Transcontinental Petroleum Corp. v. Texas Co.

24 So. 2d 248, 209 La. 52, 1945 La. LEXIS 910
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedNovember 5, 1945
DocketNo. 37425.
StatusPublished

This text of 24 So. 2d 248 (Transcontinental Petroleum Corp. v. Texas Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Transcontinental Petroleum Corp. v. Texas Co., 24 So. 2d 248, 209 La. 52, 1945 La. LEXIS 910 (La. 1945).

Opinion

PONDER, Justice.

' The plaintiffs are appealing from an adverse judgment. After carefully reviewing the record in this case and. the briefs filed by the. parties to the suit, and after considering the arguments advanced by counsel, we have arrived at the conclusion that the written reasons handed down by the trial judge properly determine the issues raised in the cause. The trial judge has carefully stated all of the issues, clearly analyzed the testimony, and aptly applied the law relevant thereto. After ■ a careful consideration of the written reasons handed down by the trial court, we have decided to adopt them and make them the opinion of this Court, viz.;

“The two plaintiff corporations, the Transcontinental Petroleum Corporation and the Mineral Domes Production Company, Inc., brought this action against the Texas Company and the St. Martin Land Company to have plaintiffs’ mineral lease from the State of Louisiana (State Lease No. 323) on the beds and water bottoms in Townships 8 and 9, South of the Louisiana meridian, recognized as bearing upon the bottom of a certain water-course located in Sec. 21, Township 8 S., Range 7 E. Plaintiffs claim their rights flow from the fact that this water-course was a navigable stream at the date of the admission of the State of Louisiana into the Union, and that the State has not disposed of its title thereto except by the mentioned mineral lease.
“Plaintiffs further allege that the defendant, the Texas Company, has drilled two wells, St. Martin Land Company Wells No. 12 and 13, in the bed of this water-course, and has extracted oil therefrom, the value of which plaintiffs seek to recover. As an aid in arriving at the value or quantity of the oil extracted, they annexed interrogatories to their petition, and, upon order, the same were duly answered by the defendant, the Texas Company.
“Both defendants deny that the watercourse in question is navigable now, or was *55 navigable in the year 1812, in which year the State of Louisiana was admitted into the Union, and hence deny that the State ever enjoyed ownership resulting from this alleged fact. They also deny that either of the wells mentioned is in the watercourse.
“The Texas Company then sets out that it acquired and owns the mineral rights, except a mineral royalty owned by the St. Martin Land Company, under all of said Section 21, and it asks that said right be recognized. As alternatives it claims that if either well, or both wells, be located in the "water-course, and if the water-course be found to belong to the State, then the wells are bottomed outside the said watercourse, and beyond the title of the State and under the land of the St. Martin Land Company;, that the Section 21 concerned herein was selected and approved under the Swamp Land Act of March 2, 1849, 9 Stat. 352, and subsequently transferred by the State to the Atchafalayia) Ba;sin Levee District and by said acts the State either divested itself of its ownership, or ha's estopped itself from now claiming title to any portion of it. If none of these contentions can be maintained, then the said company styles itself as a trespasser in good faith and claims all of the advantages that such position commands. It also calls into warranty its codefendant, the St. Martin Land Company.
“The defense of the St. Martin Land Company raises practically the same issues, but it adds the additional defense, that the effect of the suit is to annul a patent issued by the State of Louisiana, and under Act 62 of 1912 such action is barred by the prescription of six years.
“During the trial plaintiffs’ claim upon Well No. 13 was formally abandoned as it was admitted that the same is not within the water-course. 1
“As plaintiffs’ entire case is based upon the navigability of the water-course in the year 1812, this point comes first for consideration. Should the conclusion thereon be with plaintiffs, the then defendants’ special defense that the well is not in the water-course is the next point to adjudicate. Should the conclusion on this .issue be again with plaintiffs, then we should go. into defendants’ alternative defenses. But,, should the adjudication be adverse to plaintiffs on the navigability of the watercourse, then the other issues become moot,, for, in this case plaintiffs would fail to. make title, and necessarily, their claim must fall. It would then be of no moment whether the well was in or out of the watercourse.
“Passing, therefore, to the consideration of whether or not the water-course in controversy was navigable when the State was admitted into the Union on April 30, 1812, we must necessarily approach the question entirely through recorded evidence, deductions and analogies. The latter two methods are necessarily highly scientific and specialized, and I may add, somewhat inaccurate. The inaccuracy must be attributed to - the inability of man to uniformly conclude from observation of given facts, as well as from the lack of the powers possessed by bur senses to uniform *57 ly appreciate existing facts. It is but natural, therefore, that we should find marked disagreement between the persons whose services were engaged herein in both phases where human frailty so often manifests itself. I mention this to emphasize the fact that the rejection of a theory advanced by one conversant with the subject should not be construed as a reflection upon that person’s ability. It is not the aim of this Court to do so, as I have gained many hours of fascinating enjoyment in perusing each of the theories advanced herein. I want it to be known that I have marvelled at the thoroughness and clarity of the theories submitted, and I appreciate the effort made, which was so successful in most cases, at developing highly scientific and technical subjects so simply as to be within the grasp of the layman’s mind.
“However, from these theories, I had to come to a conclusion. My conclusion is incorporated in the following discussion.
“The water-course in question is called Bayou Ledet by plaintiffs and Coulee Ledet by defendants. We shall call it Ledet. At present its course is only a slight depression on the surface of the earth which is visible to the eye at low water stage from the vicinity of the new levee near Henderson, in Section 19 of Township 8 South of Range 7 East, and easterly thru Sections 20 and 21 where it connects with the bays and lakes of the Atchafalaya basin system, into a bay called locally, Bay Patin. West of the levee the work of men has obliterated its natural channel so that it cannot be accurately traced, but enough evidence is left to permit us to surmise that at one time it connected with Bayou Teche, perhaps in Sections 60 or 61, just south of Cecelia. Since the construction of levees in recent years which confine, and perhaps increase the amount of water in the Atchafalaya Basin, Ledet is entirely under water the greater part of the time and its location and course cannot be followed by the eye. Therefore, no one contends that the watercourse is presently navigable.
“However, from the amount of silt which has been deposited over the original or one time bottom of the water-course, neither plaintiffs nor defendants contend that it was not at one time a stream of sufficient caliber to support navigation, and hence, navigable.

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Bluebook (online)
24 So. 2d 248, 209 La. 52, 1945 La. LEXIS 910, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/transcontinental-petroleum-corp-v-texas-co-la-1945.