Wellsville Oil Co. v. Miller

243 U.S. 6, 37 S. Ct. 362, 61 L. Ed. 559, 1917 U.S. LEXIS 2085
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 6, 1917
Docket541
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 243 U.S. 6 (Wellsville Oil Co. v. Miller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wellsville Oil Co. v. Miller, 243 U.S. 6, 37 S. Ct. 362, 61 L. Ed. 559, 1917 U.S. LEXIS 2085 (1917).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice White

delivered the opinion of the court.

The Wellsville Oil Company sued to protect its alleged rights as lessee under an'oil and gas lease and to set aside a conflicting lease held by the Alpha Oil Company. Upon demurrer the petition was dismissed for want of cause of action and the judgment to that effect was affirmed by the court below...-

*8 To state the undisputed facts which led to the bringing of the suit and upop which its determination depends, will make clear the issues, Martha Miller, born Everett, owned land which had been allotted to her as a Cherokee of the full blood, and which, through her guardian, under authority of court approved by the Secretary of the Interior, had been leased in 1905 for the term of her minority for oil and gas purposes, the lease having by assignment passed to the Wellsville Oil Company, also with the approval of the Secretary of the Interior. In 1907 the guardian filed in the United States Court, Northern Judicial District of the Indian Territory, a request for authority to make a new lease to the Wellsville Oil Company for fifteen years. It was stated that the minor was then within one year of majority, that the existing lease would expire at that time and. that the Oil Company, in view of the short time which the lease had yet to run, was engaged in pumping oil night, and day and would probably extract all of the oil before the expiration of the lease, to the great detriment and injury of the minor and her property, as the price of oil was very low and the royalties would amount to very little. It was averred that the Oil Company had agreed that it would abandon the “excessive and damaging pumping ” in which it was engaged if it could, get a new lease for fifteen years and proposed to pay a bonus and ah additional royalty. The court after a reference entered an order authorizing the lease, expressly, however, causing the authority to make it to depend upon the approval of the Secretary of the Interior and providing that only when the lease was so approved should it take the place of the old and existing lease which had yet a year to run. The order directed the guardian to report the lease by him made and to furnish a mew bond'to secure the bonus and the additional sums to be paid. Acting under this authority on the form of lease prepared and exacted by the Interior Department, *9 the parties executed the fifteen-year lease. This lease in the fullest way gave the Secretary of the Interior control over the, parties in performing the obligations of the lease, delegated to the Secretary authority to cancel the lease without resort to legal proceedings if he deemed the situation required it and expressly exacted that after approval by the Secretary the lease should be void unless an additional bond subject to his approval was given. The lease thus drawn was reported to the court and was by it approved on July 24, 1907. It was forwarded by the Indian agent in October of that year to the Commissioner of Indian Affairs for submission to the Secretary of the Interior and was by the Secretary in the same month expressly disapproved.

A little more than three years later, the petition to which we have at the outset referred was filed, and some months thereafter, in September, 1911, there was an amended petition. This petition was divided into two counts. The first, after reciting the facts which we have stated as to the making of the new lease and the disapproval of the same by the Secretary, charged that the plaintiff had remained in possession of the property under the new lease; that it worked and developed the same, producing oil therefrom, but that it was unable to dispose of the oil, as the only means for its outlet was through the pipe line of the Prairie Oil Company and that company, under the influence of the Secretary of the Interior, had refused to pay for the oil on the ground of the non-existence of the lease. It was further charged that some time after Martha Miller, the lessor, had become of age, she had leased the property to the Alpha Oil Company for gas and oil purposes, that that company had fraudulently interfered with the exercise of the rights of plaintiff under its lease and had ousted the plaintiff of possession and had wrongfully held possession until 1910, in which year it had abandoned the property. It was alleged that following this *10 abandonment the plaintiff had retaken possession and continued to produce oil and transmit it through the pipes of the Prairie Oil Company without pay as in the previous period. It was charged that the fifteen-year lease was valid, that the Secretary of the Interior was wholly without authority of law to disapprove the same, that while the court in sanctioning the lease had acquiesced in his claim of authority to do so, that acquiescence was nothing worth and the lease as made was valid notwithstanding the disapproval of the Secretary. There was an inconsistent claim in the petition that the court by approving the lease as presented by the guardian prior to its transmission to the Secretary of the Interior for his action had virtually sanctioned the lease upon the theory that the approval of the Secretary was not necessary. The second count asserted, under the theory of the validity of the lease, the right to the proceeds of the oil in the hands of the Prairie Oil Company, and even upon the hypothesis that the lease was invalid,, the right to be reimbursed a very large amount of expenses and costs of improvements which it was alleged had been made in working and developing the property.

The prayer was for a judgment upholding the validity of the fifteen-year lease and annulling the lease to the Alpha Oil Company and awarding the proceeds of oil in the hands of the Prairie Oil Company to the plaintiff. It was further prayed, under the hypothesis that the fifteen-year lease should not be upheld, that there be a judgment for the costs and expenses as averred in the second count.

' The petition was demurred to on the ground that it stated no cause of action. The demurrer was sustained and, as the plaintiff elected to stand upon its pleading, a judgment was entered dismissing the petition on the merits. By order of court and consent of parties it came to pass that the proceeds of the oil which had been hitherto *11 received by the Prairie Oil Company were subjected to the order of the court for ultimate distribution and an agreement was had concerning the right of the Prairie Oil Company to retain the proceeds of the oil produced by the operations under the lease until it became possible to distribute the same by a final disposition of the cause. The case was. then taken to the court below.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
243 U.S. 6, 37 S. Ct. 362, 61 L. Ed. 559, 1917 U.S. LEXIS 2085, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wellsville-oil-co-v-miller-scotus-1917.