U. v. Industries, Inc. v. Danielson

602 P.2d 571, 184 Mont. 203
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 31, 1979
Docket14755
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 602 P.2d 571 (U. v. Industries, Inc. v. Danielson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
U. v. Industries, Inc. v. Danielson, 602 P.2d 571, 184 Mont. 203 (Mo. 1979).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE DALY

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This matter is before this Court on certification from the United States District Court for the District of Montana. Plaintiffs-respondents are grantees under a mineral deed from the owner and lessor of the oil and gas beneath the EVi of section 10 in Richland County, Montana. Defendants-applicants are the lessee and its assigns under the “Danielson” oil and gas lease covering this tract; some of the applicants are or were also lessees under the “Lewis” oil and gas lease covering an adjacent tract, the NW% of section 10. On May 12, 1975, respondents, the grantees, brought suit in state District Court in Richland County, requesting damages from the applicants for the period between February 3, 1970 and September 14, 1972, for failure to drill an offset well to protect their oil interests from drainage by a producing well on an adjacent tract of land (Lewis lease). The case was removed to the United States District Court for the District of Montana, which has certified several issues to this Court for declaratory judgment regard *208 ing applicable Montana law, on application of the lessees pursuant to Rule 1 of the Rules of this Court.

The facts in this case are complex, but the parties are in substantial agreement as to those facts, which follow in summary form. There are two oil and gas leases involved in this suit — the “Danielson” lease covering the EV2 of Section 10, and the “Lewis” lease covering the adjacent NWt4 of Section 10. On December 30, 1968, Hilda Danielson, respondents’ mother and predecessor in interest, executed a five-year primary term, “unless delay rentals” oil and gas lease (“Danielson” lease) to applicant Empire State Oil Co., which subsequently assigned it to the other applicants. This lease contained a clause providing that no change in ownership of the mineral interest would be binding upon the lessee until it received written notice thereof. On July 24, 1970, Mrs. Danielson conveyed her interest to her five children, three of whom are respondents, in a mineral deed subject to the existing lease. The deed was recorded on September 20, 1971.

Meanwhile, a producing well was completed by King Resources Co. on the adjacent Lewis tract on February 3, 1970. Two of the applicants, U. V. Industries, Inc. (through its predecessor United States Smelting, Refining and Mining Company), and Wolf Corporation were at relevant times part owners of this leasehold interest in the Lewis tract. Under the dates July 1 and July 26, 1972, U. V. Industries received letters on behalf of two of the plaintiffs demanding that U. V. Industries drill an offset well in the NEVi and compensate them for drainage resulting from production from the well on the adjacent Lewis lease. This demand was refused. U. V. Industries first received a copy of the mineral deed from Mrs. Danielson to her five children on August 2, 1972. All delay rentals through December 1972 were paid and accepted.

Prior to September 14, 1972, the spacing of wells drilled on Section 10 was governed by statewide spacing orders issued by the Board of Oil and Gas Conservation. The statewide spacing order governing well spacing in the formation and depth to which the Lewis well was drilled in effect at the time the well was drilled pro *209 vided that one well could be drilled and operated on each quarter section (160 acres). This order was changed by the Board’s Order No. 16-71 of May 13, 1971, which provided that one well could be drilled and produced on 320 acres at this depth. Under the May 13, 1971 order, the 320 acre spacing unit would be composed of two contiguous north-south or east-west quarter sections designated by the lease operator, which did not necessarily have to be within the same section.

On September 14, 1972, the Montana Oil and Gas Conservation Board held a hearing at which respondents and applicant U. V. Industries were represented. The Board issued a specific well spacing order superseding the statewide spacing order for the particular production field involved in the present controversy (Lonetree Creek field). This order designated the NV2 of Section 10 as a production spacing unit. The designated well spacing unit includes the existing, producing Lewis well on the NWVi and it also includes the NEt4 owned by the respondents, where they are alleging applicants had a duty to drill an offset well. Subsequently, on September 15, 1972, all parties entered a voluntary pooling and unit agreement covering this field.

Respondents brought the present action seeking damages under the common law “offset drilling rule.” The common law theory implies in every oil annd gas lease a covenant on the part of the lessee to protect the premises of his lessor from drainage of an adjacent producing well by drilling an offset well.

The threshold issue is: (1) Whether or not the common law judicial remedy of a civil suit for damages in state District Court under the offset drilling rule has been abolished by enactment of the 1953 Montana Oil and Gas Conservation law; i. e., does the Board of Oil and Gas Conservation have exclusive jurisdiction to determine such controversies? If this question is determined adversely to applicants, there are several subsidiary issues:

(2) Was the lessor or her grantees (respondents) required to serve written notice or demand on the lessee or its assigns (applicants) to drill an offset well; if so, did the lessee have a reasonable time *210 thereafter in which to comply; and, when does the obligation of the lessee, if any, to pay damages commence?

(3) What is the effect of the “no change in ownership until written notice” clause in the lease and certain provisions of the mineral deed on the rights of the parties?

(4) What is the appropriate statute of limitations?

The applicants’ contentions are as follows:

Issue #1. Enactment of the 1953 Oil and Gas Conservation Act, sections 82-11-101 et seq., MCA, has eliminated and abolished actions to prevent drainage by producing wells on adjacent land based on the common law offset drilling rule theory. The power to conduct public evidentiary hearings, issue subpoenas, establish well spacing units, order involuntary pooling of interests within the same, grant or deny permission to drill wells, prevent waste and protect correlative rights is now committed by statute to the discretion of the Board of Oil and Gas Conservation. State District Courts, therefore, no longer have jurisdiction to entertain and decide an isolated part of the whole scheme of discretionary administrative determinations vested in the Board by statute. Involuntary pooling of interests within a well spacing unit by order of the Board affords the same kind of relief as was formerly granted by the common law judicial remedy of a civil suit for damages in the state District Court under the offset drilling rule. At any time after they acquired their interest and before the Board order of September 14, 1972, plaintiffs-respondents had the statutory right to apply to the Board of Oil and Gas Conservation for relief but did not do so.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Scherpenseel v. Bitney
865 P.2d 1145 (Montana Supreme Court, 1993)
Sundheim v. Reef Oil Corp.
806 P.2d 503 (Montana Supreme Court, 1991)
Majers v. Shining Mountains
711 P.2d 1375 (Montana Supreme Court, 1986)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
602 P.2d 571, 184 Mont. 203, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/u-v-industries-inc-v-danielson-mont-1979.