Tyson v. Surf Oil Co.

196 So. 336, 195 La. 248, 1940 La. LEXIS 1072
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedApril 29, 1940
DocketNo. 35673.
StatusPublished
Cited by45 cases

This text of 196 So. 336 (Tyson v. Surf Oil 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
Tyson v. Surf Oil Co., 196 So. 336, 195 La. 248, 1940 La. LEXIS 1072 (La. 1940).

Opinions

LAND, Justice.

(1) This is a suit to cancel an oil, gas and mineral lease affecting the North 22% acres of the Southeast Quarter of the Northwest Quarter, less 5 acres in a square in the Northeast Corner, and less 1 acre in a square in the Northwest Corner, in Section 24, Township 23 North, Range 16 West, Caddo Parish, Louisiana, in what is known as the Rodessa Oil and Gas Field.

The grounds alleged for the cancellation of the lease are:

(a) That lessee, Surf Oil Company, abandoned the property; and

*254 (b) In the alternative, that lessee failed to pay plaintiffs royalties allegedly due them under the terms of the mineral lease.

On February 1, 1933, Louvannia Tyson, Jeff Tyson, Emma Godfrey, Charlotte Tyson Henderson, Aliene Gordon, D. D. Tyson and Lula Learj plaintiffs herein, executed an oil and gas lease in favor of Flaynes Drilling Company, Inc., for a primary term of five years, covering and affecting 105 acres of land situated in Section 24, Township 23 North, Range 16 West, Caddo Parish. (Tr., Vol. 1, p. 38.)

Under date of June 13, 1935, the lessors entered into an agreement with Haynes Production Company, Inc., by the terms of which said mineral lease and other mineral leases, comprising in all 715 acres, were unitized or pooled. (Tr., Vol. 1, p. 39 et seq.)

The unitization agreement was entered into only with reference to the right to produce gas from the 715 acres, the right to mine for and produce oil from the premises under the terms of the leases being unaffected.

By mesne assignments Surf Oil Company, Inc.’, succeeded to the leasehold interest of Haynes Production Company, Inc., as to the tract involved in this action, and plaintiffs seek to obtain against Surf Oil Company, Inc., a personal judgment for royalties they claim are due.

The lower court rendered a money judgment in favor of plaintiffs and against Surf Oil Company, Inc., in the amount of $4,049.34, plus interest, for royalties found due under the terms of the mineral lease, but rejected plaintiffs’ demands for the cancellation of the lease.

Plaintiffs acquiesced in the money judgment but they applied for and obtained an order of appeal from that part of the judgment rejecting their demands for a cancellation of the lease.

(2) On March 4, 1936, F. H. Brown, Inc., entered into an 'agreement with W. F. Lacy, then the owner of the mineral lease affecting the 16% acres involved in this suit, by the terms of which it agreed to drill a well in search of oil or gas to the then known producing horizon in the Rodessa Field and, as consideration therefor, Lacy agreed to pay Brown the sum of $8,000 in cash, and the additional sum of $52,500 from proceeds accruing to the credit of an undivided % of "^ths of all of the first oil, gas, distillate and other minerals produced, saved and marketed from said well. (Tr., Vol. 1, p. 192.)

A similar contract for the drilling of well No. 2 was entered into between W. F. Lacy and Red Iron Drilling Company. (Tr., Vol. 1, p. 212.)

On February 28, 1936, Pittsburgh Steel Company agreed to furnish the casing and tubing for both wells and, as consideration therefor, Lacy agreed to pay Pittsburgh Steel Company the sum of $23,000 from proceeds accruing to the credit of an undivided % of %ths of all of the oil, gas, distillate and other minerals produced, saved and marketed from well No. 1, and $23,000 from proceeds accruing to the credit of an equal interest in well No. 2.

*256 After exceptions of no cause or right of action filed by F. H. Brown, Inc., Pittsburgh Steel Company and Red Iron Drilling Company had been overruled, they answered plaintiffs’ original and supplemental petitions and denied that plaintiffs were entitled to cancel or rescind the mineral lease and, in the alternative, alleged a reconventional demand against plaintiffs for the value of the property placed by them on the leased premises, should the court cancel or rescind the mineral lease.

Defendants, F. H. Brown, Inc., and Red Iron Drilling Company, answered the appeal, urged their exceptions of no cause or right of action, averred that plaintiffs’ demands should have been rejected and, in the alternative and only in the event the court should decree a rescission or cancellation of the lease, prayed for judgment in reconvention against plaintiffs for the value of the improvements placed by them on the premises and, further, that they be decreed the operator of the premises until they shall have received a sum equal to the value of said improvements from minerals produced and marketed from the wells drilled by them, respectively, on •said premises.

Plaintiffs have appealed from that part ■of the judgment adverse to them and defendant, Surf Oil Company, has answered the appeal praying that the personal judgment fixing the disputed royalty be reduced to the sum of $919.20.

(3) Plaintiffs sued a number of other persons having an interest in the other land •contained in the 715-acre unitization agreement but this suit as to these defendants was dismissed on exceptions for the reason that the lower court concluded that, since the unitization agreement merely made a joint lease on the 715 acres and Haynes Drilling Company had assigned all of its interest in the 16% acres to W. F. Lacy, this had the effect of making two separate leases insofar as the lessees were concerned. However, all persons interested in the 16% acres directly are before the court either as plaintiffs or defendants.

(4) W. F. Lacy drilled two wells on the 16% acre tract in question but, instead of being ordinary gas wells, they produce large quantities of fluid with gas, which is separated from the gas at the well by means of a separator. This fluid is called “distillate,” is almost pure gasoline, and is run to storage on the premises. The residue gas from these wells, after the separation of the distillate, contains also some gasoline content, which is recovered through a gasoline absorption plant. By assignment of date January 21, 1937, Lacy conveyed to the Surf Oil Company, Inc., this lease.

Plaintiffs allege that, beginning with the acquisition of the lease, defendant, Surf Oil Company, Inc., disposed of all gas, without extracting the gasoline therefrom, from the leased premises for one cent per thousand cubic feet to its associated companies, The Leonard Company, the Shoreline Oil Company and the La-Tex Crude Oil Purchasing and Pipeline Company, Inc., contrary to the obligations expressed and implied by the lease and unitization agreement, when the market price was four cents per thousand cubic feet for dry gas or gas from which the gasoline had been extracted.

*258 Plaintiffs allege that the Surf Oil Company, Inc., has been engaged in the production of oil, gas and distillate; that the LaTex Crude Oil Purchasing and Pipeline Company, Inc., has been engaged in the gathering and transporting of oil and gas through a pipe line system; that the Shoreline Oil Company has been engaged in operating a refinery and absorption plant and in the marketing of products thereof; and that defendant, Surf Oil Company, Inc., and said affiliated companies have failed and refused to account for and pay to your petitioners the royalties due under the terms of the lease.

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Bluebook (online)
196 So. 336, 195 La. 248, 1940 La. LEXIS 1072, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tyson-v-surf-oil-co-la-1940.