Tanner v. Olds

173 P.2d 6, 29 Cal. 2d 110, 167 A.L.R. 1219, 1946 Cal. LEXIS 281
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 1, 1946
DocketL. A. 19460; L. A. 19467; L. A. 19472
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 173 P.2d 6 (Tanner v. Olds) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tanner v. Olds, 173 P.2d 6, 29 Cal. 2d 110, 167 A.L.R. 1219, 1946 Cal. LEXIS 281 (Cal. 1946).

Opinion

SCHAUER, J.

The problem presented by this appeal from a judgment in a quiet title suit is whether the royalty interest of a colessor in oil produced under a community oil lease is forefeited by reason of the fact that after land owned by him and originally subject to the lease was excluded therefrom, he produced oil on his land and thereby diminished the production of the community wells. For the reasons hereinafter stated, we have concluded that the trial court’s determination in favor of such colessor must be sustained.

Certain of the issues here involved have been previously passed upon by this court (Tanner v. Title Ins. & Trust Co. (1942), 20 Cal.2d 814 [129 P.2d 383]). As stated in our opinion on that appeal each of the parties, or his predecessor in interest, in 1921 joined as lessor-with others in a community oil lease to Standard Oil Company as lessee of nine contiguous 5-acre lots in Montebello. The lots are numbered 168'to 176, both inclusive. The lease provides, among other things, that “Lessors agree to, and they do hereby, pool their interest in *112 this lease, and agree that during the continuance of this lease each owner of land subject thereto shall share in all benefits accruing to the whole lease in the ratio which the acreage owned by said Lessors bears to the entire acreage leased. This provision as to apportionment of benefits to be operative, notwithstanding the surrender by the Lessee of any land described herein.” The lessee drilled two wells, one on lot 174 and the other on lot 176, and each well has produced oil in paying quantities for some years. Lots 174 and 176 are owned by plaintiff Tanner and plaintiff Hunt, respectively.

On June 1, 1933, the lessee joined with the owners of the nine lots in executing a written agreement by which all of the lots except numbers 174 and 176 were quitclaimed and released from the community lease to their respective owners. On June 30, 1937, such owners secured a decree, which is now final, quieting their several titles against plaintiffs Tanner and Hunt. In the latter part of 1937 defendant Emma F. Olds and her husband, who had joined in the community lease as owners and lessors of lot 173, leased that lot to the Bush Oil Company and in 1939 began receiving royalties on oil produced therefrom. No part of those royalties has been shared with plaintiffs. Mr. Olds died in 1944 and Mrs. Olds is now the sole owner of lot 173 and of the rights formerly held by her and her husband in the community wells. The Bush wells were not slant drilled or whipstocked, but were bottomed entirely on the Olds property.

Until approximately September, 1938, the owners of the nine lots originally covered by the community lease shared equally in the landowners’ royalties accruing under the terms of the lease from the wells on lots 174 and 176. Shortly before that time plaintiffs Tanner and Hunt asserted that they alone were entitled to such royalties. Thereupon they brought this action to quiet title thereto and the trial court originally entered judgment in their favor. That judgment was reversed upon defendants’ appeal.

In our decision upon the former appeal (Tanner v. Title Ins. & Trust Co. (1942), supra, 20 Cal.2d 814, 823), we held, upon the record, then presented, that the owners of the seven surrendered lots “have the right to participate in all royalties payable under the lease.” Concerning the one-ninth royalty share of Mr. and Mrs. Olds, the owners of the producing lot 173, we stated, however, at pages 824-825, that “courts have frequently considered implied covenants as being within a *113 contract, but such covenants are justified only when they are not inconsistent with some express term of the contract and, in the absence of such implied terms, the contract could not be effectively performed. [Citations.] But the facts of the present case do not show any basis for implying a covenant in the lease which would have the effect of dividing the royalty provided for in it differently than the parties have agreed upon by the plain terms of their contract.

“The respondents [Tanner and Hunt, appellants herein] would be in an entirely different position if their suit was based upon pleadings and proof that the . . . Olds, by the production of oil on their land, are draining oil from the pool tapped by the wells on lots 174 and 176, and are thus impeding the full performance of the community lease.

“Every contract contains an implied covenant on the part of each party not to prevent or hinder performance by the other party. [Citation.] Upon fundamental principles, the law will not allow one to claim royalties under a community lease and at the same time diminish the amount of oil which might otherwise be recovered for the common benefit of all the lessors.

“For example, in Hartman Ranch Co. v. Associated Oil Co., 10 Cal.2d 232 [73 P.2d 1163], the defendant leased plaintiff’s 011 property and also acquired a lease on adjacent land upon which it drilled wells, thereby draining oil from the plaintiff’s land. The lease with the plaintiff contained no offset clause. Nevertheless, the court held that a covenant would be implied obligating the lessee to drill wells to offset those on the adjacent property.

“In the present case, however, no evidence was offered to show that the well on the land of the Olds is draining oil from the source of supply under the community lease, and contrary to the contention of the respondents, this court may not take judicial notice of any such alleged fact.”

After the remittitur went down appellants Beaty, as the successor of the original lessors of the westerly one-half of lots 171 and 172, intervened as the owners of a one-ninth lessor’s royalty interest in the community wells. When the case was tried for the second time the pleadings of all appellants (plaintiffs, and interveners Beaty) had been amended so as to allege, in effect, that the wells drilled by the Bush Oil Company on Mrs. Olds’ lot 173 drained oil from the common pool tapped *114 by the community wells on lots 174 and 176, and thus impeded the full performance of the community lease. Escrow-Depositary Corporation v. Olds (L.A. 19467) and Security-First National Bank of Los Angeles v. Tanner (L.A. 19472) are interpleader actions involving the same question as that presented in the quiet title action, and are actions in which the monies to be awarded upon final judgment consist of the disputed one-ninth community lease royalties due to the Olds by the terms of the lease. The three cases were tried together, arid the. court entered judgments decreeing, in substance, that defendant Olds was entitled to her one-ninth share of the community lease production despite the fact that her independent production on lot 173 from its inception in May, 1939, drained the common pool tapped by the community wells and her own well to such an extent that had it not been, for the production on lot 173 the community wells would have produced 15 per cent more.

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Bluebook (online)
173 P.2d 6, 29 Cal. 2d 110, 167 A.L.R. 1219, 1946 Cal. LEXIS 281, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tanner-v-olds-cal-1946.