Smoots v. Southern Star Central Gas Pipline

CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedFebruary 6, 2026
Docket127158
StatusUnpublished

This text of Smoots v. Southern Star Central Gas Pipline (Smoots v. Southern Star Central Gas Pipline) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smoots v. Southern Star Central Gas Pipline, (kanctapp 2026).

Opinion

NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION

No. 127,158

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF KANSAS

RICHARD C. SMOOTS and DEBBY D. SMOOTS, Appellants,

v.

SOUTHERN STAR CENTRAL GAS PIPELINE, INC. and JONATHON BOESE, Appellees.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appeal from Jefferson District Court; CHRISTOPHER ETZEL, judge. Oral argument held March 11, 2025. Opinion filed February 6, 2026. Affirmed.

Benjamin K. Carmichael, of Morris Laing Law Firm, of Wichita, for appellants.

Samantha M.H. Woods, of Martin, Pringle, Oliver, Wallace & Bauer, L.L.P., of Wichita, for appellee Southern Star Central Gas Pipeline, Inc.

No appearance by appellee Jonathon Boese.

Before ATCHESON, P.J., COBLE and PICKERING, JJ.

PICKERING, J.: The "principal dwelling" clause under a gas storage lease executed in 1950 is the focus of the dispute between Richard C. and Debby D. Smoots and Southern Star Central Gas Pipeline, Inc. and Jonathon Boese.

1 The Smootses appeal the district court's grant of summary judgment, which found Boese resided in the lease's principal dwelling and ruled that Southern Star properly honored its obligation under the lease by providing free gas to Boese. After reviewing the record, we find summary judgment was appropriate. The district court also did not err in citing an affidavit that attested to nonmaterial facts, nor did the district court err in ruling that a 1969 agreement did not modify the 1950 lease as to remove the principal dwelling requirement to receive free gas. We therefore affirm the district court's granting of the summary judgment.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

In 1950, Besse and Alfred McLeod entered a gas storage lease with Cities Service Gas Company, allowing Cities Service Gas to store gas on the McLeods' 88.4-acre property. Paragraph 5 of the lease provided for a certain amount of free gas to the principal dwelling on the lease property:

"In the event there was on June 23, 1944 a producing gas well or wells on the above described lands First Party shall have annually, in lieu of gas to which he may be entitled under any oil and gas lease, not to exceed Three Hundred Thousand cubic feet of gas free of cost, but only from wells on said premises until Second Party begins the actual injection of gas for storage purposes into said McLouth Field, while such well or wells are capable of producing such gas, for domestic use at the principal dwelling house on said lands, by making his own connections with the well at his own risk and expense and while he is maintaining all service lines, connections and equipment in a manner to prevent leakage of gas therefrom. Second Party may at its option deliver such free gas at a convenient point on its then nearest pipeline on or in the vicinity of said lands instead of at the well. However, Second Party agrees that if during the term of this lease First Party uses in any one year an amount of gas in excess of Three Hundred Thousand cubic feet, Second Party will sell or cause to be sold to First Party such excess gas at a price of fifty cents (50₵) per thousand cubic feet. . . ."

2 Paragraph 6 of the lease outlined the procedure for requesting free gas under certain circumstances:

"After Second Party has begun the actual injection of gas as aforesaid and in the event there was not on June 23, 1944 a producing gas well on the above described lands, Second Party, upon written request of First Party for gas, addressed to its Oklahoma City, Oklahoma office, shall within thirty (30) days after receipt of such request set or cause to be set a meter at its then nearest pipeline in a suitable place near to or in the vicinity of said lands, and when First Party, at his own cost and risk, has connected thereto, shall sell or cause to be sold during the term of this lease at its such pipeline, gas for domestic use on said lands at a price of fifty cents (50₵) per thousand cubic feet. . . .

"The provisions of this clause (6) shall remain in force and effect until such time as a well capable of delivering gas has been completed by Second Party on the above described lands. If, as and when such a well is completed on said lands, First Party may at his option avail himself of the provisions of Clause Five (5) of this lease."

At the time of the lease execution, the lease property contained two producing gas wells. On the same day the parties executed this lease, they also executed a second gas storage lease covering the McLeods' separate 252.17-acre property. The second lease also granted 300,000 cubic feet of free gas for domestic purposes on the second lease property.

In 1963, upon written request by Alfred McLeod, Cities Service Gas began providing free gas to the principal dwelling on the lease property. Then, "in or around 1963," the McLeods subdivided the lease property into four tracts.

In 1964, the McLeods and Cities Service Gas executed an agreement transferring the free gas obligation in the first lease to the second lease property. Under this agreement, Cities Service Gas provided 600,000 cubic feet of free gas to the second lease

3 property. Paragraph 3 of the 1964 agreement stated: "Except as herein modified, said First Lease and said Second Lease shall remain as written."

However, in 1969, the McLeods and Cities Service Gas entered into another agreement transferring the 300,000 cubic feet of free gas originally provided in the first lease back to the first lease property.

Successor in Interest, Lease Tract Sale, and Requests for Free Gas

Under the terms of the first lease, Southern Star became the successor in interest to Cities Service Gas. Under Paragraph 15 of the lease, all of the lease's terms and conditions extended to and were binding upon "the heirs, devisees, executors, administrators, personal representatives, successors and assigns of the parties hereto."

In 1982, the McLeods sold one of the four tracts of the first lease—and thus subject to the 1950 gas storage lease—to David and Mary Rollins. This tract was vacant at the time, and there was no longer a dwelling where the McLeods originally connected to the gas well for free gas. Later that year, Southern Star granted the Rollinses' written request for free gas for their trailer. The Rollinses' trailer was the only dwelling on the entire lease property.

In 1988, the Rollinses sold their tract to the Smootses. By this time, the Rollinses' trailer was no longer on the tract. There were no other dwellings on the other three tracts of the lease property either. Even without a dwelling, the tract the Smootses purchased included "the water lines, septic system, transformer pole, electric meter, and the gas lines" where the trailer had been located.

4 Hills' Interest in the Right to Free Gas Under the Lease

In or around 1991, Carla Hill—an owner of another tract of the property subject to the gas lease—called Richard to ask if the Smootses would forfeit their gas right. Richard denied the Hills' request, informing Hill that he "had plans to build on the property" and would not relinquish the gas right.

In 1999, the Hills submitted a written request to Southern Star for free gas after establishing a dwelling on their tract. Their dwelling was the only residence on any tracts of the lease property. Southern Star granted the request, deeming the Hills' dwelling the principal dwelling under the lease. The Smootses were unaware that Southern Star granted the Hills' request. The Hills later sold their tract to Boese. Boese then resided in the dwelling on the tract.

The Smootses built a barn on their tract in approximately 2012. They "[s]tarted the process" of building a residence on their tract in February 2021; construction began in September 2021.

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Smoots v. Southern Star Central Gas Pipline, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smoots-v-southern-star-central-gas-pipline-kanctapp-2026.