137 S.W.2d 797 | Tex. App. | 1940
This is a rule 37 case. The appeal is from a final judgment refusing to set aside permits to drill two additional wells (Nos. 6 and 7 — there were already 5 producing wells) upon a tract of 9.305 acres known as the Marine lease in the East Texas oil field, granted to appellee, Marine Production Company, as exceptions to rule 37 in order "to prevent confiscation of property."
The Marine tract (except that its west line followed the meanders of a creek) was in form a trapezoid; its three straight line lengths being; North, 1,210 ft., east, 345 ft., and south, 1,105 ft. Immediately to the south was the Iron Rock lease, triangular in form (about 1,100 ft. long, about 125 ft. wide at its west end, and terminating in a point at the Marine southeast corner) containing 2.014 acres, and having two producing wells. The position of the Marine and Iron Rock leases with relation to surrounding leases is shown on map accompanying Richey v. Shell Petroleum Corp., Tex. Civ. App.
There was a great deal of testimony upon the subject of waste, consideration of which we pretermit under the holding in the Atlantic case. Gulf Oil Co. v. Atlantic Refining Co., Tex.Sup.,
Appellee, Marine, cross-assigns error upon the overruling of its plea in abatement, predicated upon the failure to make the royalty owners parties defendant to the appeal from the Commission orders. Our examination of the many rule 37 opinions delivered by this and other courts fails to disclose that it has ever been suggested that royalty owners are necessary or even proper parties to an appeal from a Commission order granting or refusing a drilling permit. The only interest of the royalty owners is to receive when produced their share of the oil or its proceeds. The lessee is invested with the exclusive right of possession and development. In the drilling and spacing of wells the lessee represents the royalty owners in so far as they may have any interest therein. They were so represented in the making of the applications for the permits and in all proceedings thereunder before the Commission; to which proceedings they were not made parties and in which they did not participate other than by such representation. We hold that the trial court properly overruled the plea in abatement. A closely analogous situation was presented in Railroad Comm. v. Humble, Tex. Civ. App.
Appellee, Marine, presents a number of other points which have been frequently decided adversely to its contentions. All these have been given our careful consideration; but in view of their obvious want of merit in the light of adjudicated cases, we do not deem it necessary to discuss them. To do so would be but to reiterate previous holdings, thereby adding to the volume of reported cases to no useful purpose.
The trial court's judgment is reversed, the orders granting the permits in issue are set aside, and production under such permits is perpetually enjoined.
Reversed and rendered.