Stewart v. Amerada Hess Corp.
1979 OK 145, 65 Oil & Gas Rep. 530, 604 P.2d 854 (1979)
Sections
Case Podcast
Listen to an audio breakdown of Stewart v. Amerada Hess Corp..
Rule of Law:
The Legal Principle
This section distills the key legal rule established or applied by the court—the one-liner you'll want to remember for exams.
Facts:
- Amerada Hess Corporation (Amerada) held an oil and gas lease with a habendum clause extending its term so long as oil or gas was 'produced'.
- Amerada assigned a portion of this lease to Union Texas Petroleum (Union), which drilled a producing well known as Whitworth #1.
- Production from the Whitworth #1 well was sufficient to hold Amerada's entire lease, including the portion Amerada did not assign.
- The current owners of the land subsequently granted a new lease on the portion of land retained by Amerada to the Rodman Corporation (Rodman).
- Rodman also drilled a producing well, creating a dispute over which company held the valid lease.
- For the years 1972 and 1973, Union's well was profitable only if the depreciation of its lifting equipment was excluded from operating expenses.
Procedural Posture:
How It Got Here
Understand the case's journey through the courts—who sued whom, what happened at trial, and why it ended up on appeal.
Issue:
Legal Question at Stake
This section breaks down the central legal question the court had to answer, written in plain language so you can quickly grasp what's being decided.
Opinions:
Majority, Concurrences & Dissents
Read clear summaries of each judge's reasoning—the majority holding, any concurrences, and dissenting views—so you understand all perspectives.
Analysis:
Why This Case Matters
Get the bigger picture—how this case fits into the legal landscape, its lasting impact, and the key takeaways for your class discussion.
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