Texas Consolidated Oils v. Vann

1953 OK 90, 258 P.2d 679, 208 Okla. 673, 2 Oil & Gas Rep. 1335, 1953 Okla. LEXIS 877
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 24, 1953
Docket35265
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 1953 OK 90 (Texas Consolidated Oils v. Vann) 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
Texas Consolidated Oils v. Vann, 1953 OK 90, 258 P.2d 679, 208 Okla. 673, 2 Oil & Gas Rep. 1335, 1953 Okla. LEXIS 877 (Okla. 1953).

Opinion

O’NEAL, J.

The question before us arises in a proceeding by the owners of an 80-acre tract of land in Caddo county, to obtain a cancellation of an oil and gas lease executed by them and by assignment held by the operators, upon plaintiffs’ contention that the operators have abandoned the lease and have failed to develop the same by drilling additional wells, thereby breaching the implied covenants thereof, and have failed to protect the land from oil and gas drainage from wells drilled on adjacent lands. For the reasons hereinafter stated, we hold that the court’s decree and judgment requiring the drilling of additional wells in the manner and mode designated in the decree, and declaring a forfeiture of the oil and gas lease, cannot be sustained.

Plaintiffs’ original petition filed November, 1948, alleges plaintiffs’ ownership of the land and mineral rights in and to the S% of the NW14 of section 4, township 5 north, range 9 west, Cad-do county, Oklahoma. That on June 27, 1941, plaintiffs, Wade H. Vann and Mary B. Vann, executed an oil and gas lease upon said land for a term of four months and as long thereafter as oil or gas was produced therefrom. By assignments the oil and gas lease is presently owned by the defendants, Texas Consolidated Oils, successor to Texmass Petroleum Company, and the Caddo Oil Company, the operators, and by certain other named defendants asserted to have an interest therein. That the operators have made no effort to develop said land under the lease, and have abandoned its development, with the exception of one well thereon. Plaintiffs state that there is considerable production of oil and gas on adjacent land, which proves all of the above described land is productive of oil and gas from other and different horizons and sands that warrants development of the undeveloped portion of said lease, which defendants have failed and refused to do. That defendants have failed to protect the land from drainage by offset wells. Written notice for additional development is pleaded. The prayer seeks a cancellation of all acreage under the lease, except the ten acres upon which the well is presently producing gas, for the reason that the operators have neglected to comply with the express and implied terms of *675 the lease, and have abandoned further development thereof.

On the 17th day of August, 1949, the plaintiffs filed their amended petition in which additional parties are made defendants, and who appear to claim some interest in the property involved, which rights are asserted to be inferior to plaintiffs’ rights pleaded in their original petition.

On the 30th day of August, 1950, plaintiffs filed their amendment to their original and amended petition in which they allege that since the filing of their original and amended petition, there has been further development in the vicinity of the leased premises, and that the wells so drilled are direct offsets to said land and cause plaintiffs’ land to be drained of the oil and gas therefrom. Upon this additional ground, plaintiffs pray for cancellation of the lease.

The Texas Consolidated Oils, by its answer, states the defense of all named defendants necessary for our consideration. Defendant, Texas Consolidated Oils, after its general denial, admits its ownership of the oil and gas lease upon the described land and asserts that the notice for additional development is insufficient to advise defendants of planitiffs’ ground for cancellation of the lease, and further that the notice served on defendants is not signed by the owners of the mineral interest in said land. The answer further states that at the time suit was filed there was no producing oil or gas well offsetting defendant Texas Consolidated Oils’ lease and, therefore, there was no drainage of oil or gas from the land and, consequently, no cause of action for cancellation under the implied covenants of the lease to protect against drainage had accrued, when the notice for additional development was served on defendants.

Defendants pleaded that they have made considerable research at considerable expense to determine the potentialities of the lease for further development. That when said research is completed, if favorable, defendants intend to explore the deeper oil and gas sands underlying the land. Defendants specifically deny that they have or intend to abandon the lease, but on the contrary expect to develop it further if its geological research justifies additional development. Various defendants have filed separate answers and cross-petitions, but it will be unnecessary to refer to them for a proper disposition of the case.

The Texas Consolidated Oils and the Caddo Oil Company demurred to the sufficiency of the plaintiffs’ evidence, which demurrer was overruled, and at the close of the trial demurred to the evidence and requested a dismissal of the plaintiffs’ action for failure to establish facts upon which plaintiffs were entitled to any affirmative relief. The demurrer was overruled and from an order denying defendants a new trial, they have perfected their appeal.

A proper consideration of the issues involved require an examination of the court’s decree and the judgment rendered thereon. The journal entry of judgment recites that there is a producing gas well on the SW14 of the SWVi of the NW% of section 4, and as to said gas well and to its ten acres of land the lease is confirmed and remains in full force and effect. As to the remaining 30 acres in the SW% of the NW% of said section 4, the decree provides that the NE14 of the SW14 of the NW14 and the NW14 of the SWVi of the NW% and the SEA of the SWt4 of the NWVi of said section 4, that the lease remain in full force and effect providing that the operators commence operations for the drilling of a well on one of said ten acres of land within 30 days from May 11, 1951, and prosecute such operations with due diligence until the well has been completed, and that within 30 days from the completion of 'the first well, that said operators commence drilling operations on the second well on another ten acres of said land and prosecute such operations *676 with due diligence until the well has been completed, and within 30 days after the completion of the second well that said operators commence drilling operations on the remaining ten acres of said 30 acres of land and prosecute such operations with due diligence until said last well has been complete^; that if operators fail to drill any one of said wells within the time provided for in the decree, then the oil and gas leases on the said remaining, ten acres of land will be canceled.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1953 OK 90, 258 P.2d 679, 208 Okla. 673, 2 Oil & Gas Rep. 1335, 1953 Okla. LEXIS 877, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-consolidated-oils-v-vann-okla-1953.