Rule 37 case. The appeal is by the Commission and the permittees from a judgment cancelling permits to drill two wells on a strip of land 36.3 feet wide and 600' feet long in the western portion of the East Texas Oil Field in order to prevent confiscation and waste; and awarding in-junctive relief. It was conceded that the permits could not be upheld on the confiscation theory; and that subject will not be further noted.
Upon the issue of waste the case is clearly ruled by the Trem Carr case (Railroad Com. v. Shell Oil Co., Tex.Sup.,
Appellants also sought to defeat the suit upon a plea of laches; the pertinent facts regarding which plea were: The well No. 1 permit was granted December 22, 1939, and a motion for new trial, seasonably filed, was overruled February 24, 1940. Meantime the well was drilled and brought in as a producer January 9, 1940. The well No. 2 permit was granted February 24, 1940, and motion for new trial overruled March 4, 1940. The well was brought in as a producer March 14, 1940. Shell filed a statutory appeal challenging both permits in the Federal Court March 8, 1940. June 3, 1940, the United States Supreme Court decided the Rowan & Nichols case, and on October 21, 1940, it altered its opinion and denied a rehearing. Railroad Comm. v. Rowan & N. O. Co.,
While we think the Shell was justified in .its assumption that the Federal Court had jurisdiction of the appeal up to the time of the final order in the Rowan & Nichols case, and that laches would not be imputed to it for failure to file the instant suit, we deem it unnecessary to consider that question. The record negatives any prejudice to appellants by reason of the delay thus caused in that it affirmatively appears that well No. 1 was brought in as a producer even before the new trial motion was overruled, and well No. 2 was so brought in only ten days after the new trial motion was overruled. The effect of the holding in Gulf Land Co. v. Atlantic Refining Co.,
The trial court’s judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.
