Standard Oil Co. v. John P. Mills Organization

43 P.2d 797, 3 Cal. 2d 128, 1935 Cal. LEXIS 405
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 2, 1935
DocketL. A. 13885
StatusPublished
Cited by50 cases

This text of 43 P.2d 797 (Standard Oil Co. v. John P. Mills Organization) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Standard Oil Co. v. John P. Mills Organization, 43 P.2d 797, 3 Cal. 2d 128, 1935 Cal. LEXIS 405 (Cal. 1935).

Opinion

THE COURT.

The Standard Oil Company of California commenced this action by filing a complaint in interpleader. Said company purchased oil produced on Block V, Signal Hill, Los Angeles County, from lessees operating wells on said block under a lease providing for a 16% per cent or % landowner’s royalty. . Under the complaint interpleader the *131 Standard Oil Company deposited in court $71,980.28, the landowner’s one-sixth share of the purchase price due from it, and prayed that the court determine conflicting claims thereto. Other companies deposited in court a total of $18,451.61, which likewise represented one-sixth of the price due for oil purchased from operating lessees on said block Y.

In 1923, John P. Mills Organization, Inc., was the owner of block Y, subject to said oil and gas lease, ivhich provided for a 16% per cent, or one-sixth, landowner’s royalty. In that year it subdivided the block into 83 lots, all of which were sold under a plan of subdivision whereby there was to be conveyed to each purchaser of a lot in the block 1/83 of said % landowner’s royalty, or a 1/498 part of all oil and gas produced, saved and sold on said block Y. On the theory that the oil royalties sold were securities, the Mills Organization procured a permit from the corporation department of the state of California to sell said lots together with a 1/498 part of oil to be produced from the block with each lot sold.- The Mills Organization stated in its application for a permit that the 83 lots with oil rights were to be sold at prices to average $1500 per lot, and on this basis the permit authorized sale of the property at an aggregate price of $124,500.

A provision transferring to each purchaser of a lot “1/498th part of all oil and gas produced, saved and sold on said Block V” was included in all deeds except four, which covered six lots, numbers 37, 57, 61, 60, 67 and 68. Appellants O. Douglass Smith and Ellen Smith, husband and wife, through mesne conveyances, are the owners of lots 60, 67 and 68, and also of eleven other lots, and of an undivided one-half interest in a further lot. The respondents severally are the owners of other lots in block Y. The parties stipulated that all wells on block Y were on the property of appellants Smith, except for a well on lot 77, which is not involved in the instant action. The sums deposited in court represent amounts due for oil produced from lots 68 and 83, owned by appellants Smith. By virtue of their ownership of the lots from which the oil was produced, they contend that they are entitled to the full amount deposited in court, to the exclusion of the owners of other lots in the block. By appropriate pleadings the parties submitted to the court the question of the oil rights of respond *132 ents in the lands owned by appellants Smith, upon which depends their rights in the .fund on deposit in court. By the judgment appealed from the court below decreed that the Ye landowner’s royalty from oil produced, or to be produced, on any lot in block V should be distributed to all lot owners in the block in the proportion of 1/83 of Ye, or 1/498 of the total production, for each lot owned.

“The appellants Smith claim the right to all oil produced, and to be produced, not only from lots 60, 67 and 68, which were sold by the Mills Organization to predecessors in interest of the Smiths by deeds omitting the oil clause, but also from lot 83 and other lots now owned by them, which were transferred by the Mills Organization to appellants’ predecessors in interest by deeds containing the oil clause. The trial court herein found that the Smiths purchased their lots with full notice of the scheme of subdivision and the plan that all lot owners should share in oil produced anywhere on the block, and in the light of the record could have reached no other reasonable conclusion. Appellants were not original grantees of the Mills Organization as to any lots in block V, and did not become owners of any lots in said block until after all 83 lots had been sold by the Mills Organization.

The basic proposition asserted by appellants is that assignments by a landowner of royalty interests cannot create any rights which are enforceable against -a subsequent grantee of the general estate in the land. This question is determined adversely to appellants in Callahan v. Martin, L. A. No. 12569 (ante, p. 110 [43 Pac. (2d) 788]), this day decided. We there hold that an assignment by a landowner of an interest in his oil rights creates in his assignee an interest or estate in real property which may be asserted against a grantee of the fee in the general estate in the land. It follows from our analysis in Callahan v. Martin, supra, that the owner of land may convey all or a percentage of his oil rights in described land, retaining the residue of the general estate in the land, or that he may grant surface rights, retaining in himself all or a percentage interest in oil rights in the land. That is, interests in oil rights may be transferred separate and apart from the general estate in the land. But under a deed granting a general estate in the land, the grantee generally succeeds to all oil rights *133 in the land as an incident to the conveyance, except as such rights have previously been assigned by instruments of which such grantee had actual or constructive notice, or are reserved by the deed.

Where a parcel of land subject to a single oil and gas lease is subdivided by deeds which contain no reference to oil rights, there is a conflict of authority in the few cases where the question has arisen as to whether the landowner’s royalty on oil thereafter produced goes entirely to the owner of the section on which the oil has been brought to the surface, or is to be apportioned among the several lot owners. The question also arises where land is partitioned among heirs upon the death of the landowner-lessor. The problem is the subject of three annotations in American Law Reports. (Pittsburgh & West Virginia Gas Co. v. Ankrom, 83 W. Va. 81 [97 S. E. 593, 5 A. L. R. 1157, note 1162] ; Musgrave v. Musgrave, 86 W. Va. 119 [103 S. E. 302, 16 A. L. R. 564, note 588]; McIntire v. Bond, 227 Ky. 607 [13 Pac. (2d) 772, 64 A. L. R. 630, note 634].)

We are of the view that the decisions holding for the rule of apportionment best accord with the principles laid down in Callahan v. Martin, supra, this day decided, and in other decisions of the courts of this state, as to the nature of the interest of the landowner, his lessee, and assignees of oil royalty. Therefore, in the instant case, during the continuance of the oil lease to which block V was subject at the time of its subdivision by the Mills Organization, even in the absence of any provisions in regard to oil rights in the deeds to the 83 lots of approximately equal size, each lot owner would be entitled to 1/83 of % landowner’s royalty, or 1/498 part thereof for each lot owned. The sum of more than $90,000 deposited in court in the actions herein was produced under the lease in effect at the time of subdivision by the Mills Organization, and was apportionable in the ratio of 1/498 part for each lot owned, as decreed by the court below.

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Bluebook (online)
43 P.2d 797, 3 Cal. 2d 128, 1935 Cal. LEXIS 405, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/standard-oil-co-v-john-p-mills-organization-cal-1935.