Touchet v. Humble Oil & Refining Company

191 F. Supp. 291, 14 Oil & Gas Rep. 971, 1960 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4283
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Louisiana
DecidedJune 27, 1960
DocketCiv. A. 7587
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 191 F. Supp. 291 (Touchet v. Humble Oil & Refining Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Touchet v. Humble Oil & Refining Company, 191 F. Supp. 291, 14 Oil & Gas Rep. 971, 1960 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4283 (W.D. La. 1960).

Opinion

HUNTER, District Judge.

Touchet seeks cancellation of an oil, gas and mineral lease on land in Acadia Parish, Louisiana. The lease was granted by Touchet to Duson on February 21, 1955. The lease was subsequently assigned to defendant and stands in defendant’s name upon the records. The land was made part of a voluntary unit of 160 acres by instrument dated June 26, 1957, and a unit well was completed as a producer, and plaintiff was paid royalties monthly by defendant from the date of the production of the unit until March of 1959, when the Commissioner of Conservation issued an order unitizing and pooling various lands and leases, including the subject lease, in a 416-acre unit. The creation of this new unit, effective March 1, 1959, required Humble to have the unit surveyed and the survey to be approved by the Commission, and also required a re-check of the title to the various tracts included in the unit and the preparation of new division orders covering percentage of participation. While these various steps were being taken by Humble, royalty payments were discontinued. A final title opinion was received by Humble on June 12th, and thereupon the preparation of division orders to be sent to each royalty owner was begun. The division order was mailed to Touchet on July 10, 1959. However, in the meantime Victor Tou- *293 chet, having failed to receive a cheek m April, May or June, demanded by letter dated July 1st that Humble furnish to him a recordable release of the lease. No prior demand had been made by Touchet, either verbally or in writing, for the payment of the royalties, nor had Humble refused to pay the royalties. Humble, at all times since the demand, has stood ready and willing to pay the royalties to Touchet, but Touchet refuses to accept same, and relying on Melancon 1 filed this suit on the 29th day of September, 1959, demanding cancellation. Plaintiff concedes that the lease agreement did not provide for the time and place of the payment of royalties, but asserts that in Louisiana royalties from production must be paid on a monthly basis, and that the lessee has an obligation to continue to pay those royalties on a monthly basis as long as there is continuous production in paying quantities. Defendant does not, in fact cannot, challenge this assertion as a general principle of Louisiana law. However, defendant insists that before bringing such a suit as this, plaintiff must first demand the payment of royalties and show that defendant refused to pay, or that there was an unreasonable delay in payment after demand. Secondly, defendant argues that even if no demand were necessary, it would nevertheless be unjust to cancel under the facts of this case without giving the operator a reasonable opportunity to perform the investigative and administrative details necessary to figure the percentage of participation in the new unit.

The case was tried to the Court without a jury on stipulated facts, affidavits and exhibits. The detailed facts are these:

(1) Plaintiff is a resident and citizen of Louisiana.

(2) Defendant, Humble Oil, is a foreign corporation authorized to do, and at all times pertinent doing business in Louisiana.

(3) The matter in controversy exceeds, exclusive of interest and costs, the sum of $10,000.

(4) Victor Touchet granted an oil, gas and mineral lease to Henry T. Duson on, February 21, 1955, covering 27 acres.. This lease was assigned by Henry T. Duson to Humble Oil & Refining Company on May 13, 1955.

(5) Humble created a voluntary unit on June 26, 1957, consisting of 160 acres.

(6) On November 2, 1957, Unit No. 17, Well No. 1, was spudded in on the voluntary unit and completed on January 23, 1958, as a well producing gas and condensate. The cost of the well was $288,487.

(7) Humble paid royalty from production of said unit well to Touchet through March 1, 1959, the last such payment being made for gas on or about March 24, 1959, and for condensate on or about March 18,1959, for production during the month of February, 1959.

(8) The Louisiana Commissioner of Conservation held a hearing to unitize the North Crowley Gas Sands, including a portion of the property of Victor Tou-chet covered by lease referred to herein, and an order was issued effective March 1, 1959, unitizing and pooling various lands and leases, including 24.38 acres of the land of Victor Touchet, in a 416-acre unit.

(9) Humble North Crowley Gas Unit No. 16, Well No. 1, was designated as the unit well and was producing on March 1, 1959, and is still producing at this time. This well was drilled, completed and equipped at a cost of $319,868.

(10) Order No. 423-j issued by the Commissioner establishing the new units was filed for record on March 11, 1959.

(11) Order No. 423-j also required that the new unit be surveyed.

(12) On April 29, 1959, Humble received the final survey unit plats and forwarded them to the Department of Conservation for approval and these plats were approved on May 12, 1959.

*294 (13) The division order title opinion covering the unit was rendered by Mr. Ellis Barnes on June 10, 1959, and was received in the Houston office on Friday, June 12th, or Monday, June 15, 1959, and actual preparation of the division order to be sent to each royalty owner then started. This involved detailed work in securing current names and addresses; computation and checking of each individual royalty interest; and clerical and stenographic work involved in the actual typing, mimeographing, folding and mailing the division orders to each of the numerous parties involved. The division order was mailed to Victor Touchet for his execution on July 10, 1959.

(14) The new unit consisted of 416 acres, whereas the voluntary unit was 160 acres and the unit included numerous tracts and ownerships as shown by division order which was sent to Victor Touchet by letter dated July 10, 1959.

(15) On the date of the division order there was no change in the ownership of the property owned by Victor Touchet.

(16) After the creation of the new units on March 1, 1959, defendant ceased paying royalty under the voluntary unit.

(17) No demand, either written or verbal, was made by Touchet for the payment of royalty after March 1,1959 until he demanded a cancellation of the lease by letter dated July 1, 1959. Thereupon, Humble contacted Touchet and royalty payments were mailed to Touchet on July 27, 1959.

(18) Touchet refused to accept the royalty payments mailed to him on July 27, 1959, and instituted this suit on September 29, 1959.

(19) In the case of royalty based on oil and gas production, it is the accepted custom, as reflected by this very record, to make such payments on a monthly basis.

(20) No time was fixed in the lease agreement for the payment of royalties, and the lease' did not expressly provide for its termination on the failure of payment.

The Law

We are governed by the law of Louisiana. The threshold question is: Under the facts of this case, must the lessor make a demand for payment of royalties before he is entitled to a cancellation of the lease because of their non-payment?

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Bluebook (online)
191 F. Supp. 291, 14 Oil & Gas Rep. 971, 1960 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4283, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/touchet-v-humble-oil-refining-company-lawd-1960.