Wall v. United Gas Public Service Co.

181 So. 562, 1938 La. App. LEXIS 247
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 29, 1938
DocketNo. 5299.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 181 So. 562 (Wall v. United Gas Public Service Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wall v. United Gas Public Service Co., 181 So. 562, 1938 La. App. LEXIS 247 (La. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

TALIAFERRO, Judge.

In this suit, plaintiff, Shady J. Wall, seeks to be recognized as the owner and entitled to receive one-half of all rents and royalties due and/or to become due and payable under the terms of that certain mineral lease executed by the West Monroe State Bank and Charles G. Wall to the Greenwood Production Company on August 7, 1930, embracing the following described lands in Ouachita parish:

“Lot 4 and all that portion of the NEj4 of SWJ4, lying North of Coulee or Cross Bayou, of Section 23, Township 19 North, Range 3 East, containing 80 acres, more or less.”

The said bank, Charles G. Wall and the United Gas Public Service Company, as-signee of the Greenwood Production Company, were made parties defendant.

On May 9, 1921, plaintiff, for a consideration of $16,000.00, partly paid by the value of other lands given in exchange, and the balance liquidated by the notes of the vendee, maturing over a period of seventeen years, conveyed to Charles G. Wall, his son, the Aaron plantation in Ouachita parish, containing several hundred acres, less certain excepted portions thereof, and also the 80-acre tract above described. The act of salé and exchange contains the following reservation and stipulation:

“Provided, however, that it is distinctly understood that in case of the discovery and development of oil, gas and mineral rights on any of the said property,’ the vendor herein reserves and shall receive from the vendee, his heirs, successor or assigns, a half of all royalties received by the transferee, his heirs or assigns either from oil, gas or other minerals produced or developed upon said property, it being understood that the right on the part of the transferee to mortgage, alienate, or otherwise dispose of said oil, gas or other mineral rights shall not be impaired by this contract and that he shall have the right to mortgage, control, alienate or otherwise dispose of same without the necessity of conferring with this vendor, his heirs or assigns, he, his heirs, transferees and assigns being only obligated to pay over and to account for half of all royalties received by him in connection with said mineral rights.”

On April 14, 1923, Charles G. Wall reconveyed to plaintiff for the recited price of $16,000.00 cash, the identical property acquired by him from plaintiff on May 9, 1921, and on the same day plaintiff transferred back to Charles G. Wall the same property for the same recited price. In neither deed is there any mineral reservation of any character. These deeds, it is contended, were executed in order to correct some alleged errors of description therein, but no such purpose or intent appears in either instrument.

*564 On October 10, 1923, Charles G. Wall sold and conveyed to R. B. Halsell a portion of the lands he had previously acquired from plaintiff, his father, including the 80-acre tract in Section 23, described above. This instrument contains the following mineral reservation:

“It is also understood and agreed that the said Wall hereby reserves to himself, his heirs and assigns, an undivided one-half interest in and to all of the minerals, fugitive and placed, 'in, on and under the said property hereby conveyed to the said Halsell.

“It is further understood and agreed that the said Halsell is to receive one-half of the yearly rentals on the mineral lease now extant upon the records against the said property.
“It is agreed and understood that the reservation hereby made by the said Wall of the minerals' hereinabove referred to is a mere servitude and prescribes in ten years from the date hereof, and that at the end of said ten-year period, as a part of the consideration of this contract, the said Halsell binds and obligates himself to renew said reservation of said undivided one-half interest in the minerals by deed, conveying the same to the said Wall, for the price of $100.00 cash.”

On May 6, 1924, Halsell and wife executed a mortgage on the tracts acquired by him from Wall, supra, -to the Federal Land Bank of New Orleans, Louisiana, to secure a note of $10,800.00, payable over a period of 35 years. He defaulted in the annual payments on the note and it was thereafter purchased from the Bank by Edwin S. Hall, who. forced a sale of the mortgaged property by foreclosure proceedings. At sheriff’s sale, on December 10, 1928, defendant, the West Monroe State Bank, became the purchaser of the property. There is no mention in this deed nor in the mortgage to the Federal Land Bank of any preexisting mineral reservation or reservations.

On January 11, 1926, Charles G. Wall and R. B. Halsell “bargained, sold and assigned” to plaintiff an undivided half interest in and to all royalties “accruing or hereafter to accrue under leases heretofore made by the said C. G. Wall and R. B. Halsell, or either of them, their heirs or assigns” on the 80-acre tract above mentioned, and two other lots of land. The wording of stipulations in this assignment is quite similar to that of the reservation in the deed of May 9, 1921, from S. J. Wall to Charles G. Wall, quoted heretofore. It is made plain that the parties intended, so far as they were able, to reestablish in S. J. Wall the rights and benefits reserved by him in his first deed to Charles G. Wall (May 9, 1921). In executing this assignment, the parties tacitly reflect a consciousness on their part that the public records, as regards this land, did not disclose that S. J. Wall was vested with any interest in the royalty dealt with therein. However, this instrument was executed and registered over eighteen months subsequent to the date and registry of the mortgage from Halsell to the Federal Land Bank.

The value of the lands described in these various instruments enhanced because of the discovery of gas near them, augmented by the hope of profitable oil production in the same territory, and in August, 1930, opportunity arose for the closing of new leases thereon for attractive cash considerations plus bonuses. On August 18, 1930, the bank’s board of directors, by formal resolution, authorized its president, Mr. E. D. Cason, to execute oil and gas leases to the Interstate Natural Gas Company, incorporated, and to the Ouachita Natural Gas Company, Incorporated, on separate pieces and parcels of its lands, therein described; and also authorized its said president to execute such a lease to the Greenwood Production Company on the said 80-acre tract, above described, all on terms and conditions expressed in the resolution. The directors at the same time adopted the following resolution :

“Mr. Cason stated that the West Monroe State Bank was the owner of the entire surface of said lands set out in the foregoing resolution, but was the owner of an undivided interest only in the minerals as to part, together with Charles G. Wall and S. J. Wall, and that, inasmuch as there was doubt as to whether prescription was running in favor of this corporation against the interest owned by the -said Charles G. Wall and S. J. Wall because of non-development of said lands in which they own said mineral interest, the said Charles G. Wall and S. J. Wall were not agreeable to joining with this corporation in granting said leases and thereby pei‘-mitting a complete and valid lease being given on the entire property without this corporation entering into an agreement *565

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Bluebook (online)
181 So. 562, 1938 La. App. LEXIS 247, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wall-v-united-gas-public-service-co-lactapp-1938.