delivered the opinion of the court:
This is an appeal from a decree of the circuit court of Wayne County in favor of appellees, in an action of equitable interpleader instituted by the Central Pipe Line Company to determine the ownership of funds in its hands. The funds were derived from the purchase of royalty oil, and a determination was also- sought of the ownership of future funds to be derived from the same source.
We ascertain the basic facts to be as follows: In July, 1936, Emma Tyler, a widow, owned 114 acres of land. On July 13 of that year she leased all of the land for oil and gas; 74 acres thereof being in sections 27 and 28, and 40 acres being in section 4. Before any oil or gas wells were ever drilled upon any of the aсreage, Emma Tyler in January, 1938, (as an act of voluntary division between her children,) by deeds conveyed all of the land in fee. In each deed she reserved a life estate which she enjoyed until her death intestate in November, 1941. In December, 1945, wells were drilled on the 74-acre tract; no wells were ever drilled on the 40-acre tract. From those wells oil was produced, sold and marketed to an extent whereby the Central company had impounded $4726.95.
By various assignments the oil-and-gas lease as to the 74-acre tract passed to one Mitchell. By mesne conveyances the fee in the 74 acres became vested in Elsie Mae Corn-stubble. A one-half of the fee in the 40 acres rеmained in Geneva Hutson, who is a daughter of Emma Tyler. The other one-half of that fee belonged to Lucille Coil, another daughter of Emma; this one-half became the property of Cecil Tyler subject to a reservation by Lucille of an undivided one-fourth of the minerals for 20 years or so long as oil or gas is produced. The oil-and-gas lease covering the 40-acre tract was retained by the assignee of the original lessee.
The oil-and-gas lease which Emma Tyler gave did not contain a royalty proration clause providing, in the event the leased 114 acres shall thereafter be owned in severalty or in separate tracts, that the entire 114 acres shall be develоped and operated as one lease, and that all royalties accruing thereunder shall be treated as an entirety, to be divided among and paid to the separate owners in the proportion the acreage of each separate owner bears to the entire leased acreage.
Errors relied upon by the appellants, and the counter-propositions advanced by appellees to negative them lead to but one issue. It is — where a lease for oil and gas does not contain a proration clause, and the owner of the fee, subsequent to the execution of the lease, disposes of all by conveying portions thereof to others, and oil or gas is produced from some portion of the leased property after it was fractioned, does the royalty therefrom belong only to the owner of the particular portion upon which the well is located, or does the royalty belong to all the owners of all the portions upon a prorata basis? Courts of last resort of other States have been confronted with this issue, but this is the first time it has been presented to this court.
The appellants advance the point that, as a matter of law, oil-and-gas-lease royalties should be apportioned in the same manner as is the apportionment of rentals payable under surfaсe or business leases. This is predicated upon the fact that apportionment of rentals has long been recognized in Illinois. (Crosby v. Loop,
Where this issuе has been presented to the courts of last resort in other States their decisions have not been universally harmonious. The lack of harmony is due to a fundamental difference of opinion regarding the innate character of potential oil or gas royalties. Wettengel v. Gormley,
Lynch v. Davis,
In 1919 the Supreme Court of Oklahoma decided Kimbley v. Luckey,
The Court of Appeals of Kentucky in- Mclntire’s Admr. v. Bond,
Where the State of Kansas stands on this matter is clearly disclosed in Carlock v. Krug,
The question before this court was presented to the Supreme Court of Arkansas in Osborn v. Arkansas Territorial Oil & Gas. Co.
In Indiana the issue was presented in Fairbanks v. Warrum,
In Gillette v. Mitchell, — Texas, —,
Hoffman v. Magnolia Petroleum Co.
In Japhet v. McRae,
The decision in Higgins v. California Petroleum & Asphalt Co.
The appellants believe the Supreme Court of California was confronted with the question in Standard Oil Co. v. John P. Mills Organization,
The appellants concede no issue like the one presented here has arisen in the State of Louisiana, but cite decisions from that State which, they allege, bear upon it. We have examined those cases and do not believe them to be pertinent. Thompson On Real Property, Perm. Ed., vol. 10, sec. 5592, is also cited and quoted from. The quoted portion of the cited sеction pertains only to the situation “where several owners of adjoining tracts of land join in a single lease thereof, * * What we have said concerning the inapplicability of the holding in Higgins v. California Petroleum & Asphalt Co.
Appellants would have this court retract holdings made in People v. Phillips,
The decision on the issue presented by this case would be-the same regardless of whether the subdivision оf the whole acreage came about by grant, devise or by operation of the statute controlling descent of intestate property. We agree with Professor Summers on the immateriality of how the ¡subdivision was made; the basic controlling principle would apply in either instance.
The lease in the instant case did not provide for pro-ration of the royalties. To accede to the view of the appellants would amount to a change in the terms of the lease from non-proration to proration without the consent of all the parties thereto. Where the writing actually expresses an agreement, equity cannot make a new one for the parties or add a provision in lieu of another without a prior accord between them for such substitution. Harley v. Magnolia Petroleum Co.
The appellants complain the lower court taxed the costs against them instead of against the fund involved. Their argument in support is a specious one. To follow it would be tantamount to taxing the costs against appellees who are entitled to the fund.
The decree of the circuit court of Wayne County is affirmed.
Decree affirmed.
