West v. Continental Oil Co.

194 F.2d 869
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedApril 14, 1952
Docket13371
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 194 F.2d 869 (West v. Continental Oil Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
West v. Continental Oil Co., 194 F.2d 869 (5th Cir. 1952).

Opinion

RIVES, Circuit Judge.

Appellants sued in the state court asserting that a mineral lease executed by them as lessors on August 5, 1947, expired by its own limitations on August 5, 1948, because appellee, lessee, began no drilling operations and paid no delay rental as required by the lease. Appellee removed to the federal court and pleaded that oil was being produced in paying quantities on the anniversary date from an old well drilled under a former expired lease and that such production preserved the later lease.

The parties submitted the case on an agreed statement of facts which was adopted by the district court as its findings of fact and which is substantially set forth in the opinion of the District Court reported in 91 F.Supp. 505.

The question to be determined is whether the lease by its own terms expired on the first anniversary date for failure of appellee to begin drilling operations as defined in the lease and failure to pay delay rental, or whether it was continued in effect by the production of oil from an old well drilled under a former lease.

In July, 1945, under the former lease, the appellee completed an oil well on the land involved in this suit, having an initial potential of 103 barrels daily, but due to its high gas-oil ratio, its allowable was subsequently decreased to approximately 6 barrels per day during the early part of 1947. Appellee has produced the allowable from said well since about August 1, 1945, the same on August 5, 1947, and now being approximately 6 barrels of oil for each day of operation. The appellants demanded the drilling of additional wells and the resumption of payment of delay rental, and also demanded the re-working of the one well which was completed. In July, 1947 the appellants informed the appellee that they intended to file suit to cancel the former lease, contending that appellee could not hold the land without payment of delay rent or further development. The former lease was beyond its primary term, and the production from the well was no longer sufficient to pay the cost of lifting the oil, ’ and it was considered terminated. The appellee stated that it would buy a new five-year primary term lease on the tract of 654.94 acres and would pay appellants a consideration of $50.00 per acre bonus therefor, a total of $32,747.00, to which appellants agreed. Appellee thereafter prepared the new lease herein involved dated August 5, 1947, and paid appellants in August, 1947 the sum of $327.47 and paid the remainder of the agreed bonus in January, 1948, at appellants’ request. The new lease was executed and became effective on its date, August 5, 1947.

After the new lease was executed, in October of 1947, and again in December of 1947, the price of oil advanced materially. As a result of such increased price, the revenue from the well increased' to the extent that it exceeded the cost of operating the well and paid a profit, and it has continued to do so since that time; At the time the lease of August 5, 1947, was executed nothing was said about the drilling of additional wells or about the one well on the leased land which had been completed in July of 1945. Appellee drilled no additional wells on the land and appellants did not demand the drilling of any additional wells. Appellee did not tender or pay the delay rental of $654.94 within- one year from the date of the lease of August 5, 1947, or at any time before the appellants on August 24, 1948, demanded’ a release of the lease. During the first year of the lease, the appellee paid the appellants the amount of $559.95, being one-eighth of the net value of the oil produced from the old well. The appellee has tendered to- appel *871 lants one-eighth of the oil produced from the old well since that time, but the appellants have refused to accept such payments.

Appellants complain because the district court treated the case as one to cancel or forfeit a lease rather than one to declare that the lease had expired by its own terms. The appellee, to the contrary cited a number of Texas decisions in which a suit to declare a lease terminated by its own limitations was discussed or treated as if it were, in practical effect, a suit to cancel or forfeit a lease. 1 Appellants, in support of their contention, cite a number of authorities in which the distinction has been deliberately considered and the rule declared as it was stated by Judge Bryan for this court in Empire Gas & Fuel Co. v. Saunders, 22 F.2d 733, 735: “The equitable rule as to relieving against forfeiture has no application to the facts of this case, for there was no forfeiture; there was nothing to be forfeited, because the lease by its very terms had ceased to exist.” 2 Since in St. Louis v. Continental Oil Co., 5 Cir., 193 F.2d 778, we have pointed out that this conflict is only apparent, we need not deal further with it here, especially if we conclude that by its own terms the lease had not expired.

We come then to consider the terms of the new lease in the light of the circumstances existing at the time the lease was executed. 3 Apparently neither of the parties clearly foresaw the possibility that the price of oil might advance so as to make the continued operation of the existing well profitable, and at the time of the execution of the lease, nothing was said about the drilling of additional wells or about the one well then completed on the leased land. A printed oil and gas lease form, known as form 88, was used for the new lease and most of its terms refer to the usual situation where a new well or new wells are to be drilled.

The only case involving the construction of such a lease that either party has been able to find where the production was from a well drilled under a former lease is Ryan v. Kent, Tex.Com.App., 36 S.W.2d 1007, 1010. The facts and circumstances surrounding the execution of the new lease in that case were very different from those in this case. In that case, the wells on the property were producing in paying quantities at all times. The last lease had no drilling clause or delay rental clause, these being left in blank. The only value of that case in arriving at a decision of this case is the court’s consideration of the word; used in the term clause, “as long * * * as oil or gas or either is produced from said! land by the lessee”, 4 as to which the court said: “Construing the contract in the lighf *872 of these well-established principles, we think the provision for continuing the lease after the initial or fixed period of five years ‘as long * * * as oil or gas or either is produced from said land by the lessee’ is not an ambiguous one. In plain terms it gives the lessee the right to continue to explore the land for oil so long as oil is produced by him from the premises, and this regardless of whether such oil should be produced from existing wells or from those subsequently drilled under the present lease.”

Appellants place their principal reliance on the drilling clause left blank in the case of Ryan v.

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Bluebook (online)
194 F.2d 869, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/west-v-continental-oil-co-ca5-1952.