Compton v. Trico Oil Co.

120 S.W.2d 534, 1938 Tex. App. LEXIS 260
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 16, 1938
DocketNo. 12437.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 120 S.W.2d 534 (Compton v. Trico Oil 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
Compton v. Trico Oil Co., 120 S.W.2d 534, 1938 Tex. App. LEXIS 260 (Tex. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinions

Appellant, as plaintiff below, brought suit against appellee, Trico Oil Company, for breach of title warranty following an assignment of an oil and gas lease situated in Rusk County, Texas. The issues between the parties were strenuously litigated in the lower court, there having been two trials; the first resulting in judgment for plaintiff Compton on June 18, 1935, in the full amount received by defendant for the lease in question, with interest, as to which a new trial was granted. Upon second trial, judgment was rendered on October 5, 1936, that plaintiff take nothing by reason of his suit, from which this appeal was taken. Both trials were to the court.

On April 4, 1928, Adella Lolley et al., executed an oil and gas lease in usual Texas form, conveying to C. M. Joiner the full rights to enter upon, drill for, develop and retain all oil produced from a much larger acreage, of which the 2-acre lease in suit is a part, subject only to a 1/8 royalty retained by said fee owners; Joiner later conveying the full rights in and to the entire acreage to R. E. Blankenship. On September 27, 1930, Blankenship executed an assignment of the Joiner leasehold, insofar as it covered a 14-acre tract, to W. V. Lester (general manager of appellee) for a recited consideration of $10,500 cash and $7,000 to be paid out of 1/2 of the first oil and/or gas produced from said lease; said Lester conveying on the same date (both instruments being filed at the same time) the 14-acre leasehold to appellee, Trico Oil Company, which company assumed as part of the consideration the $7,000 payment out of 1/2 of the first oil produced under the terms of the prior lease to R. E. Blankenship. On October 3, 1930, appellee executed to appellant's immediate warrantor, H. E. Pelton, a conveyance of the leasehold estate, in and to the 2-acre tract in suit out of the 14-acre Blankenship lease. This instrument, after reciting the execution of the original leases by Adella Lolley et all to C. M. Joiner, contained the following provisions: "For the consideration hereinafter stated Trico Oil Company, a Texas corporation, the present owner of said three leases and all rights thereunder or incident thereto, does hereby sell, transfer and assign all of the right, title and interest of the original lessee and present owner in and to said leases and the rights thereunder insofar as they cover the south two (2) acres of the West fourteen (14) acres of Tract Nine (9) according to the plat of the W. H. Frederick Estate land in the Juan Zimines League Survey, Rusk County, Texas, which is recorded in Book 141, at page 330, Deed Records, Rusk County, Texas, together with all persona property used or obtained in connection therewith, to H. E. Pelton, his heirs and assigns, to have and to hold unto the said H. E. Pelton, his heirs and assigns forever, and Trico Oil Company for itself, its successors and representatives, covenants and agrees with H. E. Pelton, his heirs and assigns forever to warrant and defend the title thereto against the lawful claims and demands of all persons whomsoever".

The consideration paid by H. E. Pelton for the above lease was $2,500 in cash and $2,500 to be paid out of 1/2 of 7/8 of the first oil and/or gas produced therefrom. At the time of the assignment of this 2-acre tract to Pelton, appellee Oil Company was not the owner of said lease and all rights thereunder, by virtue of its agreement to deliver 1/2 of 7/8 of the first oil produced therefrom to the extent of the $7,000 oil payment. This defect in title was not disclosed to assignee Pelton at the time of his assignment and payment of the cash consideration, and no abstract of title was furnished. Sometime later, the abstract to the two acres was made but the retention of the Blankenship oil royalty was not shown. Some months later, Pelton, in attempting to get the 2-acre lease drilled, discovered the existence of the $7,000 oil payment, and failing to get it released, conveyed the tract by general warranty to his brother-in-law (appellant here) on June 1, 1933, and this suit was filed in August of the same year, the lease being tendered back to defendant company and a return of the purchase money demanded, with legal interest.

Before the above mentioned assignment of this lease to appellant by Pelton, and on October 4, 1930, the latter had transferred a 1/4 undivided interest therein to Bud Harrell, who, in turn had assigned fractional interests to some 20 other individuals, assignor Harrell, however, retaining a power of attorney for a period of five years to reconvey these fractional interests, if same should be deemed for the best interest of the parties to the Harrell assignments. Many of the assignees under the Harrell instruments reconveyed their infinitesimal interests back to Bud Harrell, the remaining parties being made defendants to this *Page 536 suit on the last trial of the case below, for the purpose of clearing the title to the 2-acre lease of the Harrell transactions; the original 1/4 Harrell interest being conveyed back to H. E. Pelton by said Harrell on January 27, 1931.

The remaining part of the 14-acre tract, subject to the $7,000 Blankenship oil payment, was never drilled until after filing of the instant suit, and about December 1934 or January 1935, and not until appellee had secured a written agreement from Blankenship, reducing the amount of oil to be received by him under such oil payment to 1/16 of 7/8, instead of 1/2 of 7/8. In March 1936, Adella Lolley et al., original owners and lessors, filed suit to cancel the lease on this particular tract, for failure to perform certain development requirements. On the last trial of this case, appellee introduced in evidence, over plaintiff's objection, an instrument dated August 19, 1935, executed by R. E. Blankenship, releasing the lien of the $7,000 oil payment, insofar as the same covered the south two acres in question of the 14-acre tract.

Appellant's main assignments of error on this appeal (two in number), submitted together, are:

"(1) The Court erred in rendering judgment for the defendant against the plaintiff, because the undisputed evidence and admissions of the defendant and plaintiff shows that the said plaintiff sold the seven-eighths oil and gas lease on the land in controversy to plaintiff's grantor, for the sum of $2500.00 with general warranty of title; that the said title thereto had failed, and plaintiff was entitled to recover the said $2500.00 with interest from the date paid.

"(2) The Court erred in refusing to render judgment for plaintiff for the amount paid for said lease to the defendant, with 6% interest thereon from date paid, because the undisputed evidence shows breach of warranty of title to the property conveyed by general warranty to plaintiff by defendant".

Appellee's first five counter-propositions to the propositions of appellant under the above assignments of error are: (1) the $7,000 oil-payment instrument in favor of R. E.

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Bluebook (online)
120 S.W.2d 534, 1938 Tex. App. LEXIS 260, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/compton-v-trico-oil-co-texapp-1938.