By this suit, plaintiffs seek to quiet their title to an 80-acre tract of land in Oklahoma county, Oklahoma, as against oil and gas leases thereon, owned by defendants as assignees, because of nondevelopment during the primary term thereof. The parties are referred to herein in the same order as they appeared in the trial court. The facts were stipulated.
Plaintiffs were the owners of the S. % of the S. W. % of sec. 12, twp. 12N., R. 2W., in Oklahoma county, Oklahoma, and as such, on November 16, 1944, executed an oil and gas lease thereon which was assigned to the defendants. This lease was for a primary term of five years or as long as oil or gas was produced therefrom. One of the plaintiffs, who did not sign the lease, executed one later, expiring on the same date, and stipulated at the time of trial that a determination of the rights of the parties, under the above described lease, would also determine his rights.
Defendants also held a lease covering the north half of said quarter section with the right to pool or com-munize it with plaintiffs’ land for the purpose of developing and operating it in the production of oil and gas. The title to this north 80 acres and the terms of the lease covering it are not here involved and have no bearing on this case. The object of this litigation is to determine the rights of the parties in the south 80-acre tract.
The lease executed by plaintiffs provided that:
“* * * If at the expiration of the primary term oil, gas or other minerals is not being produced on said land but Lessee is then engaged in drilling or re-working operations thereon, the lease shall remain in force so long as operations are prosecuted with no cessation of more than thirty (30) consecutive days, and if they result in the production of oil, gas or other minerals so long thereafter as oil, gas or other mineral is produced from said land. * *
And, further, by a typed-in paragraph, that:
“* * * A1; lessee’s option, the land hereby leased may be pooled with all or any portion of the mineral estate or estates in and under the Southwest Quarter (SW1/4) of Section Twelve (12), Township Twelve (12N) North, Range Two (2W) West, I. M., and all royalties payable to such communized interests shall be divided and paid to the several owners thereof in the proportion that the interest owned by each such owner bears to the entire interest so communized and, after such commu-nization, all interests so communized may be operated and developed without regard to the boundary lines of any separate leasehold tract within the com-munized area. The rights herein provided are in addition to those conferred by paragraph nine hereof. * * *”
In September, 1949, the defendants executed a pooling declaration unitizing or communizing the entire quarter section. No well was drilled or commenced on the south half thereof, but, on November 8, 1949, about one week before the expiration of the primary term of the lease above described, defendants commenced operations for the drilling of a well on the north half of the unitized 160 acres and diligently prosecuted such drilling operations until said well reached the known producing horizon within the area and, after setting pipe therein, performed various operations to make such well productive of oil and gas in paying quantities. Although such production had not been obtained, said operations were still in progress at the time the petition herein was filed.
The trial court rendered judgment for defendants and plaintiffs have perfected this appeal therefrom. Although subdivided and argued under several *439 propositions, the sole question for determination by this court is: Where the lessees of two separate tracts of land under separate oil and gas leases have, by agreement with the lessors, pooled or unitized the entire property for the distribution of royalty from any well thereon, does the commencement of a well on one tract operate to extend the primary term of the lease on the other? Our conclusion is that it does.
No case is cited by the parties, nor do we, upon independent investigation, find where the same question has been before the courts heretofore. It is definitely settled in this jurisdiction that the grant to lessee “of the right to commence a well at any time within the term fixed by the lease contract, by necessary legal implication, carried with it the right to complete the well after the period fixed for commencement had expired, subject, however, to abandonment of that right by failure to proceed in good faith and with diligence.” Simons v. McDaniel,
Thus, there are two situations which prevent the expiration of the lease contract at the end of the primary term. These are: (1) The diligent development of the property by drilling operations in progress at the end of the primary term, as discussed in the foregoing paragraph; (2) Actual production from the leased premises. This latter situation was the gist of the case of Roach v. Junction Oil & Gas Co.,
The judgment is affirmed.
