Robinson v. Southwestern Development Co.

277 P.2d 825, 130 Cal. App. 2d 1
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 29, 1954
DocketCiv. 8477
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 277 P.2d 825 (Robinson v. Southwestern Development Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robinson v. Southwestern Development Co., 277 P.2d 825, 130 Cal. App. 2d 1 (Cal. Ct. App. 1954).

Opinion

VAN DYKE, P. J.

This is an appeal by defendants Houchin and Gallagher from a judgment in favor of plaintiffs and respondents, C. Ray and Pauline I. Robinson, in an action for declaratory relief brought to determine the rights of the respective parties under an oil and gas lease, including their rights in a bonus paid for the execution of the lease. Involved in such determinations are the rights of the parties with respect to royalties to be paid under the same lease or future leases. Other defendants than Houchin and Gallagher did not appeal.

The judgment appealed from declares the following: Respondents Robinson, together with A. E. and Sarah Montgomery, who are nonappealing defendants, were and are the owners of an undivided 45-5/6 interest in and to certain real property in Fresno County; respondents Robinson were and are the owners of an undivided one-half interest of said undivided 45-5/6 interest in said real property; prior to the execution and delivery of the oil and gas lease under which the bonus was paid, the following transactions had taken place affecting the ownership of the .land and the rights of the parties to share in oil, gas and other hydrocarbons produced therefrom:

On July 7, 1938, A. E. Jones and wife, who then owned the fee simple title to all of said land, executed an oil and gas lease to The Texas Company, which provided a rental or royalty of 121/2 per cent of production.

On April 6, 1939, while said lease was existing, the successor in interest to A. E. Jones and wife, conveyed an undivided one-fourth of the land to A. E. Montgomery, the deed reciting that it conveyed the designated interest and a one-fourth interest in the existing lease.

On May 3, 1939, Montgomery and wife conveyed to appellant Houchin “An undivided 1% of all oil, gas, petroleum or other hydrocarbon substances within or underlying or which may be produced and saved from” the said real property, and also on said date conveyed one-half of 1 per cent *3 of all oil, gas, etc., to nonappealing defendant Gilbert. (The description in the two deeds as to the nature of the rights conveyed is the same.)

June 12, 1939, Montgomery and wife, by a like further instrument, conveyed one-half of 1 per cent of the oil, gas, etc., to nonappealing defendant Southwestern Development Company, a corporation.

On July 11, 1939, Houchin and wife conveyed to appellant Gallagher one-fourth of their interest.

March 24, 1941, Montgomery took by conveyance five-sixths of an additional one-fourth interest in the real property and “in the oil and gas lease thereon.”

April 16, 1949, Montgomery and wife conveyed an undivided one-half of Montgomery’s interest in the real property to respondents Robinson.

The Texas Company’s lease was abandoned at some time not disclosed by the evidence. On April 26, 1949, respondents Robinson and the Montgomerys executed an oil and gas lease to the Barnsdall Oil Company. This lease provided for a 25 per cent royalty, and as a bonus, in consideration of the execution of the lease, the lessee paid the sum of $12,375, which sum was received by respondent C. Ray Robinson and placed in his trust account. Thereafter he offered to distribute

the money as follows: 1

To Houchin, % of 1% of total amount.....$ 92.82
To Gallagher, % of 1% of total amount.... 30.94
To Gilbert, % of 1% of total amount...... 61.87
To Southwestern Dev. Co., % of 1% of total
amount ........................... 61.87
To Montgomerys, 49% of total amount..... 6,063.75
To respondents Robinson, 49% of total
amount ........................... 6,063.75

All parties except Gilbert returned their checks, this action was begun, and Robinson continued to hold the represented money in trust.

The trial court by its judgment declared that the sums tendered were the correct sums to which the interested parties were entitled. It further decreed that respondents Robinson, together with the Montgomerys, have the “sole and exclusive right to execute any oil and gas lease on said real property upon any terms which they might elect, provided that the defendants, Southwestern Development Company, C. B. Houchin, C. R. Gallagher and Robert K. Gilbert shall receive their proportionate shares, as herein defined, of any *4 bonus, royalty, rent or other consideration paid or payable for and under the terms, conditions and provisions of any such oil and gas lease.” This part of the decree is based upon the deeds whereby the four parties named received their fractional interests; and no attack is made in this appeal upon this part of the decree. The court further decreed that Southwestern Development Company was entitled to receive one-half of 1 per cent of any royalty, rent or other consideration paid or payable under the terms of any oil and gas lease on the real property; that Gilbert was entitled to receive one-half of 1 per cent; Houchin three-fourths of 1 per cent and Gallagher one-fourth of 1 per cent of such payments; and that respondents Robinson and defendants Montgomery were entitled to receive each 49 per cent of such payments. The court decreed that Southwestern Development Company was the owner of an undivided one-half of 1 per cent of all oil, gas, petroleum or other hydrocarbon substances within or underlying “or which may be produced and saved from said real property, together with perpetual rights for drilling and production purposes, but subject, however, to any present or future oil or gas lease executed by the Robinsons and the Montgomerys. Like ownerships, with proportional interests, were declared to exist in Gilbert, Houchin, Gallagher, the Montgomerys and the Robinsons.

The questions presented on appeal as stated by appellants are these: 1. Did the lower court err in its determination of the existing interests of the parties to the action? 2. Did the court err in refusing to -grant appellants’ motion for new trial?

It is apparent from the record that the trial court mainly relied upon the case of Little v. Mountain View Dairies, Inc., 35 Cal.2d 232 [217 P.2d 416], deeming that case to be decisive of the main issues between the parties. We may note the similarities in the factual picture presented in that case and in the ease at bar. In both eases the granting clauses of the instruments of conveyance contained the same language, that is, there was granted a specified per cent of the oil, gas and like substances in or under or which might be produced and saved from the subject property. In both cases also the owners of .fractional interests who did not execute the lease had agreed to be bound by the terms thereof.

In Little v. Mountain View Dairies, Inc., the Supreme *5

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Bluebook (online)
277 P.2d 825, 130 Cal. App. 2d 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robinson-v-southwestern-development-co-calctapp-1954.