Waggoner & Zeller Oil Company v. Deike

508 S.W.2d 163, 47 Oil & Gas Rep. 539, 1974 Tex. App. LEXIS 2225
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 3, 1974
Docket12120
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 508 S.W.2d 163 (Waggoner & Zeller Oil Company v. Deike) 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
Waggoner & Zeller Oil Company v. Deike, 508 S.W.2d 163, 47 Oil & Gas Rep. 539, 1974 Tex. App. LEXIS 2225 (Tex. Ct. App. 1974).

Opinion

SHANNON, Justice.

This appeal concerns a suit filed in the district court of Runnels County by Fritz F. Deike and wife, Truman Deike, for a declaratory judgment that an oil and gas lease had terminated because of the cessation, after expiration of the primary term, of production of oil and gas. Appellants are members of a partnership, Waggoner & Zeller Oil Company, and are W. M. Waggoner, A. E. Zeller, Anthony M. Ciof-fi, L. B. Howerton, Samuel Weill, Jr., John P. Strutzel, Richard G. Rawlins, and Maryann Rawlins. Upon trial to a jury, judgment was entered for appellee. Truman Deike, 1 canceling the lease, awarding appellants $2,560.00 in damages for the recoverable casing in the well, and requiring appellants to remove the equipment and personal property within ninety days. We will affirm that judgment.

The lease canceled by the judgment was comprised of sixty acres of land in Runnels County and was executed by the Deikes, as lessors, in January of 1966, to Dorman N. Farmer, lessee, whose interest, by subsequent conveyances, became vested in appellants. The lease was “ . for a term of three (3) years from this date (called ‘primary term’) and as long thereafter as oil, gas or other mineral is produced from said land hereunder.” Paragraph five of the lease provided in part that “ . . .if after discovery and production of oil, gas or other mineral the production thereof should cease from any cause, this lease shall not terminate if Lessee commences operations for drilling or reworking within sixty (60) days thereafter . . . ” Paragraph eight is concerned with notice to the -lessee of breaches of the lease and provides in part that, “The breach by Lessee of any obligation arising hereunder shall not work a forfeiture or termination of this lease nor cause a termination or reversion of the estate created hereby nor be grounds for cancellation hereof in whole or in part. In the event Lessor considers that operations are not at any time being conducted in compliance with this lease, Lessor shall notify Lessee in writing of the facts relied upon as constituting a breach hereof, and Lessee, if in default, shall have sixty (60) days after receipt of such notice in which to commence the compliance with the obligations imposed by virtue of this instrument.”

A well was completed in March of 1967 and commercial production was obtained *165 through the end of the primary term. However, during the years after the well was drilled production decreased. From July through November of 1970 there was no production, but there was production in December of 1970, which continued through February of 1971. The amount of production from March of 1971 through September 14, 1971, was disputed. The ap-pellee contended that there was no production in paying quantities and the appellants claimed otherwise. On July 3, 1971, Fritz F. Deike advised an agent for appellants that he considered the lease to have terminated and that he did not want any of appellants’ agents “to set foot” on the lease. On two different occasions Deike attempted to notify appellants in writing that he considered the lease terminated. On July 8, 1971, appellants received a letter from Deike’s attorney to that effect.

In her trial pleading appellee took the position that production had ceased under the lease as of March, 1971, and that because no drilling or reworking operations had been commenced within sixty days thereafter, the lease had, by its terms, terminated.

In response to appellee’s suit, appellants pleaded that since the end of the primary term of the lease and until about July 1, 1971, they had continuously produced oil and gas in paying quantities from the Deike well or else had in good faith conducted reworking operations on the well. Appellants averred also that on or about July 1, 1971, Fritz Deike instructed appellants’ agent “to not set foot” on the lease. Appellants pleaded further that by the terms of paragraph eight of the lease they had sixty days after receipt of written notice from the Deikes of the breach by them of any obligation in the lease to commence compliance with those obligations. In this regard appellants pleaded that they received written notice on July 8, 1971, and that on or about September 1, 1971, Fritz Deike refused their agents entry upon the lease.

The case was submitted to the jury upon six special issues. In answer to those issues the jury found that between March 1, 1971, and September 14, 1971, there was no oil production from the well, and that during the same period of time there had been no reworking operations conducted by appellants. The jury answered further that there was a period of at least sixty consecutive days after March 1, 1971, that the oil was not produced in paying quantities. The jury also responded that Fritz Deike, on July 3, 1971, told appellants’ agent that he considered the oil and gas lease terminated.

Appellants maintain in their first point of error that, because paragraph eight of the lease required written notice from the lessor of any breach of the lease agreement by the lessee, it was necessary for the lessor to give the lessee written notice of cessation of production and from that time the lessee would have sixty days to begin production, drilling or reworking operations. Appellants say that they were not accorded that time after notice was received.

The same basic contention was made by the operators and rejected by the courts in Lynch v. Southern Coast Drilling Company, 442 S.W.2d 804 (Tex.Civ.App.1969, no writ) and Preston v. Lambert, 489 S.W.2d 955 (Tex.Civ.App.1973, writ ref’d n. r. e). We are of the opinion that those cases control the disposition of this point of error.

In Lynch, which involved the same kind of lease provision, the court stated, “By its very language, the lease provision relating to notice is applicable only where lessor is claiming that ‘lessee has not complied with all its obligations’ under the lease. It is now well settled in Texas that an oil and gas lease, such as the one before us, creates a determinable fee in the lessee, and that the provision to the effect that, after the expiration of the primary term of five years, the lease shall continue in force as long as oil or gas is produced constitutes a *166 special limitation upon the estate transferred ...

“When the condition constituting the special limitation occurred, the lease terminated by force of such limitation, and not as the result of any default in their obligations by lessees or of any breach by lessees of any contractual duties imposed upon them by the terms of the lease. The existence of the condition terminating the lease was not a breach of duty by lessees and created no cause of action in lessor. Walker, The Nature of the Property Interests Created by an Oil and Gas Lease in Texas, 7 Tex.L.Rev. 1, 18 (1928); 2 Summers, Oil and Gas § 337, p. 394 (1959).

“Since the special limitation imposes no obligation on lessees to perform any duty, the clause providing for notice has no application here. Cf. Stephenson v. Calliham, 289 S.W. 158 (Tex.Civ.App.—San Antonio 1926, no writ).

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Bluebook (online)
508 S.W.2d 163, 47 Oil & Gas Rep. 539, 1974 Tex. App. LEXIS 2225, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/waggoner-zeller-oil-company-v-deike-texapp-1974.