Leavell Resources Corporation et al., (Leavell) appeal the district court’s ruling which canceled Leavell’s oil or gas lease for nonproduction, finding that certain leasehold personal property reverted to thg owners of the mineral interest, John Eichman, and other Eichman family members, and granting a money judgment to Eichman for revenues from oil sold by Leavell from the lease.
In 1975, the Eichman family executed an oil or gas lease to Marshall Denny covering a tract of land in Graham County, Kansas. The habendum clausb in the lease provided that the lease “shall remain in full force for a term of one (1) years from this date, and as long thereafter as oil or gas, or either of them, is *712 produced from- said land by the lessee, or the premises are being developed or operated.” The lease further provided that “[l]essee shall have the right at any time to remove all machinery and fixtures placed on said premises, including the right to draw and remove casing.”
The Eichman well, drilled during the primary term of the lease, produced oil in paying quantities, thereby extending the lease into its secondary term. Over the years, the lease was assigned to various parties, eventually ending up in the hands of Leavell in July 1990.
During that same year, the Eichman family became suspicious of the oil operations and discovered that the Eichman well apparently had not produced oil in paying quantities for several years. In February of 1992, Eichman sent a demand letter to Leavell stating that Eichman considered the lease to be abandoned and requesting that Leavell remove itself from the premises. Leavell did not respond, and in September of 1992, this action was commenced. Eichman requested that the district court declare the lease abandoned, return possession of the land to the Eichman family, and award appropriate damages.
At trial, Leavell’s field operator testified that the Eichman well was pumping oil when Leavell purchased the lease in July 1990. Leavell produced invoices showing that it had paid for the operating expenses incurred by the previous leaseholders in January, February, and March 1990. The evidence further showed that as of February 1992, Leavell had expended $20,532.42 on the Eichman well and sold oil produced from the well for $8,681. There has been no production from the Eichman well since February 1992, the month the Eichmans served the demand upon Leavell to vacate the premises.
Tax rendition statements produced at trial showed oil sales from the Eichman well of 320 barrels of oil in 1987 and 214 barrels in 1988. The last sale of oil in 1988 was in July of that year. No oil was produced during the balance of 1988, in all of 1989, or the first half of 1990. There was no further sale of oil until March of 1991, when 128.9 barrels were sold. Testimony showed that this oil was produced sometime during the latter part of 1990, but that the oil was held in the tank battery until the March 1991 sale. Leavell’s vice-president admitted that apparently no *713 oil was produced from the Eichman well between February 1988 and July 1990, but he said that it was not unusual for an oil lease to be down for short periods during its development.
A title opinion drafted by Leavell’s attorney prior to purchase of the lease warned Leavell that “[t]his is a shut-in lease, and in order to fully protect yourself, you should make sure that the royalty owners are willing for you to take over.”
The record before us is entirely blank concerning activities or operations on the lease between February 1988 and January 1990. In early 1990, some reworking operations were apparently started by Leavell’s immediate predecessor in title.
The district court found that the last production from the Eichman well was in 1988 and that the “lease had ceased producing oil in paying quantities as of the end of 1989, and was terminated.” The court held that “[t]he lease did not exist when the defendant attempted to purchased [sic] it as it had already expired by its own terms.” The court observed that Leavell had been warned of this possibility in its attorney’s title opinion. The court also awarded the leasehold equipment to the Eichmans and entered judgment in their favor for $8,681.79 for oil sold by Leavell after the lease had terminated.
Leavell argues that there was not substantial evidence to support the trial court’s determination that the lease had permanently ceased production prior to Leavell’s acquisition of the lease. Leavell also maintains the trial court failed to consider Leavell’s intent and reworking activities in light of the specific language in the habendum clause concerning “development or operation of the premises”. Leavell concedes that the Eichman lease is now abandoned and has been since February 1992, but asks that it be allowed to reenter the property, remove its equipment, and plug the well.
It has long been the rule in Kansas that when the primary term of an oil or gas lease has expired and the lease is being held upon the condition of continued production only, all rights under the lease terminate if and when production of oil or gas in paying quantities ceases.
Kelwood
Farms,
Inc. v.
Ritchie,
If there is a halt in production at an oil leasehold, the burden is upon the lessee to prove that the cessation is temporary and not permanent.
Wilson,
There are three factors relevant to whether a cessation is temporary or permanent: (1) the period of time cessation has persisted; (2) the intent of the operator; and (3) the cause of cessation.
Kelwood Farms,
Eichman introduced uncontested evidence at trial to show that oil production from the lease ceased from the period of February 1988 through July 1990. At that point, the burden shifted to Leavell to prove that the cessation was only temporary and that development of the well was continuing during that period. The' only evidence Leavell produced in that regard was the fact that the prior leaseholder contracted to have some repair work done on the equipment during the early spring of 1990, just prior to the sale of the lease to Leavell. Leavell introduced no evidence of any production or development of the well during 1989, the year in which, according to the court, the lease terminated. Furthermore, Leavell introduced no evidence of the intent of the well operators during 1989 or of the cause of the cessation.
Thei-e was substantial competent evidence from which the trial court could conclude that Leavell failed in its burden of proving that the cessation was temporary.
Leavell argues that the cessation of production during 1989 is not the only factor to consider because of the additional specific language in the lease that it would remain in effect as long as oil or gas is produced or the premises are being developed or operated. Leavell contends that even though no oil was produced *715 from the Eichman well during 1989, the leaseholder was still operating and developing the lease.
Although most Kansas cases construing habendum clauses in oil or gas leases deal only with clauses that condition extension of the lease upon continued production, the Kansas Supreme Court did consider a dispute arising from a lease that contained an “as long as the property is being developed or operated” condition in
Wagner v. Sunray Mid-Continent Oil Co.,
We believe Leavell attaches too much significance to the “developed and operated” language in its lease. Webster’s Ninth New Collegiate Dictionary 347, 827 (1991) defines “develop” as “to make active, ... to promote the growth of, . . . to make available or usable” and defines “operate” as “to produce an appropriate effect, ... to cause to function, ... to put or keep in operation.” When viewed in the light of oil and gas operations, these words sound suspiciously like the temporary cessation rule. The leaseholder is required to move promptly and by its efforts establish that the cessation of production, regardless of its cause, was temporaiy and not permanent.
Wilson,
Williams and Meyers observed that interpretations of “so long as oil and gas is produced or the property is being developed or operated” clauses are very sparse. 2 Williams and Meyers, Oil and Gas Law § 334.2, p. 133 (1993). However, the authors reached the following conclusion as to the construction of that phrase:
“If at the end of the primary term of the defeasible interest oil or gas is being produced (in paying quantities if required) on the land and such production thereafter ceases in the secondary term of the defeasible interest, the interest will not terminate if drilling operations, reworking operations, or similar activities in pursuit of oil or gas are engaged in within a reasonable time after such cessation of production. The term interest will be preserved *716 as long as such operations are continued with due diligence and if production results, so long as production lasts. But when operations cease and are not resumed within a reasonable time, the term interest terminates. If the operator ceases operations with the intention of abandoning the premises the interest terminates unless the term owner (who in order to do so himself must have a mineral interest) commences operations or others do so within a reasonable time after such abandonment.” 2 Williams and Meyers §334.2, pp. 133-34.
Additionally, regardless of how the language of the habendum clause is construed, Leavell’s failure to produce evidence of the intent of the operators in 1989 or any development or repair activities during that time proves fatal to its claim. In the absence of contrary evidence, when production from a well ceases, then operation and development also ceases. Since the record is silent in this respect, we can only conclude that Leavell’s predecessor did nothing. See
Wagner v. Sunray Mid-Continent Oil,
We are not unmindful of the fact that Leavell expended significant sums of money in an effort to produce the well and that some oil was subsequently obtained. However, by the time Leavell assumed the lease in 1990, it had already terminated. No amount of money or effort expended on the Eichman well by Leavell could breathe new life into the lease. See
Wagner v. Sunray Mid-Continent Oil,
There was substantial competent evidence presented from which the district court could properly conclude that the Eichman lease had lapsed by its own terms due to permanent cessation of production at the end of 1989.
Since the termination of the lease at the end of 1989 also terminated any rights the lessee may have had to the oil thereafter, it is clear that title to any oil produced in 1990 and thereafter belonged to the Eichmans. The evidence was uncontested that the value of the oil removed by Leavell during 1990 and subsequent thereto was $8,681.79. The trial court was correct in entering judgment in that amount in favor of the Eichmans.
A harder question is presented on the issue of ownership of the leasehold personal property remaining on the lease. The trial court awarded this property to the Eichmans, treating Leavell’s interest in the personalty as terminating at the same time as the lease itself.
*717 The lease provisions granted the lessee the right to remove at any time all machinery and fixtures placed on the leasehold, including the right to draw and remove casing.
In
Pratt v. Gerstner,
The Eichmans argue that when Leavell’s rights to the lease ended by virtue of nonproduction of the lease, so went their rights to the equipment and that since Leavell’s predecessors had no right to the equipment, neither does Leavell. The Eichmans cite
Pratt
and
Newlands v. Ellis,
Neither case deals with the exact question presented here: What rights does a lessee have, if any, to remove leasehold equipment following an involuntary termination of a lease which was contested in court? The Kansas appellate courts have not issued a definitive ruling on this question.
In
Pratt,
the lessee had voluntarily executed a release of the lease, relinquishing all rights and interest in the lease back to the landowners.
In
Newlands,
the parties had specifically provided in their lease “ ‘that upon the termination of this lease, the second party shall have six months thereafter in which to remove all machinery, buildings, equipment and all other improvements placed therein or thereon by second party.’ ”
In the case at hand, the lessee in possession of the Eichman leasehold in 1989 probably did not realize that its lease had terminated. It may well have believed that it was still “operating or developing” the well. When Leavell assumed the lease, the well was in operation, and Leavell continued to produce oil from the well and expend money thereon until February 1992. Even if Leavell had reason to believe from its attorney’s title opinion that there might be a problem with the shut-in provision of the lease, it does not necessarily follow that Leavell had reason to believe that its rights to the mining equipment were jeopardized since the continuing activity on the lease in 1990 and thereafter would not make it readily- apparent that the lease had been abandoned or become forfeited. When the Eichmans served their demand upon Leavell and brought this action to quiet title, Leavell defended its interest in the lease in good faith. Under- the circumstances Leavell should have a reasonable time to remove its equipment after entry of the court judgment evicting them from the property.
Such a solution was ordered by the court in
Idalia Realty & Development Co. v. Norman,
"There are many authorities asserting the general rule that the right to remove fixtures by a tenant must be exercised during the tenant’s term. *719 There are also many exceptions to this rule, and the courts do and should favor such exceptions, because forfeitures are not favored in the law, and the rule is frequently found to be a harsh one.”183 S.W. at 350 .
The court then pointed out that the exact terms of the lease were highly debatable and that the tenant had defended his ejectment in good faith. The court held that in such situations, a tenant had the right to remove fixtures immediately after the entry of judgment against the tenant.
Idalia Realty
was cited favorably in
State Hwy. Comm. v. Demarest,
The reasoning in Idalia Realty and Demarest is persuasive. We hold that when an oil or gas lease is terminated by court judgment because of a failure of the lessee to satisfy the provisions of the habendum clause, and where the lessee defends the action in good faith, the lessee has a reasonable time to remove leasehold equipment after entry of judgment.
The finding of the district court that the Eichman lease terminated and the judgment in favor of the Eichmans for $8,681.79 are affirmed.
The order of the district court awarding the leasehold personalty to the Eichmans is reversed. The case is remanded with directions that the district court issue an order allowing Leavell to enter the property to remove its equipment and to plug the Well within such reasonable time as the district court may, in its. sound discretion, allow.
