United North & South Oil Co. v. Meredith

258 S.W. 550
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 20, 1923
DocketNo. 6760. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 258 S.W. 550 (United North & South Oil Co. v. Meredith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United North & South Oil Co. v. Meredith, 258 S.W. 550 (Tex. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

McOLENDON, C. J.

The present appeal is from an order appointing a receiver of property in litigation with powers to develop its mineral resources by executing oil and gas leases, giving to the lessees an interest in the minerals. The order was made after final judgment in the main case and pending appeal from that judgment. The application and appointment are predicated upon Rev. St. art. 2128, subd. 1, which authorizes the appointment of a receiver—

“in an action * * * between partners or others jointly owning or interested in any property or fund, on the application of the plaintiff or any party whose right to or interest in the property or fund or the proceeds thereof is probable, and where it is shown that the property or fund is in danger of being lost, removed or materially injured.”

*552 From the record before us which embraces the pleadings and judgment in the main case, as well as the pleadings, statement of facts, and order in the receivership matter, we make the following statement:

The main suit was brought by Meredith, Coopwood, and Richards, as plaintiffs, against Alexander, Merriweather, Kelley, and the United North & South Oil Company, Incorporated, which latter will be referred to as the oil company, as defendants. The purpose of the suit was to cancel.an oil and gas lease upon four contiguous tracts of land designated by the numbers 1, 2, 3, and 4, which lease had been executed on June 24, 1921, by the owners of the land in favor of the oil company, and to remove cloud from plaintiffs’ titles as the owners of oil leases by the landowners subsequent to the oil company’s lease, and for partition of the mineral rights in the land in case it should appear that defendants had any interest therein. Cardwell, Dorn, and Cosey intervened, asserted certain interests in the property, and otherwise adopted plaintiffs’ pleadings. Answers filed by the defendants oil company, Merriweather, and Kelley were merely by way of demurrer, exception, general denial, and pleas of not guilty. Defendant Alexander made default, and as he was decreed to have no interest in the property, he will not be further noticed.

It appears from the judgment that the case was tried to a jury upon a single special issue: Whether a certain payment by the oil company was a “down payment up to June 24, 1923,” or “rentals to June 24,1924." The jury answered that it was “down payment to June 24, 1923.” Upon this verdict judgment was rendered canceling the oil company’s lease except as to a ⅛ interest in tracts 3 and 4, and, except as to such ⅛ interest, decreeing plaintiffs’ lease valid. The interests of the several parties in the fee (as distinguished from the minerals)- and in the minerals, both leasehold and royalty, were decreed by the court, partition in kind of such interests ordered, and commissioners of partition appointed. The interests so decreed by the court were as follows:

As to the fee Dorn was decreed sole owner of tracts 1 and 2; and tracts 3 and 4 were decreed Dorn 1/6, Cosey ½, Merriweather 1/6, and Kelley 1/6.

The mineral rights were divided into lease rights and royalty rights, the former constituting % of the minerals and the latter ⅛; the lease rights being subject to the cost of production of oil, gas, and other minerals, and the royalty rights free from cost of production, development, and exploration.

The lease rights were decreed .to Richards and Coopwood in all four tracts, except ⅜ interest in tracts 3 and 4, which was decreed to the oil company.

The royalty rights were decreed to be owned as follows: In tracts 3 and 4 by Mer-riweather 1/6; by Kelley 1/6; by Cosey ⅜; by Cardwell 1/36; by Richards and Coop-wood 1/96; by Dorn 7/96. In tracts 1 and 2 by Cardwell 1/6; by Richards and Coopwood 19/48; by Dorn 7/16.

The oil company alon© appealed from this judgment, the appeal being upon a cost bond without supersedeas. The judgment wasi rendered March 29, 1923.

On April 25, 1923, Cardwell, Cosey, and Dorn filed a petition for a receiver, naming as defendants Merriweather, Coopwood, Richards, Kelley, and the oil company. All the named defendants, except Kelley and the oil company, answered joining in the prayer for receiver. One Triplett intervened, as as-signee of the rights of Kelley, and joined in said prayer. The oil company answered contesting the application. It will thus be seen that the receivership is sought by all interested parties, except the oil company, and the latter alone is resisting it.

The grounds upon which a receiver was sought, as gathered from the pleadings, may be briefly summarized as follows: That the land in suit is a long, narrow strip lying in a northeast-southwest direction; upon its southeast side it abuts upon lands already developed and producing oil and gas; that several producing wells are within 150 feet of its southeast line, and several other wells are rapidly being drilled within a like distance of that line;, that there are a larger number of other wells in close proximity, but at further and varying distances from said lines, and an additional large, number so situated being drilled; that the oil strata under these lands is of such a character that oil rapidly drains into these wells from adjacent lands; that a number of these wells are already showing water in rapidly increasing quantities, and the gas préssure in them is rapidly decreasing; that the other owners of the leasehold interests have made every effort at agreement with the oil company to some plan by which the property may be developed, but that no agreement could be reached; that if offset wells are not drilled upon the land in suit, all the oil, or, in any event, a large part of it, will be drained from the land in question, and the oil and its value lost to the owners, before the main suit can be finally adjudicated upon appeal; that if a receiver is ‘appointed, with power to contract for drilling offset wells, he can make such contracts as will develop the property and secure it or its value to the owners, “for a consideration to be paid out of the production of the wells drilled on said lands, and in addition thereto large sums of money for the leasehold rights of said land can be obtained and saved to said owners of said leasehold rights, in the event said lands become productive of oil and gas; that the development of said land for oil and gas by this court’s receiver can be done at an economical and reasonable cost and expense”; that with *553 out a receiver the mineral rights in the land cannot he developed on account of the assertion of adverse claims by the oil company in its pending appeal; and therefore that unless a receiver be appointed the property, as to the oil and gas thereunder, will be entirely or, in any event, in a very large measure, lost or destroyed, pending the appeal. '

The answer of the oil company, in addition to certain demurrers and exceptions and a general denial, contained special pleas in which it was alleged that the leases of Coop-wood and Richards of September 9 and 11, 1922, contained provisions for extension, by payment of certain rentals beyond the time when the appeal would be determined, without the obligation of drilling for oil during that'period, and that the oil company’s lease contained a like provision, and that it would be inequitable for the court to require development of the mineral rights at an earlier date than the lessors could require it under their contracts.

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Bluebook (online)
258 S.W. 550, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-north-south-oil-co-v-meredith-texapp-1923.