Wurzlow v. Placid Oil Company

279 So. 2d 749
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 7, 1973
Docket9221
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 279 So. 2d 749 (Wurzlow v. Placid Oil Company) 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
Wurzlow v. Placid Oil Company, 279 So. 2d 749 (La. Ct. App. 1973).

Opinion

279 So.2d 749 (1973)

Kermit WURZLOW et al.
v.
PLACID OIL COMPANY.

No. 9221.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.

May 29, 1973.
Rehearing Denied July 5, 1973.
Writ Refused September 7, 1973.

*751 E. Harold Saer, Jr., New Orleans (Chaffe, McCall, Phillip Toler & Hopkins), New Orleans, Kenneth Watkins (Watkins, Watkins & Walker), Houma, Armand Gutierrez, Dallas, Tex., for appellants.

John McCollam and Blake Arata, New Orleans (Gordon, Arata & McCollam), New Orleans, Edmund McCollam, Houma, for appellee.

Before SARTAIN, BLANCHE and WATSON, JJ.

BLANCHE, Judge.

Plaintiffs, Kermit Wurzlow and his assignees (hereinafter collectively referred to as "Wurzlows"), instituted a declaratory judgment action on March 23, 1965, against defendant, Placid Oil Company (hereinafter referred to as "Placid"), seeking to be recognized as owners of a one forty-eighth overriding royalty interest in certain enumerated oil, gas and mineral leases involving lands situated in the "Lapeyrouse Field" in Terrebonne Parish, Louisiana. By supplemental and amended petition filed on November 6, 1970, the Wurzlows asked that Placid additionally be ordered to account to them for all monies and interest thereon attributable to the claimed overriding royalty interests, dating from the respective first dates of production. Judgment was rendered by the trial court in favor of the Wurzlows, from which judgment Placid perfected this suspensive appeal.

Placid's first specification of error is that the trial court erred in admitting parol *752 evidence to supply an allegedly completely inadequate or missing description of lands in an instrument affecting real property, since the term "Lapeyrouse Prospect" which is used in an August 16, 1949, letter agreement allegedly does not describe any lands which can be identified or located on the ground. The body of the August 16, 1949, letter agreement, which forms the basis of this suit, reads as follows:

August 16th, 1949 Re: Lapeyrouse Prospect Terrebonne Parish File No. 15,876 Mr. Kermit Wurzlow Houma, Louisiana Dear Mr. Wurzlow: Please refer to Mr. Frank Babcock's letter of August 2nd regarding your override on our leases on the Lapeyrouse Prospect. The letter of August 30th, 1948, addressed to you and Mr. McDermott and signed by Mr. H. L. Hunt, President of Placid Oil Company, sets out our agreement regarding the new leases taken and covering lands assigned to us by British-American Oil Producing Company and Mr. McDermott on August 30th, 1948. This letter is written for the purpose of clarifying our oral agreement regarding your override on new leases taken on the Lapeyrouse Prospect. Also, we think it is good business practice to have such agreements in writing. We understand that you are to have a one forty-eighth (1/48th) overriding royalty on any new leases taken by us on the Lapeyrouse Prospect except leases from the Louisiana Land and Exploration Company and leases from the State of Louisiana. If the new leases are not full interest leases, your 1/48th override will be reduced in the proportion the outstanding interest bears to the interest covered by the lease. If this is your understanding of our agreement, please indicate by signing and returning a copy of the letter. Yours very truly, PLACID OIL COMPANY By (signed) W. F. Dalton W. F. Dalton BBB:WFD:JR Signed this 24th day of August, 1949 (signed) Kermit Wurzlow Kermit Wurzlow

Placid's second specification of error is that after admitting parol evidence, the trial court erred in holding that the parties to the 1949 letter intended the term "Lapeyrouse Prospect" to be an area of uncertain limits rather than a limited geographical area which, once established, did not change in size and included only the area in which Wurzlow was employed by Placid to purchase leases.

*753 Placid's third specification of error is essentially related to the first and second specifications of error and is that the trial court erred in holding that Placid was obligated to convey to Wurzlow an overriding royalty on leases acquired by Placid and covering lands in Township 20 South, Range 17 East, on which Placid's alleged Dulac Prospect was located.

As a result of the trial judge's excellent reasons for judgment, our disposition of a difficult matter on appeal has been made an easy task. We are satisfied that he disposed of all three of these arguments correctly, and the following excerpts from his Written Reasons for Judgment are reproduced here with approval:

"Plaintiffs' claim to the overriding royalty in question is based on a letter agreement dated August 16, 1949, photocopy of which is attached to plaintiffs' petition as Exhibit B and introduced into evidence as Wurzlow Exhibit No. 16, which was signed by the president of defendant company, W. F. Dalton, and which purports to reduce to `writing' and to `clarify' an oral agreement between plaintiff, Kermit Wurzlow, and the defendant, with respect to an overriding royalty to be transferred to Mr. Wurzlow in leases to be acquired by defendant on the `Lapeyrouse Prospect,' Terrebonne Parish. Essentially, the letter recites that Kermit Wurzlow was entitled to receive from Placid

"a one forty-eighth (1/48) overriding royalty on any new leases taken by us on the Lapeyrouse Prospect except leases from the Louisiana Land and Exploration Company and leases from the State of Louisiana.'

"Significantly this letter, which was prepared by defendant and signed by its president for the express purpose of confirming a prior agreement, neither attached a plat outlining the area of the `Lapeyrouse Prospect' nor did it purport to further describe said area by any other description.

"The central point of the controversy between plaintiffs and defendant revolves around the meaning to be accorded the term `Lapeyrouse Prospect' for purposes of enforcing the obligation undertaken by defendant to transfer to plaintiffs' predecessor in title a one forty-eighth (1/48th) overriding royalty interest on leases acquired by defendant on the `Lapeyrouse Prospect'.

"Plaintiffs contend that the override is owed by defendant on all leases acquired by defendant covering lands which lie within the exterior surface boundaries of the producing units ultimately created by the Louisiana Department of Conservation for various producing sands designated by the Department of Conservation as being in the Lapeyrouse Field of Terrebonne Parish, Louisiana. Plaintiffs' position is that the word `prospect', as used by the parties in the 1949 Letter Agreement and as understood in the oil and gas industry, denotes the entirety of a geologically promising area, thought to be prospective of commercial oil and gas deposits, which is ultimately proved to be productive by exploratory and development drilling.

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279 So. 2d 749, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wurzlow-v-placid-oil-company-lactapp-1973.