Tri M Petroleum Company, William E. Hathorn, R.C. Speights, Jr., and Thomas G. Bass v. Getty Oil Company, C.R. Ridgway, Jr. And First National Bank of Jackson as Co-Trustees of the W.S. Ridgway Trust v. Shell Oil Company

792 F.2d 558, 91 Oil & Gas Rep. 547, 1986 U.S. App. LEXIS 26573
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedJune 25, 1986
Docket85-4261
StatusPublished

This text of 792 F.2d 558 (Tri M Petroleum Company, William E. Hathorn, R.C. Speights, Jr., and Thomas G. Bass v. Getty Oil Company, C.R. Ridgway, Jr. And First National Bank of Jackson as Co-Trustees of the W.S. Ridgway Trust v. Shell Oil Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tri M Petroleum Company, William E. Hathorn, R.C. Speights, Jr., and Thomas G. Bass v. Getty Oil Company, C.R. Ridgway, Jr. And First National Bank of Jackson as Co-Trustees of the W.S. Ridgway Trust v. Shell Oil Company, 792 F.2d 558, 91 Oil & Gas Rep. 547, 1986 U.S. App. LEXIS 26573 (1st Cir. 1986).

Opinion

792 F.2d 558

TRI M PETROLEUM COMPANY, William E. Hathorn, R.C. Speights,
Jr., and Thomas G. Bass, Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
GETTY OIL COMPANY, Defendant-Appellee.
C.R. RIDGWAY, Jr. and First National Bank of Jackson as
Co-Trustees of the W.S. Ridgway Trust, Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
SHELL OIL COMPANY, Defendant-Appellee.

Nos. 85-4261, 85-4363.

United States Court of Appeals,
Fifth Circuit.

June 25, 1986.

Glenn Gates Taylor, Harry E. Neblett, Jr., Jackson, Miss., for plaintiffs-appellants in No. 85-4363.

Paul H. Stephenson, III, P.N. Harkins, III, Jackson, Miss., for defendant-appellee in No. 85-4363.

Dale H. McKibben, Donald Clark, Jr., Elias Lake Tolbert, Jackson, Miss., for plaintiffs-appellants in No. 85-4261.

Scott P. Hemleben, Jack W. Brand, Jackson, Miss., for defendant-appellee in No. 85-4261.

Appeals from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Mississippi.

Before THORNBERRY, POLITZ, and RANDALL, Circuit Judges.

POLITZ, Circuit Judge:

In these two Mississippi diversity jurisdiction cases, consolidated for purposes of oral argument and disposition, plaintiffs-lessors appeal adverse summary judgments in suits to cancel oil and gas leases for nonproduction. Both Mississippi federal trial judges reached the same conclusion, ruling that the leases continued in force because of forced-pooling orders of the State Oil and Gas Board of Mississippi (the Board) and subsequent drilling within the pooled unit. Concluding that the district courts correctly anticipated and applied Mississippi law, we affirm both judgments.

BACKGROUND

Tri M v. Getty, No. 85-4261

The material facts are not in dispute. In October 1971 Skelly Oil Company (later Getty Oil Company), acquired two oil, gas, and mineral (OGM) leases from Ora Barnes, covering land in Jefferson Davis County, Mississippi. Both leases had ten-year primary terms and would continue for "as long thereafter as oil, gas, or other mineral is produced from said land or acreage pooled therewith." Both leases contained standard clauses on pooling and drilling operations, the latter providing for continuation of the lease, despite lack of production, if drilling or reworking operations were underway at expiration of the primary term. The leases were due to expire in October 1981 unless continued by diligent drilling operations resulting in the production of oil, gas, or other minerals.

Several months before expiration of the primary term, Tri M Petroleum Company and the individual plaintiffs (hereafter "Tri M") acquired "top" leases on the lands covered by the Getty leases. In June 1981, System Fuels, Inc., seeking to develop the area but having been unsuccessful in securing approval of the various mineral interest owners, petitioned the Board for a unitization order and authority to drill a well in a 640-acre unit which included the acreage covered by the Getty leases.

On August 20, 1981, the Board force-pooled the 640-acre unit and designated System Fuels as the operator of the proposed well. Getty declined to farm out its acreage to System Fuels but initially agreed to participate in the drilling costs. Getty later refused to participate when System Fuels insisted on an agreement which provided that if the well was completed as an oil well, the size of the unit would be reduced, excluding Getty's acreage and precluding its entitlement to any production, despite its having advanced a portion of the drilling costs. When System Fuels refused to delete that clause, Getty declined to sign the agreement. System Fuels commenced drilling operations on August 25, 1981 and completed the well as a producing gas well on January 5, 1982. Getty's interest was carried to payout.

Tri M filed suit seeking cancellation of the Getty leases for nonproduction. Getty countered that the Board's forced-pooling order superseded the lease provisions and that drilling by the designated operator continued the leases in effect. The district court agreed and granted Getty's motion for summary judgment. Plaintiffs appealed.

Ridgway v. Shell Oil, No. 85-4363.

On May 2, 1974, the Ridgway plaintiffs executed an OGM lease with Shell Oil Company covering property in Rankin County, Mississippi.1 The lease had a five-year primary term with standard operation and production continuation clauses.

A dispute between Shell and Pursue Energy Corporation triggered this litigation. Both companies wished to drill in the same area. A voluntary accord could not be reached and both filed petitions with the Board requesting approval of a drilling unit and forced integration of all interests within the unit.

Exercising its authority under Miss.Code Ann. Sec. 53-3-7 (1972) (prior to its amendment by Laws 1984, ch. 511, Sec. 1; see Laws 1984, ch. 511, Sec. 2), the Board denied Shell's application and granted Pursue's stating in its order:

... All separately owned interests ... are hereby pooled and integrated, and the persons owning the drilling rights therein and the right to share in production therefrom are hereby required to integrate their interests and said interests are hereby integrated as a gas drilling unit for the drilling, production, development and operation of said lands as to the oil, gas and mineral rights therein.

The Ridgway property was located within the unit but was not the drilling site.

Pursue finished the drilling operation and completed a well capable of production but shut it in. Shell timely tendered shut-in royalty payments until the well was put into production. Plaintiffs instituted this action to cancel the lease, whose primary term had expired, alleging that no drilling operation by Shell had taken place. Additionally, plaintiffs contended that Shell failed to file a declaration of pooling at the end of the primary term and unreasonably delayed royalty payments. The district court found that the lease was extended by the forced-pooling order and Pursue's drilling thereunder. It found no merit in the other allegations and granted Shell's motion for summary judgment. Plaintiffs appealed.

ANALYSIS

We consolidated these cases on appeal because both raise the same issue: Whether the issuance of a forced-pooling or unitization order by the Board, pursuant to Miss.Code Ann. Sec. 53-3-7 (1972), and drilling thereunder within the unit continue OGM leases on all lands located inside the unit. The controlling facts are common in both suits. Acreage under lease to Getty and Shell was included in a state-ordered pooling unit. Drilling occurred within the unit but not on the lands leased to Getty and Shell. Both refused to farm out their interests. Neither advanced drilling costs but simply "rode down the well."

Both sets of plaintiffs contend that cancellation of their leases is in order because the leases require the lessees to commence operation within the primary term, neither lessee did, and the drilling done by the Board-designated operators could not inure to the lessees' advantage.

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792 F.2d 558, 91 Oil & Gas Rep. 547, 1986 U.S. App. LEXIS 26573, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tri-m-petroleum-company-william-e-hathorn-rc-speights-jr-and-thomas-ca1-1986.