Pollock v. McAlester Fuel Company

223 S.W.2d 813, 215 Ark. 842, 1949 Ark. LEXIS 838
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 24, 1949
Docket4-8946
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 223 S.W.2d 813 (Pollock v. McAlester Fuel Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pollock v. McAlester Fuel Company, 223 S.W.2d 813, 215 Ark. 842, 1949 Ark. LEXIS 838 (Ark. 1949).

Opinion

Leflar, J.

Appellant William M. Pollock, Jr., owned an undivided one-half interest in the oil, gas and other minerals on a certain 20-acre tract in Ouachita County, Arkansas. The owner of the other undivided one-half interest had leased it to appellee Mc-Alester Fuel Company, and the Company was desirous of leasing Pollock’s half also, so that it could drill on the whole tract as a unit. After considerable negotiations between the parties and their representatives, an instrument called an “Oil and Gras Lease” was executed by them under date of July 21, 1947, covering “an undivided one-half (%) interest in and to [lands described] containing 20 acres, more or less, and 10 acres if divided.” Actually this instrument was not executed until about .November 1, 1947, though the earlier date was used because the parties had reached their agreement some months earlier and the final lease as executed was a replacement for others which had previously been executed with inaccurate language. In fact, a well had already been drilled and oil discovered on the land before the final execution of the lease.

A single paragraph in the lease gives rise to the present controversy. That paragraph is typewritten near the end of the printed form, and reads as follows: •

“The lessors herein expressly reserve unto themselves, their heirs or assigns, an undivided 1/16 of 7/8 of the total oil and gas and other minerals produced, saved and marketed under the terms of this lease, to be delivered to the lessors free of cost in tanks or pipelines to which lessee, their heirs, successors, or assigns, may connect wells, said interest being what is commonly known as ‘ over-riding royalty interest. ’ ’ ’

The lessor Pollock claimed that he was entitled under this paragraph to 1/16 of 7/8 of all the oil produced from the entire 20 acres, whereas the Company claimed that he was entitled only to 1/16 of 7/8 of the oil produced from the undivided one-half thereof conveyed by his lease. The present bill in equity was brought by the Company and certain others identified in interest with it against Pollock and his wife for the purpose of quieting in the plaintiff lessee the interests in the oil claimed by the lessee. The Pollocks answered and cross-complained, asking for comparable relief. After hearing evidence as to what the parties did and said and wrote to each other prior to execution of the final lease, and as to the oil field meaning of the terms contained in the lease itself, the Chancellor found in accordance with plaintiff lessee’s contentions, holding that the lessor Pollock was entitled to receive under the “over-riding royalty” clause only 1/16 of 7/8 of the oil produced from his half interest in the land, and quieting the lessee Company’s title to the balance of the oil accordingly. From this decree the Pollocks appeal.

The best guide to interpretation of terms used in any instrument is the ordinary meaning of the words themselves, in their own context. Sometimes there is no standard meaning, and sometimes special usages may be shown to prove that the terms are not used in the usual sense in which they' are ordinarily employed in the English language as locally spoken and written. But it is useful in any event to ascertain the ordinary meaning of the words themselves, in the proper context of the whole instrument of which they are a part.

Here, the lease by its express terms conveyed “an undivided one-half (y2) interest in and to” the oil on a described piece of land “containing 20 acres more or less, and 10 acres if divided.” Then the clause in question reserved to the lessors 1/16 of 7/8 of the oil produced “under the terms of this lease.” It did not reserve that fraction of all the oil produced “on the land to which this lease relates” or “on the premises described by this lease, ’ ’ but only ‘‘ under the terms of this lease.” And “this lease” by its express terms was a lease of a half interest in the 20 acres, not a lease of the whole of the 20 acres. It could not have been a lease on the whole 20 acres, because the lessor owned and made it clear that he owned only a half interest. It did not purport to be a lease of anything except the lessor’s half interest.

Another paragraph in the same lease, as far as its wording is concerned, might equally support the lessor’s contention. This is the regular royalty clause, which reads:

“FIRST: To deliver to the credit of lessor, free of cost in tanks or pipe line to which lessee may connect his wells, the equal one-eighth (1/8) part of all oil produced and saved from the leased premises.”

This clause must be read in the light of and along with another clause which appears in the same lease. This is the so-called ‘ ‘ reduction clause ’ ’:

“If said lessor owns a less interest in the above described land than the entire and undivided fee simple mineral estate therein, then the royalties and rentals herein provided shall be paid the lessor only in proportion which lessor’s fee simple mineral interests therein bears to the whole and undivided fee simple mineral estate in the lands. ’ ’

When these two clauses appear together in a lease, no one would contend that the regular royalty clause gives the lessor more than 1/8 of the oil produced from the half interest which he leased to the Company. This is standard language regularly used in oil leases to give the lessor a 1/8 interest in the oil produced under the interest conveyed by his lease, and it is so understood in the industry and by the courts. See Summers, The Law of Oil and Gas (1938) § 590; Thornton, The Law of Oil and Gas (Willis Ed., 1932) § 366. Yet if the reasoning employed by the lessor in this case were applied to the standard royalty clause it would give the lessor a regular royalty of 1/8 of all the oil produced on the whole 20 acres. He does not claim this, as of course he could not.

If it were necessary here to go beyond the plain meaning of the terms used in the “over-riding royalty” clause itself, this “reduction clause” would afford an indication of the sense in which the terms were used. It is enough to say now, without determining how far it might or might not be controlling, that as a key to interpretation it leads to the same conclusion that we reach from reading the words themselves.

No Arkansas case has ever passed on the question of interpretation raised by the present case. The lessor relies principally upon Texas decisions to sustain Ms position. The oldest and best known of the Texas cases, among those dealing with problems substantially comparable, is Hooks v. Neill, 21 S.W. 2d 532 (Tex. Civ. App.), which involved a conveyance of a half interest in certain land, with reservation to the grantors of “a one thirty-second part of all oil on and under the said land and premises herein described and conveyed.” The holding was that this reserved to the grantor only 1/32 of the oil produced from his half interest, since the half interest constituted the “premises herein described ancl conveyed” by the deed. The lessor in his argument denies that Hooks v. Neill is similar to the present case, and points out that it has been distinguished in later Texas cases. The first of these later cases is King v. First National Bank, 144 Tex. 583, 192 S.W. 2d 260, 163 A.L.R. 1128. In this case Duncan and King were the joint owners in fee simple of certain land.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
223 S.W.2d 813, 215 Ark. 842, 1949 Ark. LEXIS 838, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pollock-v-mcalester-fuel-company-ark-1949.