Spiller v. Massey & Moore

406 P.2d 467
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 14, 1965
Docket40654
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 406 P.2d 467 (Spiller v. Massey & Moore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Spiller v. Massey & Moore, 406 P.2d 467 (Okla. 1965).

Opinion

BERRY, Justice.

Plaintiffs in error, plaintiffs in the trial court, brought this action to recover damages alleged to have resulted from failure of defendants, defendants in error herein, to properly develop and protect from drainage a certain undrilled location involving 20 acres in an oil field in Pawnee County, Oklahoma. A jury was waived and the •cause tried to the court. At the conclusion •of plaintiffs’ evidence the trial court sustained defendants’ demurrer thereto, and rendered judgment for defendants, from which judgment this appeal was perfected.

In view of the various parties and their unequal respective interests, we shall concern ourselves herein only with the evidence which is pertinent to the issues. The details of divisional particularity shall be disregarded. We shall refer to lessors as plaintiff, and the lessees as defendant, unless otherwise specifically designated.

A résumé of the evidence discloses that defendant acquired three oil and gas leases covering 320 acres. One lease (160 acres) covered the SE/4 of 'Sec. 1-20N-5E, which lease we shall designate the Privett lease. One lease covered the N/2 of the SW/4 of Sec. 6-20N-6E (80 acres) which we shall designate as the N. Keeton lease. The other lease covered the S/2 of the SW/4 of Sec. 6-20N-6E (80 acres), which we shall refer to as the S. Keeton lease. The Privett lease lies adjacent to the West of the N. and S. Keeton leases.

This action concerns a twenty-acre, un-drilled location which lies adjacent on the East of the South half of the Privett lease. This undrilled location is adjacent to and South of the N. Keeton lease. We shall herein designate this undrilled location as the subject tract.

Plaintiff is the owner of a one-fourth royalty interest in the N. Keeton lease, and three-fourths royalty interest in the S. Keeton lease, but owns no interest in the Privett lease.

In October, 1955, the discovery well (Keeton No. 1) was drilled and completed on the N. Keeton lease, which directly offset the subject tract to the North. In December, 1955, the North 10 acres of the subject tract again was directly offset to the West on the Privett lease (Privett No. 1). Defendant continued development of the three leases until by July of 1956 there were five producing wells completed on the Privett lease and four producing wells completed on the N. Keeton lease, Keeton Nos. 1, 2, 3 and 6. Two producing wells were completed on the S. Keeton lease (Keeton Nos. 4 and 5). The Keeton No. 4 was completed in March, 1956. Keeton No. 5, completed in February, 1957, was a direct offset to the East of the subject tract. The Privett No. 4, a diagonal offset to the Northwest of the subject tract, was completed in November, 1956.

On October 13, 1955, the Corporation Commission entered Order No. 30,890, establishing 20-acre drilling and spacing units in an area which included both the N. and S. Keeton leases. This order designated a *470 drilling site in the center of the North 10 acres of the subject tract of 20 acres.

Under Order No. 31,559, the Corporation Commission, on February 1, 1956, extended the former order to include the Privett lease and made exceptions for the Keeton No. 1 and Privett No. 1 (and other wells not here mentioned), and in so doing approved of these wells being drilled off pattern.

On March 6, 1957, the Corporation Commission, by Order No. 34,293, denied defendant’s application to modify Order No. 30,890, which would have permitted the subject tract to have been spaced East and West rather than North and South, and in this manner include the subject tract and Keeton No. 5 within the same 20-acre spacing unit. The Keeton No. 5, a direct offset to the subject tract to the East, had been granted an exception to spacing Order No. 30,890 on January 4, 1957. Such exception had permitted defendant to drill off pattern on this location, resulting in Keeton No. 5 being drilled on the North 10 acres rather than the South.

No appeals were taken from any of these orders.

On December 7, 1956, plaintiff’s attorney wrote defendant demanding that an offset and protection well be drilled on the subject tract. Plaintiff demanded surrender of the undeveloped portion of the S. Keeton lease unless drilling operations were commenced within 30 days, and advised that plaintiff expected offset royalty within a reasonable time after completion of the offending wells. Thereafter defendant completed the Keeton No. 5 in February, 1957.

On December 30, 1960, plaintiff filed suit in the District Court of Payne County for damages resulting from breach of the implied covenants of the lease due to defendant’s failure, after demand and within a reasonable time, to protect the S. Keeton lease from drainage. Plaintiff also sought damages for drainage that would occur thereafter. By amendment to the petition plaintiff alternatively alleged defendant’s failure to diligently develop and operate the lease as a prudent operator would have done.

By answer, defendant denied the Privett Nos. 1 and 4 and Keeton No. 1 produced oil in paying quantities; that defendants were mining partners; that any drainage had occurred or that plaintiff had been damaged. All material allegations were denied generally.

By pretrial agreement a jury was waived, and it was agreed the case would be tried on the question of damages from inception to the date of trial. Defendant also admitted the wells had been drilled as alleged, ánd that monthly production records from the Privett and both Keeton leases would be offered and that well logs on the three leases would be furnished.

Plaintiff’s evidence included testimony of one of the defendants, one of the plaintiffs and the testimony of a geologist and a petroleum engineer, who testified as experts. Other evidence was supplied by exhibits which included maps, charts, production runs, well logs and other data. At the close of plaintiff’s evidence a demurrer was interposed, which was sustained by the trial court. Motion for new trial was heard and overruled and plaintiff has appealed from that order.

In sustaining defendant’s demurrer, the trial court expressed the opinion that, admitting everything to be true, there was no evidence to show how much drainage had been occasioned by the wells on the Privett lease. Before overruling the motion for new trial, the court briefly summarized his recollection of the evidence and stated:

“ * * * I did consider the evidence as it applied to plaintiffs’ theory and the defendants’ theory and came to the conclusion that they had not proved substantial drainage or that a prudent operator would have drilled the well, and the word 'substantial’ was the key to it.”

Plaintiff urges four contentions as grounds for reversal. The third contention urges applicability of the prudent operator rule under the evidence; the fourth asserts *471 the evidence established a prima facie.’case, against which it was reversible error to sustain a demurrer. Defendant argues from the standpoint that the prudent operator rule does apply and the evidence failed to show a well should have been drilled. As we view the matter, two settled rules are ■dispositive of the appeal.

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406 P.2d 467, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spiller-v-massey-moore-okla-1965.