Storm v. Barbara Oil Co.

282 P.2d 417, 177 Kan. 589, 4 Oil & Gas Rep. 962, 1955 Kan. LEXIS 363
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedApril 9, 1955
Docket39,553
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 282 P.2d 417 (Storm v. Barbara Oil Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Storm v. Barbara Oil Co., 282 P.2d 417, 177 Kan. 589, 4 Oil & Gas Rep. 962, 1955 Kan. LEXIS 363 (kan 1955).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Robb, J.:

This appeal was taken from an order of the district

court granting appellee ninety days to comménce, or cause to be commenced, the drilling of an oil or gas well to be completed with due diligence to test the Douglas formation in the Medicine Lodge area and to develop the lease subject to further order of the court or, in the alternative, to release appellee’s lease as to the undeveloped acreage. The appellants, landowners, asked for cancellation of appellee’s oil and gas lease and a one sixteenth royalty mineral deed on the grounds of inadequate development.

The following facts have been compiled from uncontradicted and agreed statements in the pleadings, from stipulations and oral admissions in the trial of the case, from uncontradicted testimony of witnesses, and stipulations and admissions in the pretrial conferences:

The discovery well in the Medicine Lodge gas field was the Alexander No. 1, which was located slightly southeast of the center of section 13, township 33 south, range 13 west, and was completed on or about January 13, 1927. The original lease under consideration dated July 25, 1927, was executed to appellee by R. E. Carter (signature acknowledged on August 1, 1927), by Órdella H. Carter, his wife (signature acknowledged on August 4, 1927), and by J. W. Storm and E. A. Storm, his wife (signatures acknowledged on August 4, 1927). The lease covered 600 acres lying in sections 1, 2 and 11, and was for a primary term of five years or as long as oil or gas was produced by lessee or the premises were being developed. If no well were commenced on or before March 1, 1928, the lease should terminate unless $600.00 rental were paid, which would extend the time of drilling for twelve months. These terms were set out on a general form for such leases with the specific parts filled in by typewriter. The lessors, under the foregoing lease, entered into a sale of one sixteenth of the oil and gas royalty agreement under date of August 4, 1927, with respective dates of acknowledgment of signatures the same as they were in the lease.

*591 (This court is including in the record a map which shows the lease in question and the producing wells in close proximity thereto.

This map does not reflect the entire Medicine Lodge gas field, but it is sufficient to assist the reader so he may more clearly understand the situation before the court. It follows:

*592 Appellants Frank W. Storm, Ordella H. Carter, and Jessie V. Pickerell were children and heirs of J. W. and E. A. Storm, both now deceased.

Appellee drilled Carter No. 1 to a depth of 3,880 feet where, on June 25, 1928, tools were lost and were never recovered. Carter No. 2 was completed in November, 1928, as a producing gas well and is still a commercial well. Carter No. 3, which was completed on February 4, 1930, was a dry hole and Carter No. 4, which was completed on February 2, 1932, was also a dry hole. Appellee had not developed the 600 acre tract since Carter No. 4. Carter No. 2 had produced $1,500,000 in gas production, of which appellee had received $1,407,000 (about $52,000 annually) and appellants had received $93,000 (about $3,500 annually), from the Mississippi formation.

Appellants do not contend there was any fraud or overreaching in taking the lease and royalty conveyance, but they do contend they were one and the same transaction, which would cause cancellation of both in the event the lease were cancelled. Appellee contends they were separate and distinct transactions with separate considerations, the lease consideration being $1.00 and the royalty consideration being $3,000.

Production of gas in the field prior to 1952 was exclusively in the Mississippi formation, but since 1952 there had been additional production in the Douglas formation.

Appellants made no demands prior to 1953 which were followed by legal action, and they do not contend that any oral demands were made between 1941 and 1953. Appellants admit that on or about July 29, 1953, appellee’s agent, Riley W. MacGregor, offered appellant, J. W. Storm, a possibility of drilling on the 600 acres in question at an indefinite time in the future if appellants’ claim against appellee were dropped. Appellants claimed that the company had abandoned its rights and they refused to let appellee drill. During a pretrial conference appellee accused appellants of requiring forfeiture, but appellants contended that appellee had abandoned all rights in the lease and the royalty conveyance.

On June 27, 1953, appellants made written demand on appellee stating, in substance, that there had been no development on the 600 acres for over fifteen years; appellee had drilled producing wells south and east of appellants’ property and gas wells were drilled to the north of the 600 acres; on several occasions requests were *593 made by appellants for appellee to drill on the 600 acres, but no wells had been drilled; the lease and royalty conveyance of appellee had, therefore, been forfeited by failure to comply with appellee’s obligations to appellants except the 160 acres where Carter No. 2 is located; and finally, appellants requested that within twenty days appellee should release and quit claim the lease and royalty conveyance to appellants except the 160 acres aforementioned.

Appellee replied in a letter dated July 14, 1953, wherein it stated, in substance, that it had been considering the matter of testing appellants’ property for Douglas gas possibilities, but if appellants’ letter of June 27,1953, meant that appellants intended to start court action, appellee would have to await the determination of the court action before it could be justified in commencing drilling operations.

On July 28, 1953, appellants again wrote appellee and mentioned several conversations had with appellee’s agent wherein it was stated that the purpose of the letter of June 27, 1953, was to request a release of the lease and royalty conveyance; the second letter further stated appellee had waited “far too long” and that through its agent appellee was to release the lease and the royalty conveyance except the 160 acres under Carter No. 2; and appellants would re-lease the 440 acres on customary terms providing for commencement of a well thereon within sixty days; that since no reply had been received from appellee on this proposition, the only alternative was court action, but they would wait a few more days for acceptance of the above offer before filing.

Appellants filed their action, the issues were joined, pretrial conferences were had and a trial ensued. Appellant Storm testified that he had numerous conversations over the years with agents of appellee, but there was no demand until June 27, 1953.

There was uncontroverted testimony of William Ziska, vice-president and treasurer of appellee, to the effect that the appellee’s records reflected that on or about July, 1927, the three original leases covering the Storm 600 acres were consolidated into one lease, and on September 14, 1927, a $3,000 check was issued to pay for the royalty conveyance. The original leases mentioned by Ziska were dated March 26, 1927, with rental paid on March 1, 1927.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
282 P.2d 417, 177 Kan. 589, 4 Oil & Gas Rep. 962, 1955 Kan. LEXIS 363, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/storm-v-barbara-oil-co-kan-1955.