Stringfellow v. Murphy

195 So. 844, 1940 La. App. LEXIS 50
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 6, 1940
DocketNo. 6016.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 195 So. 844 (Stringfellow v. Murphy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stringfellow v. Murphy, 195 So. 844, 1940 La. App. LEXIS 50 (La. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

DREW, Judge.

On February 23, 1938, T. Levert String-fellow conveyed to defendant, Mrs. Eleanor .Leslie Murphy, 100 acres of land in Caddo Parish, Louisiana, for a consideration of ■$753 cash, and the assumption by the ven-dee of a Federal Land Bank mortgage having a balance due of $1,778.81. On September 28, 1938, this suit was filed by .Stringfellow against Mrs. Murphy for a rescission of the sale on account of lesion beyond moiety.

The lower court fixed the value of the •property at $5,500, which was more than ■twice the amount of the consideration paid. Defendant elected not to supplement the price, but to allow the sale to be rescinded upon reimbursement to her of the pur•chase money, with interest.

A written stipulation or agreement was made and signed by plaintiff and defendant and filed in court, in which stipulation .all differences were agreed upon and settled, except one. It is set .out in the said .agreement as follows: “On July 16, 1938, the defendant, Mrs. Eleanor L. Murphy, •executed an oil, gas and mineral lease covering and affecting said property to the Arkansas Fuel Oil Company, as recorded in •Conveyance Book 394, page 329, of the Records of Caddo Parish,. Louisiana, and received therefor the sum of $1000.00 as a cash bonus, the said sum of $1000.00 having been paid to Mrs. Murphy, the defendant. The said lease is made a part of this agreement by reference, and is for a term of 10 years providing for the payment of rentals for renewal of said lease from year to year on July 16th of each year. The plaintiff in this case contends that he is entitled to receive that proportion of the $1000.00 lease bonus which the period of time from September 28, 1938, up to July 16, 1939, bears to the entire term, of the lease, and the defendant contends that the entire lease bonus, namely, the sum of $1000.00, should belong to her. The question submitted to the Court by this agreement is the ownership of said lease bonus of $1000.00, that is, whether the entire amount belongs to defendant or whether a proportion, and if so what proportion, belongs to the plaintiff. It is further agreed between the parties that since the sum of $1000.00 was applied on the mortgage due the Federal Land Bank of New Orleans, that whatever portion of the lease bonus may be decreed to belong to defendant shall bear 5% per an-num interest from July 22, 1938 (the date of the payment to the Land Bank), until paid.”

In passing on this question, the lower court, in a well-written opinion, said:

“Plaintiff sold to defendant the land in controversy on February 23, 1938. Defendant sold an oil, gas and mineral lease on the land to the Arkansas Fuel Oil Company on July 16, 1938, the lessee paying therefor the sum of $1,000 in cash; the lease is for a period of ten years and provides for the payment of $100 on the 16th day of July each year, beginning with the year 1939, for yearly renewals of the lease, and also provides for the usual royalties in the event oil or gas is produced' from the premises. Plaintiff’s suit was filed September 28, 1938.
“Plaintiff contends that he is entitled to receive from defendant, on the return of the property, a part of the $1,000 in proportion to which the period of time from September 28, 1938, to July 16, 1939, bears to one year, the time for which the $1,000 was paid. Defendant, on the other hand, contends that she is entitled to the whole $1,-000.
“It is now conceded by the parties that the property will return to plaintiff burdened by the oil and gas lease aforesaid, *846 and it is the contention of plaintiff that the $1,000 paid for said oil and gas lease is 'rental’ or a ‘civil fruit’, and that, in law, it accrues from day' to day, under Article 547 of the Civil Code, and, consequently, plaintiff is entitled to the rents and civil fruits accruing from the land from the date of his demand for cancellation of the sale. We have heretofore in oral opinion held contrary to plaintiff’s position and the matter is now before us on application for a rehearing.
“If the $1,000 bonus paid for an oil and gas lease for the initial term of one year is ‘rent’ or a ‘civil fruit’ accruing from dayi to day, we wpuld have no hesitancy in agreeing with plaintiff’s contention. Civil Code, Article 547. But, is the bonus or cash payment for an oil and gas lease ‘rent’ or a ‘civil fruit’ accruing day by day to the owner of the land?
“Oil and gas leases have never been definitely classified by law or the jurisprudence in Louisiana. For the purpose of applying the law of prescription, mineral rights or mineral reservations have been decreed as servitudes. Frost-Johnson Lumber Co. v. Sailing’s Heirs, 150 La. [756] 758 [91 So. 207]. The Legislature, by Act 205 of 1938, has declared that oil and gas leases are defined and classified as real rights and incorporeal immovables; royalty due under an oil and gas lease is held to be ‘rent’ and an action therefor is prescribed in three years. Board of Levee Commissioners v. Pure Oil Company, 167 La. 801 [120 So. 373].
“No case has been cited which deals with the subject of the initial cash consideration or bonus paid for an oil and gas lease, that is, whether it is ‘rent’ paid for one year in advance, or whether it is the consideration for an ‘option’ granted to the lessee. When the lease is executed, the lessee pays the cash consideration and he then has an ‘option’ during the year to use the land for the exploration and production of oil, and if he is successful in the production of oil, he thereafter pays a royalty, which is rent.
“In an oil and gas lease, time is the essence of the contract, and if the cash consideration is not paid, the lease is void. Likewise, if the annual rental is not paid at the time specified, the lease is forfeited and the lessor has his right of action to cancel same; but we know of no law which would authorize the lessor to sue the lessee for the annual rental and to recover a daily accrual of rental until the lease is cancelled and, if this be true, we do not see how that the cash consideration for an oil and gas lease, or the annual rental stipulated, can be said to be accruing from day to day. The payment is due not from day to day, but it is all due at one and the same time, and if not paid, the lease is forfeited, and if paid, the lessee secures certain rights for the period of time stipulated in the lease. This right then is an obligation against the land so that one who acquires the property subject to the encumbrance thereon, and this, we think, is especially true when considered with respect to an action for lesion.
“ ‘The seller who demands the rescission on account of lesion beyond moiety, must resume the possession of the thing, in the state in which it is. * * * ’ Civil Code, Article 2597.
“ ‘If the purchaser elect to rescind the sale, he must restore the property with all the profits received, or which he might have received from the property from the time of bringing suit * * *.’ Civil Code, Article 1878.

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195 So. 844, 1940 La. App. LEXIS 50, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stringfellow-v-murphy-lactapp-1940.