Burger v. Western Sand & Gravel Co.

237 S.W.2d 725, 1950 Tex. App. LEXIS 1828
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 16, 1950
Docket6106
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 237 S.W.2d 725 (Burger v. Western Sand & Gravel Co.) 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
Burger v. Western Sand & Gravel Co., 237 S.W.2d 725, 1950 Tex. App. LEXIS 1828 (Tex. Ct. App. 1950).

Opinion

STOKES, Justice.

On September 12, 1939, J. L. Bivins executed a lease to S. F. Sullenberger in which 3556 acres of land located in Oldham County, were leased for the purpose of producing and removing rock, sand and gravel: The lease provided for a royalty to be paid to the lessor of 10‡ per cubic yard for commercial materials removed and 5(⅞ per. cubic yard for railroad ballast - removed from the land. Appellee, Western Sand and Gravel Company, is a domestic corporation, organized by S. F. Sullenberger a few years prior to the date of the lease, with a capital stock of 40,000 shares of the par value of $1 each. On September 14, 1939, S. F. Sullenberger subleased or assigned the Bivins lease to- the appellee, Western Sand and Gravel Company, and, in addition to the royalty provided in the lease to be paid to the lessor, he retained an over-riding royalty of 5‡ per ton on all of the rock, sand and gravel removed from the leased premises and sold for 50‡ or more per ton, and 2‡ per ton for all of such material removed and sold for 40‡ to 49‡ per ton. The lease was for a term of four years from January 1, 1940, and it provided that the lessee should have the privilege of renewing it for another term of four years upon the same terms and conditions as contained in the original lease. The assignment provided that “ * * * the over-riding royalty is to also apply to, and be paid by said Western Sand and Gravel Company to said S. F. Sullenberger on any and all renewals of the above mentioned lease.”

On October ll, 1939, S. F. Sullenberger executed his last will and testament in which he bequeathed to his son, S. M. Sullenberger, all certificates of capital stock owned by him in the Western Sand and Gravel Company, and to his daughter, the appellant Mrs. W. D. Burger, the over-riding royalty' that had been retained by him in his assignment of the original lease to Western Sand and Gravel Company together with his home in Amarillo and his life insurance. Mrs. Burger and S. M. Sullen-bergbr were the only children of S. F. Sullenberger and he appointed them as joint independent executrix and executor of his will.

On the same day, October 11, 1939, S. F. Sullenberger, his son, the appellee .S. M. Sullenberger, and his daughter, the appellant Mrs. W. D. Burger, the latter two joined by their respective spouses, entered into a written contract or agreement in which they undertook to specify in a clearer and more practical manner the division that was intended to be madfe of the prop *727 ■erty of S. F. Sullenberger and expressing more clearly the intentions of the testator and their understanding of the provisions ■of his will, which he had just executed and which was before them at the time. The ■contract specified that a copy of the will together with a copy of the assignment of the lease to Western Sand and Gravel ■Company were attached to it and the contract contains the following provision:

“In the will of said S. F. Sullenberger he gives and bequeaths to his son Samuel M. Sullenberger, any and all stock or interest owned by him in the Western Sand and 'Gravel Co. a corporation, however it is expressly agreed and understood by all parties hereto, that the said Samuel M. Sullenberger shall have the right and privilege of selling his interest in the Western Sand and Gravel Co. at any time he may desire to do so and the over-riding royalty heretofore provided for to be paid the said' S. F. Sullenberger, shall cease and terminate upon the date of such sale, and in liéu of the over-riding royalty bequeathed to Mrs. W. D. Burger in the will of S. F. Sullenberger, the said Mrs. W. D. Burger is to receive one-half of the sale price if valued at Forty Thousand Dollars or less, but if the sale price is more than Forty Thousand Dollars, then and in .that event á total1 payment to Mrs. W. D. Burger, of Twenty Thousand Dollars will be considered a full payment and liquidation of the over-riding royalty mentioned and bequeathed in said will of S. F. Sullenberger, and the said Mrs. W. D. Burger agrees to execute a release to the royalty mentioned as an over-riding royalty to be paid to S. F. Sullenberger in .the,lease from him •to the Western Sand and Gravel Co., as well as any other leases which might provide for an over-riding royalty to be paid to him.
“In the said will of S. F. Sullenberger he ■gives and bequeaths to his daughter Mrs. W. D. Burger his homestead located on lots or part of Lots 1, 2, 7, and 8, Block 120, Oliver Eakle Addition to the City of Amarillo, Texas, and the over-riding royalty retained by him in the above mentioned lease to the Western Sand and Gravel Co. and renewals thereof, and any and all life insurance carried by him.”

S. F. Sullenberger died on July 6, 1942, and his last will and testament was duly-probated upon the application of Mrs. Burger, appellee S. M. Sullenberger not joining therein on account of illness. The option to extend the lease for ■ a second term of four years was exercised and, the original lessor, J. L. Bivins, having died, the Western Sand and Gravel Company on May IS, 1947, before the second term expired, solicited of the representatives of his estate another renewal or extension under the same terms as provided in the original lease. )In reply to its letter of solicitation, the representatives of the Biv-ins estate expressed themselves as not feeling justified in renewing or extending the lease but expressed their willingness to receive a proposal for a new lease which would provide for substantially greater royalties than those provided by the original lease. Negotiations proceeded until January 1, 1948, when the representatives of the Bivins estate executed to Western Sand and Gravel Company a new lease covering the same land as that included in the original lease and 1280 acres additional, aggregating 48'36 acres,- and providing for royalties of 12½⅝ per cubic yard for sand, gravel and crushed rock and 6‡ per cubic yard for all railroad ballast taken from the land included in the new lease.' On January 10, 1948, Western Sand and Gravel Company remitted to appellant, Mrs. Burger, $1207.'S3, being the amount due her as over-riding royalty for the month of December 1947. In its letter of remittance, it informed Mrs: Burger that it had been unable to procure an extension or renewal of the original lease and that' the -enclosed cheque would be the last remittance to her of the over-riding royalty payments.

Mrs. Burger, joined by her husband, filed this> suit against the appellees, Western Sand and Gravel Company and S. M. Sullenberger, on December 30, 1948. She set up the essential facts above detailed and alleged that, at the time the contract of October 11, 1939 was executed, it was agreed between her, her father S. F. Sul- *728 lenberger- and .her brother,- -the - appellee S. M. Sullenberger, that the over-riding royalty was to be paid to her by the Western Sand and Gravel' Company as long as sand and gravel were taken by it from the Bivins Ranch in Potter and Oldham Counties, and that such royalty was to be paid by the sand and gravel company under the lease which then existed or any renewals thereof.

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Bluebook (online)
237 S.W.2d 725, 1950 Tex. App. LEXIS 1828, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burger-v-western-sand-gravel-co-texapp-1950.