States v. Honolulu Consol. Oil Co.

249 F. 167, 1918 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1124
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. California
DecidedMarch 2, 1918
DocketNo. B-46
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 249 F. 167 (States v. Honolulu Consol. Oil Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
States v. Honolulu Consol. Oil Co., 249 F. 167, 1918 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1124 (S.D. Cal. 1918).

Opinion

RUDKIN, District Judge.

The lands in controversy in this case are within the presidential withdrawal of September 27, 1909, and the rights of the parties depend largely upon the construction to be given the proviso to the so-called Pickett Act of June 25, 1910 (36 Stat. 847, c. 421 [Comp. St. 1916, §§ 4523-4525]), which reads as follows:

“The rights of any person who, at the date of any withdrawal order heretofore or hereafter made, is a bona tide occupant or claimant of oil or gas bearing lands, and who, at such date, is in diligent prosecution of work leading to the discovery of oil or gas, shall not be affected or impaired by such order,' so long as such occupant or claimant shall continue in diligent prosecution of said work.”

The material facts are these: For some considerable time before the presidential withdrawal order, the defendant, or its predecessor in interest, was the owner of a patented section of land in the vicinity of Taft and Maricopa, in the state of California, designated as section 10, also of another patented quarter section, and held by assignments [168]*168from the original locators 31 quarter sections surrounding and in the immediate vicinity of section 10; such locations having been made under the mineral land laws of the United States. When drilling operations actually commenced on patented section 10 does not appear from the records before me, but at all events work had so far progressed as early as June, 1909, that large quantities of gas were encountered in the drilling operations on that section. This caused a suspension of work for a time, but as soon as the gas was brought under control the drilling continued, and oil was actually discovered on February 1, 1910. It might be said in this connection that a disclaimer has been filed by the defendant as to 14 of the 31 quarter sections, so that on the present hearing we are only concerned with the remaining 17. During the year prior to the withdrawal order a cabin, or a skeleton derrick, or in some cases perhaps bofh, was constructed on each of these quarter sections, and the defendant had expended considerable sums in this way, and in the building of roads, making surveys, piping water from a distant lake, and otherwise providing for the general development of the property. In due time the defendant made application for patents, submitted its proofs, and final certificates issued, accompanied by a notation, however, that the government protested against the acceptance of the proofs or the issuance of patents. On two ex parte hearings thereafter the Commissioner of the General Land Office decided the controversies in favor of the defendant; but a hearing has since been ordered by the Commissioner for the purpose of inquiring into the rights of the respective parties, and tire applications for patents are thus pending at the present time. The present suit was instituted by the government to enjoin the defendant from drilling further wells on the disputed tracts, and for the appointment of a receiver for the wells now in operation, until the matters are finally disposed of by the Land Department, and until patents issue or the applications for patents are finally rejected.

[1-3] The case.hinges upon the true intent and meaning of the words “in diligent prosecution of work leading to discovery of oil oi-gas,” and upon this question the decisions do not seem to be entirely harmonious. If the title to all these lands was vested in a common ownership, the testimony leaves no doubt in my mind that at the date of withdrawal the defendant was diligently ehgaged in the development of the entire group in a practical, businesslike, economic way, for it would not be the part of prudence to drill wells simultaneously on these 17 or 31 claims to a depth of from 2,000 to 4,000 feet before the oil-bearing quality of the lands was ascertained or proven. Indeed, such a course would seem to involve a profligate and useless waste of money. But the title to the unpatented lands was not vested 'in a common ownership, and- the question arises: Can the group system of development be applied to such a case ? If not, and if each of the several unpatented claims must be deemed a separate entity or a single unit for the purposes of development, a grave and doubtful question arises as to whether, on each individual claim, work leading to the discovery of oil or gas was in diligent prosecution on the date of withdrawal. I say the question is doubtful and debatable, because the testimony would warrant, though it would not impel, a finding that the [169]*169prosecution of further work on the unpatented claims was dependent entirely upon the results obtained or the conditions found in the drilling on section 10.

In reaching this conclusion I am not controlled by the provisions of 1lie contract between the predecessor in interest of the defendant and his assignors, for by that contract Matson had an undoubted right to limit his obligation to any extent he saw fit, and the obligation of his contract would throw but little light on his futureTntentions. But there is other evidence in the record, and other inferences that may he drawn from undisputed facts. Under date of March 6, 1909, Matson, the predecessor in interest of the defendant, wrote to his agent, Crandall, as follows:

“Would It be practical to order the lumber for the rigs, without ordering the rig Irons, as it runs into money, and I do not feel we should spend too much money until wo are sure of getting oil there. We are still ‘wild-catting,’ and hare spent considerable money .up to date, and I do not want to dump in any more until there is surety of success. If you think it is absolutely necessary to order the lumber, why I think I will order it up here.”

These views may have beeti somewhat modified by the later discovery of gas on section 10; but, however strong the indications of oil might then be, the discovery of gas is not the discovery of oil, and with my limited knowledge of the oil industry it seems incredible to me that the defendant would proceed to drill wells on these quarter sections, one after another, if neither oil nor indications of oil were discovered on section 10, or on the quarter sections previously drilled. For these reasons, as already stated, T am of opinion that the testimony would warrant a finding that future operations on the unpatented , sections depended entirely upon the results obtained from the drilling on section 10. It must be understood that I am not holding or intimating that such a finding should be made, because that question rests entirely with another department of the government. I merely hold that the case presented is not entirely one-sided, as claimed, and that a finding either way would find its warrant in the record before me. We are then brought back to the question: Can the development work in progress on section 10 he held to be development work on the remaining quarter sections within the meaning of the law? In discussing this question in United States v. Thirty-Two Oil Co. (D. C.) 242 Fed. 723, 735, Judge Bean said:

“Now, tt is clear from the testimony, and in fact undisputed, that there was no work in progress or immediately contemplated at the date of the withdrawal looking to discovery, or intended for the discovery, of oil thereon, and had not been for some, months prior thereto, if at any time, unless the drilling of a well by the oil company on another location, half a mile distant, with the intention on its pari, if oil was discovered thereon, to thereafter proceed with the development of the location in question, is held to be such work.

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Bluebook (online)
249 F. 167, 1918 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1124, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/states-v-honolulu-consol-oil-co-casd-1918.