78 F.2d 39 | 5th Cir. | 1935
James M. Roberts sued United Carbon Company for damages for alleged breaches of the latter’s obligations as assignee of an oil and gas lease on 60 acres of Louisiana land. His suit was held to be one at law, and was dismissed upon an exception of no cause of action. The exhibited lease is of an ordinary type, to last five years, or so long as oil or gas is produced. It is dated November 16, 1926, and provides for its termination at the end of a year unless a well is commenced by that time or $60 is paid as rental to defer drilling for another twelve months, and so for subsequent years. One-eighth of the oil produced and saved is to be delivered as royalty to the lessor,' and for gas utilized and sold “one-eighth of the value of such gas calculated at the rate of three cents per thousand cubic feet corrected to two pounds above atmospheric pressure.” The petition states that United Carbon Company acquired the lease February 16, 1929, and drilled one well which up to May 1, 1931, had produced 69,222,000 cubic feet of gas, for which $1,926.55 had been paid as royalty. It claims that $150.11 was retained wrongfully as a state severance tax, and that the price of the gas should have been calculated on a basis of 12 cents per thousand cubic feet, which was its true value; that gasolene vapor has accompanied the gas, producing gasolene worth $16 per million feet of gas, for
No cause of action for an amount within the court’s jurisdiction was sufficiently alleged. The Supreme Court of Louisiana has held that the lessor, even when his royalty is payable not in oil or gas, but in money, owes his part of the severance tax. Wright v. Imperial Oil & Gas Products Co., 177 La. 482, 148 So. 685. The status of the vaporized gasolene brought up with natural gas under a lease which makes no special provision for it was considered in Gilbreath v. States Oil Corporation (C. C. A.) 4 F.(2d) 232, and in Wemple v. Producers’ Oil Co., 145 La. 1031, 1047, 83 So. 232, 237, and the gasolene was held to be oil on which a royalty was due as such; but according to this petition only about $1,100 worth of such gasolene has been produced, and plaintiff’s share in that would not support federal jurisdiction. We pass to the larger items touching the additional amount and price of gas for which defendant as lessee is sought to be charged.
The provision of the lease as to price controls: Had it read “one-eighth of the value of such gas” it would have meant the value at the time and place of production. The contracting parties, foreseeing dispute as to that, made an additional agreement that the value should be “calculated at the rate of three cents per thousand cubic feet corrected to two pounds above atmospheric pressure.” We find neither contradiction nor ambiguity in these provisions. They mean that the lessor is to get as royalty not gas, but its value taken at 3 cents per thousand cubic feet with volume corrected to the agreed pressure. The agreement binds both parties for the life of the lease. The petition does not deny that it has been carried out as respects the gas actually produced. The main contention is that vastly more gas should have been produced and has been lost by drainage to other wells and especially to the Thomason Crater. It is not denied that in Louisiana where a lease on royalty is silent on the point there is an implied condition or covenant that when the existence of oil or gas in paying quantities is made apparent the lessee shall put down as many wells as may be reasonably necessary to secure the product for the common advantage of lessor and lessee. Caddo Oil & Mining Co. v. Producers’ Oil Co., 134 La. 701, 64 So. 684. Such is the general rule. Sauder, Adm’x v. Mid-Continent Corporation, 292 U. S. 272, 54 S. Ct. 671, 78 L. Ed. 1255, 93 A. L. R. 454. The contention is over the remedy available for a breach of the obligation. In the last-cited case, the duty of continued exploration after production from part of the leased land was enforced by a cancellation in equity after a time given to comply, on the ground that a remedy by damages was not adequate. Brewster v. Lanyon Zinc Co. (C. C. A.) 140 F. 801, was apnroved and followed. See, also, Cosden Oil Co. v. Scarborough (C. C. A.) 55 F.(2d) 634. In a case from Texas, Humphreys Oil Co. v. Tatum (C. C. A.) 26 F.(2d) 882, we upheld a verdict for damages where the lessee himself had drained the leased lands by other wells of his. The Supreme Court of Louisiana in recent cases has strongly maintained the impossibility of proving the damages done by drainage, insisting also on the local law that the oil and gas underground are not capable of ownership. In Louisiana Gas & Fuel Co. v. White Brothers, 157 La. 728, 103 So. 23, where a landowner sought damages against a neighbor who was wasting gas, an exception of no cause of action was sustained on those grounds, and an injunction against the waste was said to be the remedy. The case was followed, but not unanimously, in McCoy v. Arkansas Natural Gas Co., 175 La. 487, 143 So. 383, 85 A. L. R. 1147, where the landowners in a radius of a mile from the Thomason