Placid Oil Company. Timely objection was made on behalf of the other defendants and the objection was sustained by the District Judge. Thereafter the distinguished Judge of the District Court rendered a written opinion in which he set forth detailed reasons for reversing his ruling, and, as a consequence, ordered the case re-opened for the purpose of admitting the testimony 'which had theretofore ibeen excluded.

Upon re-opening of the case the Davis defendants tendered parol testimony with respect to the instrument, which will be more particularly hereinafter set forth, which testimony, over the objection of the other defendants, was received. The case then being closed, the District Judge, on the basis of a written opinion on the merits, gave judgment in favor of the Davis defendants.

Before formal judgment was signed, on proper petition, C. B. Davis, Administrator ■of the Succession of Polly Davis, was made ■party deiendant in the place and stead of •the said Polly Davis, deceased.

The judgment sustained the plea of prescription liberandi causa, which had been filed by the Davis defendants, ordered the •cancellation of certain instruments therein .described, and further dec; oed the ownership of the sum of money deposited by plaintiff in the custody of the Court to be vested in C. B. Davis, Administrator of the Succession of Polly Davis, and John Davis, Sr./ in' equal proportions. From this judgment the defendants, George and Oil Investments, Inc., have .appealed.

The facts are almost entirely .without dispute. By instrument dated the 12th day of February, 1916, and 'duly recorded in the records of Bienville Parish, Louisiana, Polly Davis, wife of John Davis, purchased five acres in a square in the southeast corner of the Southeast Quarter of Southeast Quarter of Section 36, Township 16 North, Range 7 West. By instrument dated the 4th day of December, 1916, Polly Davis, wife of John Davis, purchased the Southeast Quarter of Southeast Quarter of Section 36, Township 16 North, Range 7 West, less five acres in the Southeast corner. The answer of the Davis defendants in the ■instant case sets forth that the purchases of the property made by Polly Davis were made for the benefit of her separate and paraphernal estate. The second deed above described contains the recital that the property was purchased “for herself and with her own funds”, but there is no recital of such nature in the first instrument by which the tract of five acres was acquired.

Concededly plaintiff has title to an oil, gas and mineral lease on the forty acre tract described as being the Southeast Quarter of Southeast Quarter of Section 36, Township 16 North, Range 7 West, of Bienville Parish, Louisiana, from- all parties claiming an interest herein, and it is also an admitted fact that Polly Davis, either in her own right or in community with her husband, owned the fee title to the forty acre tract described. All claims involved in the present dispute emanate from the Davis title.

By instrument dated April 2, 1936, Polly Davis and her husband executed a mineral deed in favor of C. R. Braswell by which they- conveyed an undivided one-half interest in the oil, gas and minerals in, on and under the forty-acre tract above described. This interest was subsequently conveyed by Braswell to Walter L. George, [502]*502one of the defendants herein. George subsequently sold one-fourth of the minerals, that is, one-half of the one-half which he had -acquired, to A. J. Harper, who assigned the interest to A. R. Wurtele, by whom it was subsequently 'sold and assigned to Oil Investments, Inc., defendant herein.

There has been no drilling on the SE/^ of SEJ4 of Section 36, but acting under the rights conferred by certain pooling agree? ments, which are hereinafter considered in some detail, plaintiff, Placid Oil Company, began the drilling of .a well in the Northwest Quarter of -Southeast Quarter of Section 36 on October 7, 1945, which was completed as a commercial producer of gas and liquid -hydrocarbons on November 29, 1945. The sum tendered by plaintiff in this pro■ceeding, namely $140.31, represents all the accumulated royalties from the operation of the well. No spacing regulations or allocations of acreage had been effected toy order of the Commissioner of Conservation of the State of Louisiana up to the time of trial.

The' Davis defendants contend that the mineral servitude created by their sale to Braswell on April 2, 1936, has become prescribed by the prescription of ten years liberandi causa. The defendants, George and Oil Investments, Inc., contend that there has been an acknowledgment of the servitude in question by the Davis defendants which interrupted the running of prescription prior to the expiration of the ten year period. These conflicting claims constitute the crux of this litigation.

The facts upon which the several parties rely, and which are material in the consideration of their opposing contentions are as follows :

Sometime during the year 1943 the plaintiff company prepared and began the circulation of certain pooling agreements which -had for their purpose the unitization of all of Section 36, Township 16 North, Range 7 West in Bienville Parish, Louisiana. Attached to these agreements was an instrument, designated “Exhibit A”, describing certain oil, gas and mineral ‘leases on lands in Section 36. 'The agreements were circulated in five so-called “counterparts”, one of which was executed by the defendant George, on April 4, 1944, another by defendant, Qil Investments, Inc., on July 15, 1944, and still a third by the Davis defendants on February 8, 1945.

It was pursuant to the procuration of these agreements, as above observed, that plaintiff undertook the drilling of a well.

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Bluebook (online)
49 So. 2d 500, 1950 La. App. LEXIS 800, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/placid-oil-co-v-george-lactapp-1950.