Wadkins v. Wilson Oil Corporation

6 So. 2d 720, 199 La. 656, 1942 La. LEXIS 1138
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedFebruary 2, 1942
DocketNo. 36393.
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 6 So. 2d 720 (Wadkins v. Wilson Oil Corporation) 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
Wadkins v. Wilson Oil Corporation, 6 So. 2d 720, 199 La. 656, 1942 La. LEXIS 1138 (La. 1942).

Opinion

HIGGINS, Justice.

This is a suit by the lessors against the lessee to rescind and cancel from the public records an oil, gas, and mineral lease covering 40 acres of land in the Pine Island Field of Caddo Parish.

The plaintiffs claim that the defendant has forfeited the lease because of its failure to fully develop, under the implied obligations of the lease, the leased premises for their mutual benefit, in accordance with the new and successful methods of development used by others in this chalk rock stratum oil field.

The defendant contends that it had developed the land according to its obligations under the lease; that, in the alternative, it had not been placed in default; and that it should be granted time within which to drill additional wells.

There was judgment rescinding the lease and ordering its cancellation.

The defendant has appealed.

The record shows that the lease covering 40 acres of land or the NEj4 of the NEJ4. Section 27, Township 21 North, Range 15 West, was granted on April 13, 1923 and that it was for a term of one year. The consideration was $3,500 cash and $3,000 was to be paid out of one-half of the first oil produced. The lease contained the implied covenant that the lessee would develop the leased premises according to the .recognized custom and progressive practices among the operators in the field. There were two old wells of a depth of about 2400 feet in the Woodbine sand formation on the property in 1923 when the lease was entered into, and after tnese Woodbine wells ceased to produce they were plugged back and perforated or. ripped at the chalk rock level, which is about 1650 *330 feet deep. Thereafter, one of the wells produced and the other failed on account of salt water. Later, the lessee drilled four successful chalk rock wells on the premises, the last of which was drilled in 1928. At the time this suit was filed, there were five pumper wells on the land which produced a little over ten barrels of oil per day, or two barrels each per day, as a result of the development prior to 1929.

The Pine Island oil field is located in Caddo Parish and has an area of approximately 15 square miles or 9600 acres, which is divided into units of 40 acres each, and therefore, there are about 240 divisions in this territory. This is an old field which has- been producing oil for twenty-five or thirty years. When it was first developed the oil was produced from the Woodbine sand at a depth of 2400 feet, but this reservoir became so greatly depleted in 1920 that the operators plugged and cemented the wells and perforated most of them in the chalk rock formation at 1650 feet. About three years ago a new and modern method of developing old leases profitably was employed by other operators in the field. It consisted of drilling new wells into the chalk rock formation deeper than theretofore, and after using fresh water in the drilling operations, the wells were acidized. The results were very favorable.The acidizing process was also tried on the old wells and while it temporarily improved some of them, the method did not prove to be as successful as in the case of new wells. It appears that some 300 hew wells in the chalk rock formation in Caddo Parish have been brought in on a profitable basis through the deeper drilling and acidizing process.

The Gulf Refining Company, the Magnolia Petroleum Company, the Texas Company and the Stanolind Oil Company have been for more than two years using this new method -and steadily drilling new wells in this chalk rock area. Some of their leases adjoin the lease involved herein.

R. D. Cooper, production foreman of the Texas Company, testified that his company, during 1941, drilled two new wells on the Raines lease which is immediately west of the Lane-Wadkins lease in question; that 'there had been six old wells on this 40 acre tract of land producing about twelve barrels of oil per day or two barrels each,. and that one of the new wells produced seventeen barrels of oil a day and the other five barrels per day; that his company had drilled thirty-five new wells in the Pine Island Field in the chalk rock formation; that all of these wells were, drilled under old leases which had been drilled several years before in both the Woodbine sand and the chalk rock; that his company had done this extensive drilling without getting a dry hole; that he did not know of any dry holes having been drilled by others in.the field; and that this indicated that the chalk rock formation was uniform throughout the Pine Island Field, except in some places the formation was tighter than in others.

Dr. A. F. Crider, who formerly served as the Chief Geologist of the Atlas Oil Company and the Dixie Oil Company, as the Assistant State Geologist of Kentucky; *331 as the State Geologist of Mississippi and as Geologist with the Governmental Geological Survey, testified that the chalk rock formation is uniform throughout the’entire Pine Island Field; that he did not know of any dry holes having been drilled in that formation; that he was familiar with the field since 1920; that good oil field operating practice in the Pine Island Field definitely required, at this time, the drilling of new wells to a greater depth in the chalk rock formation with fresh water and acidizing them when they are brought in; that this new method of drilling and treating the wells has been so successful and profitable to the major companies, that they have engaged in extensive drilling on old leases in the Pine Island Field; that the Magnolia Oil Company has drilled, with this new process, as many as sixteen new wells; that it began these re-drilling operations about three years ago when the old production had gone down to a small barrelage per day per well; that the first well drilled came in making two hundred barrels of oil daily, and that one of the new wells has produced over one hundred thousand barrels of oil up to the present time; that some of the wells paid for themselves within four months; that he was of the opinion that it would be a profitable operation for the lessee to drill four additional wells on the 40 acres of land involved, using the new process, at a cost of about $5,-500 for each of the wells; that his opinion was based on the fact that major oil producers, whose leases were adjacent to and in the vicinity of the lease involved herein, had profitably developed their wells through drilling with the modern method; that there are three new wells on the lease to the east of this 40 acres, and two new wells on the lease to the south of the lease in controversy; that there are seven new wells on the Texas Company’s Raines lease immediately to the west; and that there are new wells producing oil on the Tholl Oil Company, Inc.-Logan lease immediately to the north.

E. W. Sutherlin of the Production Department of the Gulf Refining Company stated that in December 1940, and January 1941, the Gulf Refining Company drilled four new wells on the Gulf-Wadkins lease, which covers the 40 acres described as the SWJ4 of the SE14, Section 22, Township 21 North, Range 15 West; that these new wells were producing one hundred twelve barrels of oil per day at the time of the trial of this case; that the operations were both successful and profitable; that five old wells on this same 40 acre tract, which lies diagonally to the northwest of and has a common.

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Bluebook (online)
6 So. 2d 720, 199 La. 656, 1942 La. LEXIS 1138, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wadkins-v-wilson-oil-corporation-la-1942.