Shell Petroleum Corporation v. Carter

175 So. 1, 187 La. 382, 1937 La. LEXIS 1180
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedApril 26, 1937
DocketNo. 33938.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 175 So. 1 (Shell Petroleum Corporation v. Carter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shell Petroleum Corporation v. Carter, 175 So. 1, 187 La. 382, 1937 La. LEXIS 1180 (La. 1937).

Opinion

LAND, Justice.

On December 21, 1931, the defendants, Mrs. Amelia Bethel Carter, Glenn A. Carter, and Rex E. Carter, granted to plaintiff, Shell Petroleum Corporation, an oil, gas, and mineral lease on the west % of section 1, township 9 south, range 4 west, in the parish of Jefferson Davis, containing 327 acres in one continuous tract, and owned jointly by the Carters, the lessors.

The royalty stipulated in the lease is % of the minerals produced and saved from the leased premises.

It is admitted in the agreed statement of facts, signed December 2, 1935, “that Mrs. Amelia Bethel Carter, Glenn A. Carter, and Rex E. Carter are now the owners in indivisión of the entire West Half (W. %) of said Section 1, Township 9 South, Range 4 West, and were the owners thereof at the time of the granting of the lease to the Shell Petroleum Corporation and at the time of the various sales to the other defendants.” Tr. p. 76. (Italics ours.)

The various sales to the other defendants referred to were assignments of certain portions of their royalties by the Carters, the lessors, and are as follows:

(a) May 17, 1934, to C. O. Noble !4s royalty interest on S. W. % of the section.

(b) May 17, 1934, to A. O. Fontenot %28 royalty interest on S. W. % of the section.

*385 (c) July 17, 1934, A. O. Fontenot sold Ye of Vi28 royalty interest in the S. W. Ya of the section to Gilbert Fontenot.

(d) April 4, 1935, to Earl C. Miller, Celestin M. Fontenot, and James D. Norman Vi28 royalty interest on the N. W. Ya of the section.

Operating under this lease, the Shell Petroleum Corporation drilled upon and secured production from the S. W. Ya of section 1, township 9 south, range 4 west. There was no production on the N. W. Ya of this section. But defendants, Earl C. Miller, Celestin M. Fontenot, and James D. Norman, who had purchased royalty interests solely in the N. W. Ya °f the section, demanded, under paragraph 11 of the lease, that the Shell Petroleum Corporation pay them part of the royalty accruing from the production of oil from the S'. W. Ya of this section.

Under this state of facts, the present proceeding was appropriately brought by the Shell Petroleum Corporation under Act No. 123 of 1922; the royalties in dispute were deposited in the registry of the lower court; and all parties claiming or having an interest in the fund were cited.

The issue to be decided in the case is whether the purchasers of royalty interest, in the N. W. Ya of the section alone, have the right to participate in the royalty payable from production from the S'. W. Ya of the section.

The decision of the lower court was adverse to this contention, of the purchasers of the royalty interests in the N. W. Ya of the section, that they had the right to participate in the royalty from the S. w. y4.

Accordingly, judgment was rendered in the lower court, decreeing that defendant Charles O. Noble have and recover Yba royalty interest in the production from the S. W. Ya °f the section, and that he recover that proportionate amount from the funds now on deposit in the registry of the court.

It was likewise decreed that the defendant A. O. Fontenot have and recover Yl28 royalty interest in the production from the S. W. Ya °f the section, less Ye. of the same payable to Gilbert Fontenot, his assignee, and a proportionate amount of the funds now on deposit in the registry of the court.

It was further decreed that defendants Earl C. Miller, C. M. Fontenot, and James D. Norman recover no part of the royalty payable from production on the S. W. Ya °f the section; that defendants Rudolph F. Weichert, Arthur T. Jones, Wallace H. Adams, and J. O. Modisette take no part of the royalty produced from the S. W. Ya of the section; and that the costs be paid by Earl C. Miller, C. M. Fontenot, and James D. Norman, as their interests appear. Tr. p. 84.

From this judgment the defendants James D. Norman, Earl C. Miller and Celestin M. Fontenot have prosecuted a devolutive appeal to this court.

The defendants Rudolph F. Weichert, Arthur T. Jones, Wallace H. Adams, and James O. Modisette entered disclaimers in the lower court as to any interest, and the *387 suit was dismissed as to them without cost. Tr. pp. 60-64 (inclusive).

(1) At the outset, it may be well to remember that the defendants, the Carters, are mere joint owners and lessors of one continuous tract of land, which has not been partitioned between them. This tract has been leased by thein, in its entirety, to the Shell Petroleum Corporation. Nor have the owners and lessors assigned to the appellants the mineral lease on this tract, either in whole or in part, nor have they sold to the appellants the land, or any part of same, subject to the lease.

The mere fact that the owners and lessors may have sold to some of the defendants undivided interests in royalty on the N. % of the 327-acre tract, and to other defendants similar interests on the S. % of the tract, cannot be construed reasonably as a division into two separate parts of the land in question, for the plain reason that the sale of an undivided interest in a royalty is neither the .sale of the land nor of the lease, as to the specific tract from which the royalty may be produced.

It is clear, therefore, that this is not the case of a joint lease, in the proper sense of that term, under paragraph 11 of the lease entered into between the Carters and the Shell Petroleum Corporation. Here we have no owners of separate tracts of land entering into a joint lease, by pooling their individual holdings and stipulating that the royalty shall be divided between them in proportion to the ownership of the acreage pooled, if a producing oil well is brought in upon any one of the tracts included in the lease.

The sale of the undivided interests in the royalty in this case amounts to nothing more or less than the limitation of the royalty to the N. % or to the S. % of the tract, to be participated in by the individuals purchasing the royalty to be produced from that particular tract. It is difficult to understand how the purchaser of an interest in a royalty to be produced from a particular tract, which he has selected as being more likely to produce oil than another tract, can claim, in a case of this kind, that he is also entitled to participate in the division of the royalty from another tract, when he has not purchased the royalty on that tract, and has not paid for it. Manifestly, an undivided interest in royalty on a 327-acre tract is more valuable than an undivided interest in royalty, limited to the N. % or the S. % of that tract, since the chance for striking oil is twice as great. Besides, it is not legally possible for this court to hold that a purchaser has title to something that he did not buy and did not pay for, and which the seller did not intend to sell, and did not, in fact, sell.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
175 So. 1, 187 La. 382, 1937 La. LEXIS 1180, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shell-petroleum-corporation-v-carter-la-1937.