Tenneco Oil Company v. Allen

1973 OK 129, 515 P.2d 1391, 47 Oil & Gas Rep. 180, 1973 Okla. LEXIS 446
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 30, 1973
Docket43382
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 1973 OK 129 (Tenneco Oil Company v. Allen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tenneco Oil Company v. Allen, 1973 OK 129, 515 P.2d 1391, 47 Oil & Gas Rep. 180, 1973 Okla. LEXIS 446 (Okla. 1973).

Opinion

LAVENDER, Justice:

This appeal, by the Sac and Fox Prue Sand Unit (a body politic and corporate organized, and created, under the 1951 statutes now appearing as 52 O.S.1971, §§ 287.1 through 287.15) and Tenneco Oil Company, involves a jury verdict, and judgment based thereon, against them as the defendants in an action by the defendant in error, Clyde Allen, for damages allegedly sustained by him as the owner of certain land included in the unit-area of the Sac and Fox Prue Sand Unit.

By virtue of a deed dated February 27, 1967, the plaintiff became the owner of the Southeast Quarter of Section 15, Township 14 North, Range 6 East, in Lincoln County, Oklahoma, subject to the rights of the lessee under a then-producing oil and gas lease dated May 3, 1935, to Sinclair Prairie Oil Company, as lessee, covering the entire quarter-section.

The Sac and Fox Prue Sand Unit was organized, and created by order of the Corporation Commission of this state under date of May 29, 1952, for the unitized operation (including secondary recovery operations) of the Prue Sand underlying a designated “unit-area” of some 1,200 acres of land in Lincoln County, in accordance with a “plan of unitization” submitted with the application for such order. In July of 1964, Tenneco Oil Company (hereinafter referred to as “Tenneco”) had become the designated unit-operator for the unit, and was still the unit-operator at the time of the trial of this case.

Seventy-five acres of the above-described quarter-section had been, and are, included in the unit-area of the Sac and Fox Prue Sand Unit. They consist of the seven square ten-acre tracts abutting the *1393 northern and western boundaries of the quarter-section, plus the triangular northwest half of the Southeast Quarter of the Northwest Quarter of the quarter-section.

Attached to the petition is a copy of a plat of the unit-area and the surrounding area, indicating that it had been prepared by Tenneco Oil Company. It shows that a well had been drilled near the center of each of the seven ten-acre tracts of the plaintiff’s land within the unit-area and had been assigned a unit-well number (Nos. 88, 89, 90, 91, 98, 102, and 106, commencing in the southwest corner of the quarter-section and proceeding north and then east), and that a well had been drilled near the center of each of four of the eight remaining square ten-acre tracts of the quarter-section.

Under the above-mentioned lease, the lessor granted, leased and let the described quarter-section of land to the lessee “for the purpose of mining and operating for the producing oil and gas, casinghead gas, casinghead gasoline, laying pipe lines, building tanks, storing oil, building towers, stations, telephone lines and other structures thereon to produce, save, take care of and manufacture all of such substances, and for housing and boarding employees,” for a term of five years from May 7, 1935, and as long thereafter as oil, gas, casing-head gas or any of them is produced.

The lease provides that “When required by lessor, the lessee shall bury pipe lines below plow depth and shall pay for damage caused by its operations to growing crops on said land.” It also provides that “Lessee shall have the right at any time during or 90 days after the expiration of this lease to remove all machinery, fixtures, houses, buildings and other structures placed on said premises, including the right to draw and remove all casing.”

At the time of the trial, some oil was still being produced from wells on that part of the leased premises within the unit-area and on that part of the leased premises not within the unit-area, and the above-mentioned oil and gas lease remained in full force and effect.

At the close of all of the evidence, the court sustained the defendants’ motion for a directed verdict as to punitive damages. It will be ignored hereafter.

As we understand it, the plaintiff’s first and second causes of action are brought on the theory of private nuisances created or maintained by the defendants. For that reason, we quote the pertinent statutes relating thereto.

The statute now appearing as 50 O.S. 1971, § 1 provides, in part:

“A nuisance consists in unlawfully doing an act, or omitting to perform e duty, which act or omission either:
“First. Annoys, injures or endangers the comfort, repose, health, oi safety of others; or,
“ * * * ; or,
“Fourth. In any way renders other persons insecure in life, or in the use of property.”

The statutes now appearing as 50 O.S. 1971 §§ 2 and 3 provide, respectively, that:

“A public nuisance is one which affects at the same time an entire community or neighborhood, or any considerable number of persons, although the extent of the annoyance or damage inflicted upon the individuals may be unequal.”

“Every nuisance not included in the definition of the last section is private.” The statutes now appearing as 50 O.S. 1971, §§ 5, 6 and 13 provide, respectively, that:

“Every successive owner of property who neglects to abate a continuing nuisance upon, or in the use of such property, created by a former owner, is liable therefor in the same manner as the one who first created it.”
“The abatement of a nuisance does not prejudice the right of any person to recover damages for its past existence.”
“The remedies against a nuisance are: 1, A civil action; or, 2, Abatement.”

*1394 Ordinarily, where the one liable for a nuisance fails to abate it voluntarily, abatement is accomplished through mandatory injunction.

The plaintiff pleaded the basic situation outlined above and alleged that, insofar as actual operations on his land within the unit-area are concerned, the Sac and Fox Prue Sand Unit is the lessee in the above-mentioned oil and gas lease, and Tenneco Oil Company is the agent of the unit with respect to the matters complained of by him; and that, when he purchased the • quarter-section of land, he succeeded to all of the rights and benefits of the lessor under the lease.

As the basis for his first cause of action, the plaintiff pleaded that, under the lease, the lessee has the right to occupy and use so much, but only so much, of the surface of the leased land as is reasonably necessary to produce and save oil and gas from the leased land.

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Bluebook (online)
1973 OK 129, 515 P.2d 1391, 47 Oil & Gas Rep. 180, 1973 Okla. LEXIS 446, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tenneco-oil-company-v-allen-okla-1973.