Vance v. Hurley

41 So. 2d 724, 215 La. 805, 1949 La. LEXIS 998
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJune 30, 1949
DocketNo. 39052.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 41 So. 2d 724 (Vance v. Hurley) 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
Vance v. Hurley, 41 So. 2d 724, 215 La. 805, 1949 La. LEXIS 998 (La. 1949).

Opinion

FOURNET, Justice.

This is a suit for cancellation of a mineral lease on the ground that it had expired under its own terms since the well located on the property is not: producing oil and gas in paying quantities; in the alternative, for the non-payment of a production payment due under the terms of the lease in the amount of $9,517.50, as well as for judgment covering this amount and- for attorney fees of $5,000.

The defendants denied the well drilled on the leased premises is not producing, in paying quantities, averring, in the alternative, that if the.lease>is cancelled, then that there be judgment in their favor and against the plaintiffs for the cost of drilling the well.

There was judgment- in favor of the plaintiffs ordering the cancellation' of the lease and awarding them attorney fees of $2,500. The defendants have-appealed arid the plaintiffs, answering this appeal, re *809 assert their position as set out in their petition but ask that the attorney fees be increased to $5,000.

On July 6, 1944, for a consideration of $2,600 in cash, the plaintiffs, Mrs. Evelyn Vance, Mrs. Eva A. Price, and Chesley Price, executed a mineral lease in favor of the defendants, Ed E. Hurley and G. H. Vaughn covering 260 acres of land lying in Section 34 of De Soto Parish, the lessees obligating themselves thereunder to drill a well on the leased premises during the primary term of six months to pay the plaintiffs a royalty of %th and to pay $10,400 out of J4th of the remaining %ths production from the well. This lease was recorded in C.O.B. 153, Folio 421 on May 16, 1945. Contemporaneously with the execution of the lease, however, the defendants signed a document agreeing to pay so much of the $10,500 production payment as remained unpaid at the end of three years, provided the well drilled under the terms of the lease were still producing or capable of producing oil, gas, or other minerals in paying quantities at that time.

The lease contained the further stipulation that it would continue in effect after its primary term so long as oil, gas, and other minerals were produced in paying quantities and under the terms of the contract the lessees were authorized to enter into pooling agreements for the unitization of the area if necessarily required to do so. There is also provision in the contract that the lease will be subject to all -of the federal and state laws, executive orders, and rules and regulations.

Within the primary term of the lease the lessees began the drilling of a well that was finally completed'as a producer in June of 1945, but under orders issued by the Commissioner of Conservation in November of 1944 affecting all of the land lying in Section 34, this property had been included in a 640-acre unit. In compliance with these orders and in conformity with the lease contract, the plaintiffs only received 26%ioths of the %th royalty provided for in the contract, which amount totalled $504.32 during the 25-month period following the completion of the well. But it appears that during this same period of time they were not paid their pro-rata share of the production payment under the 14-th' of %ths production clause of the lease, which payment at that time amounted to $882.50. It was only after the lessors addressed a letter to the defendants in July of 1947 demanding full settlement of the production payment of $10,400 that this $882.50 was paid to them, thus leaving a balance due and payable by the lessees personally of $9,-517.50, provided the well is producing or capable of producing in "paying quantities'. Afte,r the plaintiffs had followed' up their demands with respect to this .production payment with a request for. the. cancellation of the lease, and following further negotiations, the defendants offered to pay the plaintiffs the balance' dúe on the production payment, but' the' lessors refused this *811 offer because it was conditioned upon their acknowledgment that the well was producing in paying quantities. This suit followed.

In support of their position the plaintiffs rely on the decisions of this court in the cases of Caldwell v. Alton Oil Company, Inc., 161 La. 139, 108 So. 314, and Logan v. Tholl Oil Co., Inc., 189 La. 645, 180 So. 473, arguing that since they have received royalty of only $504.32 or approximately $240 a year for a lease covering 260 acres, amounting to 96‡ per acre per year, such production can not be said to be in paying quantities within the meaning of the contract.

A study and analysis of the Logan and Caldwell cases will show that the former is based upon the holding in the latter, wherein it was pointed out [189 La. 645, 180 So. 475]: “This court has repeatedly held that the main consideration of such a lease is the development of the land for oil and gas and that the lessee must either develop with reasonable diligence, or give up the lease.” In the course of the opinion there is the further observation: “A development that falls short of a reasonable production which would bring a net profit to the lessee and furnish an adequate consideration to the lessor for the continuance of the lease might well be said to be no development at all within the contemplation of the parties.”

There is no doubt that the production from the well that has been drilled on the leased premises has been a disappointment to both the plaintiffs and the defendants,, but there is no suggestion that the development of the lease has not been prosecuted, with reasonable diligence. On the contrary, it appears that the defendants have made every reasonable effort that could be expected of them, and at great expense, to increase the production, and that unless oil, gas, or other minerals are discovered in this-area from a different strata, or unless this well is abandoned, they will be unable to drill another well within the unit in which this property is situated. So it would- appear that the development -of this property has been within the contemplation of the parties. Of course, if the lease had not been unitized, the plaintiffs would have received under its terms royalties amounting to approximately $600 a year, or $2.30 per acre per year. The fact that they are only receiving $240 a year is clearly within the terms of the contract itself.

This court, in the case of Knight v. Blackwell Oil & Gas Co., 197 La. 237, 1 So.2d 89, 91, very aptly pointed out that “The words ‘in paying quantities’ can mean the production of oil or gas in such a quantity as will pay a small profit over operation costs of the well, although the expense of drilling and equipping the well may never be paid, and thus, the operation as a whole might result in a loss to the lessee. Under such circumstances, the well might be operated by the lessee, in order to recoup some of the drilling and equipment costs.”

*813 Under the facts of this case it appears that there was a net profit of $3,926.28 realized from the operation of this well during the 25 months following its completion as a producer.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
41 So. 2d 724, 215 La. 805, 1949 La. LEXIS 998, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vance-v-hurley-la-1949.