Struss v. Stoddard

258 S.W.2d 413, 2 Oil & Gas Rep. 1183, 1953 Tex. App. LEXIS 1796
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 8, 1953
Docket15423
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 258 S.W.2d 413 (Struss v. Stoddard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Struss v. Stoddard, 258 S.W.2d 413, 2 Oil & Gas Rep. 1183, 1953 Tex. App. LEXIS 1796 (Tex. Ct. App. 1953).

Opinion

MASSEY, Chief Justice.

Appeal from District Court of Colorado County, Texas.

Appellants brought suit in trespass to try title as to 353.16/908.39 oil and gas royalty interest in and to four tracts of land in Colorado County, Texas, the total acreage of said tracts amounting to 555.23 acres. Appellees were the owners of the remaining oil and gas royalty interests under said total acreage, under allegations of the suit brought by the appellants, and under their contentions they owned all of the oil, gas, mineral and royalty interests thereunder. Upon their motion ' for summary judgment, judgment was rendered in behalf of the appellees, and it is from this judgment this appeal is brought.

For purposes of this opinion, reference to appellants herein shall mean the parties in that category and status in relation to the questions posed on this appeal as they existed on date of February 22, 1945, the date on which there was filed of record and effective an instrument hereinafter referred to as the unitization contract or agreement of 1944, and shall also mean and include their successors in title and interests in .title. Reference to appellees herein shall mean the parties in that category and status in relation to the questions posed on this appeal as they existed at the .same time, and shall also mean and include their successors in title and interests in title.

On said date, early in 1945, the 1944 unitization agreement became effective. This agreement . included interests under ■two parcels of land belonging to appellants, constituting one tract totalling 330.7 acres of land. This tract was already under lease as to oil and gas mineral interests for a primary term of ten years from January 15, 1941. Said tract will be hereinafter termed appellants’ large tract. The unitization agreement also included what will be hereinafter called appellants’ small tract, a tract containing 22.46 acres of land, under lease by appellants as of March 17, 1943, as to oil and gas mineral interests for a primary term of ten years. Both tracts were under leases which were conditioned that in the event the lessees thereunder should, from dates of their execution, not have commenced drilling operations thereon within one year’s time, the leases should terminate as to both parties, unless by payment of prescribed delay rentals the lessees could extend the period from year to year without commencing drilling operations.

By the terms of the lease of the appellants’ large tract, if prior to expiration of the first year drilling operations should have been instituted, the lessee owed no duty to pay such rentals except, if as result of such drilling operations (no rental money being paid) a “dry hole” was' proven, in which event the lease was to still be effective if the lessee paid or tendered to the lessor these rentals prescribed to become due after expiration of three (3) months following the date of completion of the “dry hole,” in which event the lease continued in effect for its primary term without any further drilling activity, so long as the delay rentals entitling the lessee to delay drilling of any kind further were paid as provided by the lease. Provisions in the lease covering appellants’ small tract were similar though not identical. After the “dry hole” was drilled, rentals were accepted by appellants from their lessees on each of the leases as to said tracts. Both leases were of the “unless” type, wherein lease expiration was provided to occur without further affirmative action.

There were four other tracts of land, belonging to other lessors, under oil and gas leases at time of the unitization agreement of 1944, but the leases as to all of these tracts,, except one which was for a primary term of five years, expiring January 15, 1946, were for ten years, and none *415 of them expired until. 1951 or later, and subsequent to events giving rise to this cause of action. In this unitization contract, the acreage total involved as to appellants was 353.16, and the acreage total, involved as to the other lessors, appellees herein, was 555.23, and together .appellants’ and lessor appellees’ acreage totalled 9.08.39 acres. .

By the unitization agreement of 1944, appellants and lessor appellees and lessee ap-pellees contracted together for a pooling of all the. acreage and interests thereunder for oil and gas purposes, conditioned as will be hereinafter described. By the terms of this contract the royalty owners would share proportionately in royalty interests, as to any and all oil produced from any part of the acreage involved, as their respective proportionate interest under any of the several tracts related to total acreage of all parcels. ' In other words, as to any and all oil produced anywhere upon and from under the 908.39 acres the appellants would be entitled to 353.16/908.39 fractional royalty interest in the oil produced.. It was provided that the several leases (for the purposes of the unitization agreement) would be treated as an entirety, as though all the land was under one lease-from one. person, and the various leases were incorporated by reference in the unitization agreement for description of the leases ■ as- well as of the tracts of land under lease and under the unitization agreement. It was provided that the unitization agreement should constitute a covenant running with the leases and contracts on land covered thereby, and that, such leases should be modified only to the extent. they were changed or affected by the unitization contract.

In early 1945, after payment by lessee on the lease upon appellants’ large tract the delay rental for January 15, 1945 entitling lessee to delay any drilling until January 15, 1946, a well which proved to be a non-producer or “dry hole” was drilled on one of appellants’ tracts, which was abandoned as a “dry hole” and plugged on April 7, 1945. This drilling operation on appellants’ large tract was performed pursuant to the purposes of the unitization agreement of 1944, and was the operation all parties had in mind when they joined in the unitization agreement. The date of the abandonment and plugging on April 7th was prior to the date in 1945 that the delay, rentals were due on the lease covering the small tract of appellants. Subsequent accruing delay rentals were paid on this lease to appellants, and accepted by them on or before the dates they became due. Following April 7, 1945, there was no drilling activity on any of the tracts unitized under the. 1944 agreement until January 9, 1951. During this period, the primary term of five years provided for. in the Miller lease expired, and Miller re-leased his land under a new oil and gas lease, beginning in 1946. All the delay rentals accruable as provided by the individual leases upon both of appellants’ tracts ¡were paid annually by the lessees thereof and accepted by the appellants.

,. Then on March 9, 1949, all the lessors of oil and gas leases under the 1944 unitization agreement, except..the appellants, got together ■ with the lessees under their total of 555.23 acres of land, and entered into a new unitization agreement as to oil and gas produced from,such acreage, and contracted identically as in .the case of the 1944 unitization agreement, in so far as the purposes of this appeal are concerned.

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Bluebook (online)
258 S.W.2d 413, 2 Oil & Gas Rep. 1183, 1953 Tex. App. LEXIS 1796, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/struss-v-stoddard-texapp-1953.