Taylor v. Woodpecker Corp.

539 So. 2d 1293, 1989 WL 22881
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 15, 1989
Docket87-1379
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 539 So. 2d 1293 (Taylor v. Woodpecker Corp.) 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
Taylor v. Woodpecker Corp., 539 So. 2d 1293, 1989 WL 22881 (La. Ct. App. 1989).

Opinion

539 So.2d 1293 (1989)

John M. TAYLOR and John Marvin Taylor, Jr., Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
WOODPECKER CORPORATION, et al., Defendants-Appellees.

No. 87-1379.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.

March 15, 1989.
Rehearing Denied April 12, 1989.

*1294 George Griffing, Jonesville, and Broadhurst, Brook, Mangham & Hardy, George W. Hardy III, Wm. F. Bailey, Lafayette, for plaintiffs/appellants.

Nathan M. Calhoun, J.W. Seibert III, Vidalia, J.P. Mauffray, Patrick L. Durusau, Jena, for defendants/appellees.

Ella A. Bradford, Jena, in pro per.

Lena A. Hudspeth, Jena, in pro per.

Before GUIDRY, LABORDE and KING, JJ.

GUIDRY, Judge.

In this suit, plaintiffs seek an accounting for the oil and gas produced from the Smith-Wentworth, VUA, J.H. Allen Number 1 well, allocable to a 22.85 acre tract of land owned by them and situated within the limits of Unit 71B of the Nebro-Hemphill Field as established by Louisiana Conservation Commission Order Number 24-D, dated July 3, 1942, which was re-established by Order Number 781-F effective January 1, 1986. In their suit, plaintiffs demanded an accounting for their share of all oil and gas produced from the date of first production of the Allen well. Defendants excepted to plaintiffs' demands urging that plaintiffs were without a right of action to seek an accounting for any period prior to December 15, 1986. The trial court maintained defendants' exception of no right of action and dismissed plaintiffs' demands for an accounting for the period from date of first production to December 15, 1986. Plaintiffs appealed.

John M. Taylor[1] and John M. Taylor, Jr., owners of property in Township 7 North, Range 3 East, LaSalle Parish, brought suit on May 16, 1986, against Woodpecker Corporation and E.C. Wentworth.[2] The Taylors sought cancellation of an oil, gas and mineral lease originally executed in favor of M.L. Nichols which was subsequently assigned to defendant, Woodpecker, on the ground that Woodpecker failed to operate the leased property prudently and for the mutual benefit of lessors and lessee. Specifically, plaintiffs alleged that Woodpecker breached its obligation as lessee by allowing the drilling and production of the Allen well without any allocation of production to that portion of plaintiffs' property situated within Unit 71B. In this suit, plaintiffs also sought an accounting from E.C. Wentworth and others, the operators of the well, for the oil and gas produced from that portion of Unit 71B (22.85 acres) owned by petitioners from the date of first production of the well. By amended and supplemental petition, Ashland Oil Incorporated and Placid Oil Company, purchasers of production from the Allen well, were named as defendants. Judgment was sought against them for an accounting and for monetary damages equal to the value of the oil and gas removed from the petitioners' property together with legal interest, costs and attorney's fees.

In December of 1986, plaintiffs and Woodpecker compromised the lawsuit between them by Woodpecker's execution of a release (see Appendix 1) of the Taylor lease in its entirety retroactive to the date of first production of the Allen well. Subsequently, on joint motion of plaintiffs and defendants, Woodpecker and Placid Oil, plaintiffs' suit was dismissed with prejudice as to those defendants reserving to plaintiffs the right to pursue their demands against the remaining defendants.

Following the dismissal of Woodpecker and Placid, the remaining defendants filed numerous exceptions, all of which were denied except the exception of no right of action filed by the ancillary executor of the succession of E.C. Wentworth, Ashland Oil *1295 and the various Allen parties[3] to which we previously referred.

On appeal, plaintiffs urge that:

"The trial court erred in finding no right of action in plaintiffs' request for an accounting from the date of first production of the J.H. Allen No. 1 Well."

The trial judge, in written reasons, concluded that the Taylor mineral lessee, Woodpecker, was the owner of the minerals on the land burdened by the lease, within the intendment of La.R.S. 30:3(8),[4] and that, as such, it had the exclusive right of action against the operator for an accounting for all unit production allocable to the Taylor 22.5 acre tract from date of first production to December 15, 1986, i.e., the date on which Woodpecker executed a release of the Taylor lease. The trial judge concluded that the release from Woodpecker put the landowners (plaintiffs) back into the status of mineral owners under La.R.S. 30:3(8) only from the date of the release. In reaching this conclusion, he stated:

"WOODPECKER had the exclusive right to drill and produce minerals from its leased acreage and also enjoyed the exclusively [sic] right to appropriate the production therefrom for itself and the Plaintiffs. Additionally, WOODPECKER enjoyed the exclusive right to demand and sue for the proportionate share of any unit production allocated to it as owner of the minerals under the tract in question. See Louisiana Revised Statutes 30:3(8).
By definition and by usage, a release discharges obligations. It is not an assignment in that it does not transfer credits, rights or claims to a third person as required by Louisiana Civil Code art. 2642. Therefore it is liberative rather than acquisitive. The only obligations, if any, owed by the SUCCESSION OF WENTWORTH and ASHLAND OIL COMPANY were owed to WOODPECKER as owner of the minerals. When the Plaintiffs released WOODPECKER without an assignment of the rights held by WOODPECKER, the release had the legal effect of releasing the Defendants as well...."

For the reasons which follow, we find clear error in the trial court's conclusion that, as a result of the agreement between Woodpecker and plaintiffs, the latter did not acquire whatever rights Woodpecker had to seek an accounting from the date of first production of the Allen well.[5]

The agreement between Woodpecker and the plaintiffs, attached as Appendix 1, provides in pertinent part as follows:

"This release, as to those lands that are in Unit 71B, is retroactive to the date of first production of the Smith-Wentworth, J.H. Allen #1 Well located in Section 27, T 7 N R 3 E, LaSalle Parish, Louisiana ...". (Emphasis ours).

A casual reading of the agreement (Appendix 1), when considered together with the circumstances surrounding its execution, leaves little doubt regarding the intention of the parties. The obvious purpose for the language quoted above was to vest in the Taylors the sole right to seek an accounting for the oil and gas produced from Unit 71B and allocable to the 22.5 acre Taylor tract from the date of first production. In our view, it makes little difference that the parties chose to accomplish this purpose by couching the language of their contract as a retroactive release rather than a sale transfer or assignment by Woodpecker of its right as former mineral lessee to seek an accounting for unit production for the period prior to the release. As stated in In re Pan *1296 American Life Insurance Company, 88 So.2d 410 (La.App. 2d Cir.1956):

"... According to Corpus Juris Secundum, the word "assignment" has a comprehensive meaning and in its most general sense is a transfer or making over to another of the whole of any property, real or personal, in possession or in action, or of any estate or right therein ...

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Bluebook (online)
539 So. 2d 1293, 1989 WL 22881, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-woodpecker-corp-lactapp-1989.