Court Opinion

ID: 7825183
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-07 18:05:15.537717+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:30:50.433223
License: Public Domain

Robert R. Wright, Special Chief Justice, concurring. I concur in this decision with great reluctance. I concur only because Rule 9 of the Rules of the Supreme Court and Court of Appeals has been violated. It is my view that Rule 9 should be amended to provide that as soon as the problem has been discovered, the attorney involved be given thirty days in which to correct the problem by filling a new abstract or such missing documents as may present a problem. As it exists in its present •form, Rule 9 is extremely harsh to litigants and lawyers alike. It is procedural in nature, but its application is punitive. The Rule should be amended as stated to ameliorate its harshness and to prevent injustice to those litigants whom it affects. The situation in this case was such that the justices involved had to place great reliance upon the transcripts. There were five volumes, and I read most of them totally and some in part. I also examined the legal issues, involved in a number of cases, treatises, and law review articles. I felt qualified after that to render a judgment on the. merits. It is my opinion, in that regard, that the Chancellor would have been affirmed, at least in large measure, if the merits had been reached. Under those circumstances, the application of Rule 9 would seem to make little difference in the outcome. While there was conflicting testimony and evidence, this Court adheres to the proposition that the Chancellor will be affirmed unless his holding is clearly erroneous. If for no other reason, affirmance would probably have resulted even though I did not agree with him in some respects. One thing that I would have commented on if the case had been decided on the merits is a rule in Arkansas oil and gas law that seems not to be the better rule and, in fact, is contrary to that of some of our neighboring, oil-producing states. In Arkansas, a new lessee can obtain a second lease from the lessor and then notify the first lessee that his lease is not any good due to the failure to drill. Byrd v. Bradham, 280 Ark. 11, 655 S.W.2d 366 (1983); S. Wright, The Arkansas Law of Oil and Gas, 10 U. Ark. Little Rock L.J. 699, 705 (1988). The better rule is that there should be a burden on the lessor to notify the lessee that if a well is not drilled within a certain reasonable period of time, the lease will be cancelled and there will be a new lessee. E. Kuntz, J. Lowe, O. Anderson, & E. Smith, Oil and Gas Law 287 (1986). The effect of non-drilling would not necessarily cancel the lease, which would still be subject to the prudent operator standard and the implied covenant of reasonable development, but requiring notice might help to prevent litigation, which should be an object of the judicial system.