Sun Oil Co. v. Railroad Commission

68 S.W.2d 609, 1933 WL 63398
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 22, 1933
DocketNo. 8052.
StatusPublished
Cited by59 cases

This text of 68 S.W.2d 609 (Sun Oil Co. v. Railroad Commission) 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
Sun Oil Co. v. Railroad Commission, 68 S.W.2d 609, 1933 WL 63398 (Tex. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinions

This appeal is from an order of the district court of Travis county denying appellant's application for a temporary injunction to restrain the appellees Bennett, Ryan, and Scheultz from drilling three wells on a strip of land in Rusk county, Tex., 33 feet wide and 3,342 feet long, containing 2.59 acres, and to set aside the order of the Railroad Commission granting permits for said wells. Pending a determination of this appeal, this court entered on September 29, 1933, a temporary restraining order, restraining appellees from drilling wells Nos. 1 and 3 authorized by the Railroad Commission. This order did not, however, relate to well No. 2, near the center of the tract.

The case arose under the following pertinent facts: One Rich Lee and wife were former owners of a 240-acre tract in Rusk county, which included the strip in question and the lands to the north and south thereof, all held as one body of land. After their deaths, six of their children partitioned said lands in March, 1921. There was set aside to Malinda Schuler a 42-acre tract south of and adjoining in its entire length the 2.59-acre tract here involved. To Mary V. Flanagan there was set apart this 2.59-acre tract and a 39 1/3-acre track immediately south of and adjoining in its entire length Malinda Schuler's 42-acre tract. Thereafter, in August 1921, Mary V. Flanagan conveyed to Malinda Schuler this 2.59-acre tract in exchange for a 2 2/3-acre tract conveyed to her at the same time by Malinda Schuler out of the west end of the latter's 42-acre tract. This exchange gave to Malinda Schuler her 42 acres, including the strip here in controversy, all adjacent and constituting one contiguous body of land, and to Mary V. Flanagan her 42 acres of contiguous lands instead of having same separated by the Malinda Schuler tract as created in the original partition.

A seventh child of Rich and Mary Lee, who was then thought to be dead, and who was not considered in the partition of 1921, appeared in 1931 and claimed his one-seventh interest in all of said lands, and his interest in the Malinda Schuler tract, including the 2.59-acre tract, was acquired by appellant Sun Oil Company, leaving only a six-sevenths interest claimed by appellees. To avoid confusion and for the purposes of the issues here presented, we shall discuss the issues as if Malinda Schuler owned the entire estate in said lands at the time she and her son executed a lease thereon to the Sun Oil Company on July 21, 1930. It may also be noted that a suit is now pending on appeal in the Court of Civil Appeals at Texarkana wherein appellant contends, and which contention was decided against it by the trial court in that case, that its lease from Malinda Schuler and son in fact covers *Page 611 the strip here in controversy. But by written agreement, and to avoid a receivership, it was agreed, among other things, that, pending the outcome of the suit, appellees, subject to appellant's right to protest their application therefor, might drill such wells on said strip of land as the Railroad Commission would grant them permits for. The permits herein attacked were granted to appellees by the Railroad Commission on July 12, 1933, without notice to appellant, and without a hearing, and recited that same were granted to protect vested rights under exceptions to rule 37 of the Railroad Commission.

Several contentions are presented on this appeal, but, since we have concluded that one of them disposes of the entire controversy, we shall pretermit a discussion of the others. We are met at the threshold of the case with the question of whether the owners of the fee to the 42 acres, of which the 2.59-acre strip is a part, and which entire 42-acre tract was capable of development as a unit, under regulations of the Railroad Commission, in such manner as to extract therefrom all of the oil to which such owners were entitled, can by their voluntary act subdivide in small tracts said 42 acres so as to require exceptions to rule 37 and permit the drilling of more wells thereon than would otherwise be permitted under the conservation laws of the state and the rules of the Railroad Commission promulgated pursuant thereto; that is, can the owners of a tract of land capable of development as a whole, under the conservation laws of the state and valid rules of the Railroad Commission, voluntarily divide same into small tracts and thereby create in themselves or in their assignees "vested rights" in such small tracts which would entitle them to more wells thereon than they could have drilled thereon under the law but for such subdivision into small tracts. We have reached the conclusion that they cannot.

Rule 37 was promulgated by the Railroad Commission in 1919, and was in force at the time the Schulers, under whom appellees claim, acquired title to the land here involved in 1921. Its validity has been upheld by the courts and is not here questioned. Bass v. R. R. Com. (Tex.Civ.App.)10 S.W.2d 589; Danciger Oil Ref. Co. v. R. R. Com. (Tex.Civ.App.)49 S.W.2d 837, and cases there cited. When first promulgated rule 37 provided for spacing of wells 300 feet apart and 150 feet from the property lines, and for exceptions to protect vested rights. It is now settled that orders of the Railroad Commission, validly issued in accordance with law, and when operating prospectively, are legislative in character and have "the force and effect of an enactment of the Legislature." West Tex. Compress Warehouse Co. v. Ry. Co. (Tex.Com.App.) 15 S.W.2d 558, 560; Missouri-Kansas T. Ry. Co. v. R. R. Com. (Tex.Civ.App.) 3 S.W.2d 489; Railroad Com. v. Uvalde Const. Co. (Tex.Civ.App.) 49 S.W.2d 1113; Coleman Gas Oil Co. v. Santa Anna Gas Co. (Tex.Civ.App.) 58 S.W.2d 540. As such, therefore, all parties leasing land for oil and gas subsequent to its promulgation are required to take cognizance of said rule 37. Being a valid order, sustained under the police power of the state, all parties affected by it must contract with reference to this well-recognized rule, and not in violation of it; and contracts, whether by conveyance or lease, covering the subject-matter to which it relates, must be entered into and construed in keeping with its terms. It is not necessary, so far as this controversy is concerned, for us to undertake to define the term "vested rights," nor to attempt to prescribe its limitations. Whatever the conditions under which vested rights may arise, certainly they must arise in conformity with law, and cannot grow out of a violation or an evasion of it. Any asserted right, therefore, the validity of which must be predicated upon a clear contravention of the terms and provisions of rule 37, cannot become a vested right.

To hold otherwise would be to set at naught the conservation laws of the state. There can be no distinction in principle between the right of the state through its Railroad Commission to limit the number of wells to be drilled in a given oil field on a given surface area, spaced at minimum distance from each other and its power to limit and prorate the amount of production from wells legally drilled.

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Bluebook (online)
68 S.W.2d 609, 1933 WL 63398, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sun-oil-co-v-railroad-commission-texapp-1933.