Allen v. Allen

751 S.W.2d 567, 1988 Tex. App. LEXIS 951, 1988 WL 43068
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 5, 1988
DocketC14-86-234-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 751 S.W.2d 567 (Allen v. Allen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allen v. Allen, 751 S.W.2d 567, 1988 Tex. App. LEXIS 951, 1988 WL 43068 (Tex. Ct. App. 1988).

Opinion

OPINION

JUNELL, Justice.

Elizabeth Lorraine Allen (Lorraine or ap-pellee) sued her former husband, Ronnie R. Allen (Ronnie or appellant) to establish her ownership in certain overriding royalty interests allegedly due her under a property settlement agreement incident to their divorce. Fraud and conspiracy counts were also joined against Ronnie, Allen Petroleum, Inc., and several Canadian corporations. The Canadian corporations were ultimately non-suited.

The case was tried to a jury which answered special issues favorably to Ronnie with respect to ownership of an overriding royalty interest under an oil and gas lease on properties in Freestone County and favorably to Lorraine with respect to ownership of an overriding royalty interest under oil and gas leases on properties in Leon County. The jury also made findings favorable to Lorraine on a fraud count. The trial court sustained Lorraine’s motion to disregard the issue answered favorably to Ronnie concerning the Freestone County royalty interest and rendered judgment declaring void Ronnie’s September 1, 1982 assignment/conveyance to Allen Petroleum, Inc., of the Leon County overriding royalty interest and making the following awards to Lorraine:

(1) Title to a 1.165% overriding royalty interest under oil and gas leases in *570 Freestone County, out of Ronnie’s 2% overriding royalty interest therein;
(2) Title to a 1.165% overriding royalty interest under oil and gas leases in Leon County, out of Ronnie’s 2% overriding royalty interest therein;
(3) Judgment against Ronnie for $325,-465.68, comprised of the following:
(a) $34,000 (being ½ of the overriding royalty payments received by Ronnie on the Freestone County interest prior to suit);
(b) $221,465.68 (being ⅛ of $442,931.35 deposited in the registry of the court, representing suspensed royalties due the 2% Freestone County royalty interest);
(c) $30,000 (being of the shut-in royalties received by Ronnie on the Leon County interest prior to suit);
(d) $40,000 in actual damages for the fraud found by the jury;
(4) Judgment against Ronnie for $100,-000 in punitive damages for fraud;
(5) Judgment against Ronnie for $53,-701.83 in attorneys fees (being 16V2% of the sum of $325,465.68 awarded to Lorraine as set forth under (3) above;
(6) Judgment against Ronnie for $5,731.30, for expenses and costs necessary to enforce the agreement incident to divorce;
(7) Judgment against Ronnie for $12,-976.64 in pre-judgment interest from October 19, 1982 to date of the judgment, January 17, 1986, at the rate of 10% per annum, compounded daily, on her $40,000 of actual damages for fraud;
(8) Judgment against Ronnie for $9,132.42 in pre-judgment interest from January 1, 1983 to date of the judgment at the rate of 10% per an-num, compounded daily, on the $30,000 awarded to Lorraine as set forth in (3)(c) above;
(9) Judgment against Ronnie for $2,367.28 in pre-judgment interest from May 6, 1985 to date of the judgment at 10% per annum, compounded daily, on the $34,000 awarded to Lorraine as set forth in (3)(a) above.

The trial court judgment also ordered that all damages awarded to Lorraine in the judgment together with interest thereon be paid by the district clerk of Fort Bend County to Lorraine and her attorneys out of the funds held in the registry of the court.

Additionally, the trial court judgment ordered Ronnie to execute and deliver to Lorraine and her attorneys general warranty assignments of both of the 1.165% overriding royalty interests awarded to Lorraine in the judgment.

Ronnie’s second wife, Rebecca R. Allen, and Allen Petroleum, Inc. were parties to the suit. The trial court’s judgment denied Lorraine any recovery against either of them and denied Rebecca any recovery against Lorraine. Although Allen Petroleum, Inc. is named as an appellant in the appellants’ brief and joined as a principal in the supersedeas bond, all of the points of error are Ronnie’s points of error and all of the relief requested on appeal is requested by Ronnie. Therefore, in this appeal we will treat Ronnie as the sole appellant and Lorraine as the sole appellee.

An overview of relevant facts is necessary to clarify the issues. Ronnie and Lorraine were married in 1967 in Louisiana where Ronnie worked in his family’s oil and gas business. The Allens sold their interest in the family business in 1974 and moved to Houston, where Ronnie continued in the oil and gas business. Ronnie acquired various leases in East Texas, which he began to develop with the financial backing of several Canadian corporations.

Allen Petroleum, Inc. (API), of which Ronnie was president and 25 percent shareholder, was formed with the Canadian corporations early in 1981 to acquire, explore, develop, and operate oil and gas leases. Numerous problems between Ronnie and the Canadian corporations arose early in the business relationship. An initial attempt to settle those problems resulted in the “Summary of Heads Agreement,” executed by Ronnie and representatives of the Canadian corporations on July 24, 1981. Among other things, that Agreement expressly acknowledged Ronnie’s right to a *571 2% overriding royalty interest in the Freestone County leases (the Freestone Interest) one of the two properties here at issue. That Agreement did not grant Ronnie any overriding royalty interest in the Leon County leases (the Leon Interest), the second disputed property.

Notwithstanding the July, 1981, Summary of Heads Agreement, the relationship between Ronnie and the Canadians continued to deteriorate throughout 1981 and into 1982. Another effort to resolve the business problems culminated in the execution by Ronnie and the Canadians of a comprehensive settlement agreement on May 12, 1982 (the May 12 Agreement). The May 12 Agreement superseded the Summary of Heads Agreement. Among the provisions of the May 12 Agreement was the acknowledgment of Ronnie’s ownership of a 2 percent overriding royalty interest in the Leon County property, as well as an agreement to convey to Ronnie by June 15, 1982, if not already conveyed, a 2 percent overriding royalty interest in the Freestone County property.

After the July 24, 1981, Summary of Heads Agreement and before the May 12, 1982, Settlement Agreement the Allens separated and Lorraine filed suit for divorce. Pursuant to a court order in the divorce suit, Ronnie filed a sworn Inventory and Appraisement on June 3, 1982. Although advised to do so by his attorney, Ronnie failed to list in the Inventory his overriding royalty interests in the Freestone or Leon properties. It is undisputed that Ronnie did not inform Lorraine of the existence of the May 12 Agreement. Ronnie had assigned the Leon Interest from API to himself in late 1981; and later, on September 1, 1982 assigned the same interest back to API.

The Allens were divorced on October 19, 1982. The divorce decree incorporated a property settlement agreement incident to divorce.

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Bluebook (online)
751 S.W.2d 567, 1988 Tex. App. LEXIS 951, 1988 WL 43068, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allen-v-allen-texapp-1988.