Belgam Oil Co. v. Wirt Franklin Petroleum Corp.

209 S.W.2d 376, 1948 Tex. App. LEXIS 1015
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 18, 1948
DocketNo. 11959.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 209 S.W.2d 376 (Belgam Oil Co. v. Wirt Franklin Petroleum Corp.) 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
Belgam Oil Co. v. Wirt Franklin Petroleum Corp., 209 S.W.2d 376, 1948 Tex. App. LEXIS 1015 (Tex. Ct. App. 1948).

Opinion

MONTEITH, Chief Justice.

This action was brought by appellee Wirt Franklin Petroleum Corporation, against Belgam Oil Company, Inc., and numerous other defendants, for the partition of an oil, gas and mineral lease covering 58'½ acres of land, more or less, in Jackson County, Texas, and for a partition of the leasehold equipment used in connection with the lease.

The trial court found in the judgment rendered that appellee Wirt Franklin Petroleum Corporation was entitled to partition of the leasehold estate in kind, but that the property was incapable' of partition in kind, and that said leasehold estate and the equipment thereon should be sold, subject to the outstanding overriding royalties, through W. H. Hamblen, who was appointed receiver, and that the proceeds of the sale be returned into court, and that, upon confirmation of the sale, the proceeds thereof should be partitioned between appellee Wirt Franklin Petroleum Corporation, and appellant, Belgam Oil Company, Inc., according to their respective interests!

By instrument dated October 13, 1932, J. B. Strouhal executed an oil, gas, and mineral lease covering said 58½ acres of land to Shell Petroleum Corporation. The Shell Corporation assigned the lease to W. Stewart Boyle and John G. Mayo. John G. Mayo assigned his interest in said lease to W. Stewart Boyle, reserving to himself an overriding royalty of ½2 of the production. This overriding royalty is now owned by appellees Martha McDonald Wright, John G. and Katherine E. Mayo, The Second National Bank of Houston, as trustee, Donald Rein, and The Second National Bank of Houston. W. Stewart Boyle assigned an overriding royalty of Vie of ⅞ of the production from the east 40 acres of said 58½ acre tract to Houston Drilling Corporation. Appellee Second National Bank of Houston has a deed of trust lien on this override.

W. Stewart Boyle assigned to appellant, Belgam Oil Company, Inc., an undivided ⅛ interest in the lease on the said 58½ acres of land, subject to a ⅛ of the override of Houston Drilling Corporation, but not subject to the Mayo override.

By agreement between W. Stewart Boyle and appellant, Belgam Oil Company, Inc., Boyle was designated as the operator of the lease. He later assigned his % interest in the lease to Harry Pulaski and others, reserving to himself an overriding royalty of ½4 of ⅞ of the production, which override is subject to a deed of trust lien in favor of appellee Houston Oil Field Material Company, Inc. After the assignment to Pulaski and others, appellant, Belgam Oil Company, Inc., elected, pursuant to a right accruing to it under the Boyle-Bel-gam Operating Company, to become the operator of the lease.

Pulaski et al. later assigned its interest to' appellee Wirt Franklin Petroleum Corporation. This interest is subject to a deed of trust lien in favor of appellee Republic National Bank of Dallas.

*378 The lease from J. B. Strouhal granted to Shell Petroleum Corporation the exclusive right to explore, drill, produce and take oil, gas and other minerals from said 58½ acres of land for a primary term of ten years and as long thereafter as oil or other minerals were produced by lessee from the land or from drilling or mining operations -thereon. Lessee agreed to pay royalties to lessor, measured by the amount of production obtained, and was given the right at its option to surrender the lease as to any portion of the land covered thereby.

No findings of fact or conclusions of law were requested by the parties or filed by the trial court, but the court found in its judgment rendered that appellee Wirt Franklin Petroleum Corporation was the owner of an undivided ⅜ interest in the lease and equipment, and that Belgam Oil Company, Inc., was the owner of an undivided ½ interest in the lease and its equipment, and that they were the joint owners of the lease, the personal property and leaseholding equipment. The court found that the Wirt Franklin interest was subject to the Mayo and Boyle overrides, and to ⅜ of the burden of the Houston Drilling Corporation override, and that the interest of the Belgam Oil Company was subject to ⅛ of the burden of the Houston Drilling Corporation override.

The court found, after a full hearing, that the existence of the overriding royalties which were a burden on the interest of the plaintiff Wirt Franklin Petroleum Corporation, and which were not burdens on the interest of the appellant, Belgam Oil Company, Inc., would not prevent a fair and equitable partition of the property by sale and division of the proceeds, with due allowance in the division of the proceeds to the existence of the overriding royalties which burden the interest of the plaintiff Wirt Franklin Petroleum Corporation, but do not burden the interest of Belgam Oil Company, Inc., and that the proceeds of the sale could be fairly adjusted by the trial court in these proceedings.

Belgam Oil Company, Inc., duly excepted and gave notice of appeal from this judgment of the trial court. They predicate their appeal upon the alleged errors of the trial court in ordering partition of the entire 58½ acres “where the evidence showed and the court found that the interest of one of the joint claimants was an overriding royalty interest covering only the east 40 acres of said 58½ acres”, and in ordering the lease under consideration sold subject to the overriding royalty interests carved out of the leasehold estate “where the evidence showed and the court found that the major portion of said overriding royalty is a burden upon the interest of appellee, Wirt Franklin Petroleum Corporation, and that the interest of appellant, Belgam Oil Company, Incorporated, is not subject thereto.”

Article 6082, R.C.S., provides that “any joint owner or claimant of any real estate or of any interest therein or of any mineral, coal, petroleum, or gas lands, whether held in fee or by lease or otherwise, may compel a partition thereof between the other joint owners or claimants thereof in the manner provided in this chapter.”

Rule 770, Texas Rules of Civil Procedure, which has as its source Art. 6096, Vernon’s Ann. Texas Stat., which it repealed, provides that “Should the court be of the opinion that a fair and equitable division of the real estate, or any part thereof, can not be made, it shall order a sale of so much as is incapable of partition, which sale shall be for cash, or upon such other terms as the court may direct, and shall be made as under execution, or by private sale through a receiver, if the court so order, and the proceeds thereof shall be returned into court and be partitioned among the persons entitled thereto, according to their respective interests.”

It is undisputed in the record that the rights of Shell Oil Corporation, under the original lease, passed by mesne conveyances into appellee Wirt Franklin Petroleum Corporation and Belgam Oil Company, and that none of these rights are owned by the owners of the outstanding overriding loyalties, and for that reason the owners of these overriding royalties had and have no right to go on said 58½ acres of land for the purpose of exploring for or producing minerals, and that they have no right to keep the lease in effect by paying delay rentals, no obligation to pay the les *379 sor the royalty accruing under the lease, and that there is no obligation on them to drill offset wells. Their interests in said lease are similar to the interest of a royalty owner.

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Bluebook (online)
209 S.W.2d 376, 1948 Tex. App. LEXIS 1015, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/belgam-oil-co-v-wirt-franklin-petroleum-corp-texapp-1948.