Scoggin v. Bagley

368 So. 2d 763
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 20, 1979
Docket13777
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 368 So. 2d 763 (Scoggin v. Bagley) 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
Scoggin v. Bagley, 368 So. 2d 763 (La. Ct. App. 1979).

Opinion

368 So.2d 763 (1979)

Arlis D. SCOGGIN, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
Leon W. BAGLEY, Defendant-Appellee.

No. 13777.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.

February 20, 1979.

*764 Colvin, Hunter, Brown, Plummer & Means by David B. Means, III, Mansfield, for plaintiff-appellant.

Nelson, Hammons & Johnson by John L. Hammons, Shreveport, for defendant-appellee.

Before PRICE, MARVIN and JONES, JJ.

JONES, Judge.

Plaintiff, Arlis D. Scoggin, appeals a judgment rejecting his demands to invalidate a mineral top lease because of error and return to him the consideration paid for it. We affirm. The lease was granted by defendant, Leon W. Bagley, on December 5, 1977, covering 360 acres of land in DeSoto Parish, on which there was an existing lease dated December 8, 1972 for a 5 year primary term. The top lease was on a Bath Lease Form and contained the following typed provisions:

"This lease to become effective when present lease expires dated 12/8/72 (5 yrs.).

All monies paid are nonrefundable."

The basis for plaintiff's suit for cancellation is that he had been advised by the Heards, a father-son team of lease brokers, alleged to be defendant's agents, that the December 8, 1972 lease would expire by its own terms in the event no drilling commenced on the leased premises prior to the expiration of the primary term. Plaintiff testified he knew there were no drilling rigs available and considered it extremely unlikely that drilling would commence prior to December 9, 1977. Plaintiff contends the principal cause of his acquisition of the top lease was his firm expectation based upon representations of defendant's agents that absent the commencement of drilling upon the leased property prior to midnight December 8, 1977, that his top lease would become a valid, viable existing lease on the subject property. Though the plaintiff, defendant and the Heards were unaware of it, there was a Louisiana Conservation Commission order dated October 17, 1977, creating 16 production units for the Rodessa formation, including one 640 acre unit encompassing the 360 acres included in the top lease, and in which unit, though not on the top leased acreage, there was production. This had the effect of extending the primary term of the December 8, 1972 lease whether or not any drilling occurred upon the property subject to the top lease prior to the elapse of 5 years from December 8, 1972. These circumstances are the basis for plaintiff's contention that the top lease is invalid because of his error as to principal cause.

Plaintiff assigns as error the trial court's finding (1) that the defendant made no false representation to the Heards or the plaintiff that the only way the primary term in the 1972 lease would be extended would be by the commencement of drilling *765 activities prior to its expiration on December 8, 1977 (2) that the Heards were not defendant's agents and, therefore, their representation to plaintiff could not be attributable to him, and (3) that the plaintiff's lease right would come into existence with the expiration of the December 8,1972 lease, rather than finding the top lease invalid because of plaintiff's error as to the principal cause, this being his belief that the primary term of the 1972 lease would expire December 8,1977, in absence of drilling activity being commenced upon the leased property prior to that date.

In October 1977, Dugan Heard, a lease broker of DeSoto Parish, called defendant and inquired of him if he would consider top leasing the 360 acre tract involved in this litigation prior to the expiration of the December 8, 1972 lease. The defendant indicated he would consider leasing the tract for $30 per acre. Heard secured one potential lessor and brought him to defendant's home in November 1977, but this man refused to take the lease when defendant advised him that it was a top lease and that the lease to which it was subject might run out or might never run out. Dugan Heard contacted several other parties about the Bagley top lease and through one of these persons, plaintiff acquired the information of its availability. Plaintiff called Dugan Heard and met with him and his son, Joe Heard, in Mansfield on December 5, 1977. At this time the Heards advised plaintiff that the primary term of the 1972 lease would expire December 8, 1977, unless prior to that time drilling activities were commenced upon the leased premises. The Heards testified they were told this by defendant. Plaintiff gave the Heards instructions to go and secure the lease from Bagley and gave them the money to pay for it based upon a cost of $65 per acre. The Heards went to the home of Bagley in rural DeSoto Parish and there typed up the top lease and gave Bagley $30 per acre for it. Joe Heard, who prepared the lease, incorporated, at the request of Bagley, the clause in the top lease that it would not become effective until the expiration of the December 8, 1972 lease and that no money paid for it would be refunded. After Bagley executed the lease, the Heards returned to Mansfield with the lease which they delivered to plaintiff who had been waiting for them while they went to secure the lease. Plaintiff never discussed the top lease with defendant until after it was secured.

The defendant had told the Heards that he was only interested in a top lease if he had anything to lease. He pointed out to them the existence of substantial preparations for a well site on the leased premises and advised them of some litigation which delayed the drilling attempt. Defendant gave this information to the Heards as reasons why the lease might not expire on its anniversary date. Defendant testified that he urged the Heards to have an attorney check the public records to be sure of what he had available for a top lease. Defendant's warning to a potential lessor brought to his home by the Heards that the 1972 lease might run out or might never run out, resulted in the prospect refusing to proceed with the lease. Defendant testified in response to persistent cross-examination that he had never told the Heards that the only reason that the 1972 lease would not expire by its own terms would be the commencement of a well before the anniversary date. Defendant testified that "May" (apparently the owner of the 1972 lease) tried to get the leased acreage into a unit. Defendant's testimony and corroborating circumstances adequately support the trial judge's finding that defendant did not make the representations to the Heards nor to the plaintiff that except for intervening drilling activity the top lease would become viable December 9, 1977.

Plaintiff contends that the Heards were the defendant's agents and he is bound by their statements to plaintiff that the 1972 lease would expire in the event there was no drilling activity conducted upon land subject to it prior to the expiration of the primary term. Neither defendant, nor the Heards, testified there was any agency-relationship between them. Defendant *766 did not pay them anything from the money he received for the top lease. The Heards were given the money by plaintiff and by him sent to purchase the lease on his behalf. He gave them $65 per acre to make the purchase and they only used $30 per acre retaining the balance as their fee. The evidence established that plaintiff was unaware of what part of the $65 was retained by the Heards. One of the Heards testified they were to receive a 1/32 override for their services in securing the lease.

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Bluebook (online)
368 So. 2d 763, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scoggin-v-bagley-lactapp-1979.