Continental Oil Company v. Doornbos

386 S.W.2d 610, 22 Oil & Gas Rep. 394, 1964 Tex. App. LEXIS 2867
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 5, 1964
Docket6659
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 386 S.W.2d 610 (Continental Oil Company v. Doornbos) 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
Continental Oil Company v. Doornbos, 386 S.W.2d 610, 22 Oil & Gas Rep. 394, 1964 Tex. App. LEXIS 2867 (Tex. Ct. App. 1964).

Opinion

STEPHENSON, Justice.

This action was brought in trespass to try title and for reformation of a deed because of mutual mistake. Trial was by jury and judgment was rendered for plaintiffs based upon the findings of the jury.

April 23, 1945, Continental Oil Company, hereinafter called defendant, conveyed' by deed to C. Doornbos approximately 1800 acres located in Jefferson County, Texas. Such deed reserved and excepted four royalty interests as follows:

1. A reservation of %2nd of production by San Antonio Loan & Trust Company in its deed to Continental dated January 25, 1942.
2. A royalty of 542nd of production conveyed by Continental to Butcher-Arthur Company by deed dated January 26, 1943.
3. A royalty of 54snd of production reserved in favor of Continental in its deed to C. Doornbos dated April 23, 1945.
4. “14th of all the royalty” conveyed by Continental to A. R. McElreath and F. W. Suggett on January 26, 1943.

No mention is made in such deed as to the amount of royalty being conveyed to C. Doornbos.

Plaintiffs are the successors in title of C. Doornbos, their father. The successors to McElreath and Suggett were made parties defendants, and at the conclusion of plaintiffs’ evidence, an instructed verdict was rendered for these defendants and no appeal has been taken from the judgment in their favor. This judgment decreed that such successors to McElreath and Suggett recover a full 14th of all royalty whether the royalty was 54 th or in excess of 54th.

Plaintiffs alleged that it was agreed and intended by both the defendant and C„ Doornbos that C. Doornbos would receive all royalty in excess of 54th of production and that by mutual mistake this provision had not been included in the deed. It was prayed that such deed be reformed to include this provision. There was no pleading nor proof that fraud was involved in any way in this transaction.

The jury found: that defendant agreed to sell and convey and intended to sell and convey to C. Doornbos all royalty over 14th; that C. Doornbos agreed to purchase and acquire, and intended to purchase and acquire from defendant, all royalty over 54th; that defendant believed its deed effectively conveyed all royalty over 54th to C. Doornbos; that C. Doornbos believed such deed effectively conveyed to him all royalty over 54th; and, that omission of such language from the deed to convey such royalty interest was the result of a mutual mistake of the defendant and C. Doornbos. Judgment was rendered reforming such deed so that C. Doornbos received all royalties in excess of 54th and further decreed that to the extent the language of the royalty reservation in the deed from Continental Oil Company to Doornbos “is or may be in conflict with and repugnant to the grant to C. Doornbos of all royalty over and above and in excess of one-eighth (54th) royalty in accordance with said deed as same is reformed and amended by this decree, said reservation in *612 sofar as it does or may conflict with the grant of all royalty over one-eighth (¡/¿th) royalty to C. Doornbos is wholly void and of no effect to the extent of such conflict.”

Defendant contends that there is no evidence to support these findings of the jury hereinbefore set forth and that the trial court erred in decreeing reformation of the deed. These are questions of law to he determined by this court by considering only the evidence favorable to such findings and disregarding all other.

The evidence in this case shows clearly that both C. Doornbos and defendant were of the opinion that the deed by defendant to McElreath and Suggett describing the interest as Y^th of the royalty, conveyed a %2nd royalty. All of their negotiations were based upon the premise that there would be outstanding at the time of the conveyance to C. Doornbos, a Yth royalty interest, including the %2nd reserved by defendant. The evidence shows that Mr. B. F. Mayer told C. Doornbos and William Doornbos, during the course of negotiations to sell the land, that the purchase of the land would include all royalty in excess of one-eighth. A letter from Mr. Mayer dated February 7, 1945, was accepted in evidence and read as follows:

“Houston 2, Texas
February 7, 1945
Mr. C. Doornbos
Nederland, Texas
Dear Mr. Doornbos:
Before I submit your offer of $40,000 for the property near Port Arthur, with our company to reserve a %2nd royalty, there is one thing that I wish to be sure you understand. There had been sold J^ths of l/fjth royalty. If we reserved a %2nd, which is Yfo1 of Véth, there would then be no royalty conveyed with the property if we sold it. You would, however, own all the minerals which would give you the leasing rights. If you executed a mineral lease you would have to provide for more than a J4th royalty so that any royalty over and above the Ys th would be yours. This has been done in numerous instances by landowners.
With the above in mind, if you are willing to pay $40,000,1 will submit it at once, and I feel reasonably sure the management will be inclined to accept your offer.
Yours very truly,
B. F. Mayer
General Land and Title Man Land Department Southern Region”

Also admitted in evidence was another letter from Mr. Mayer to C. Doornbos dated February 15, 1945, a portion of which read as follows:

“With reference to my letter of February 7th and our recent conversation here in the Houston office, the matter of selling the property near Port Arthur to you has been taken up with our officials and they are willing to accept your offer of $35,000 for the land, with our retaining a of Ys th, or a %2nd royalty interest, which would make at the time the sale is consummated Ys th royalty outstanding against the property.”

The date of the deed from defendant to C. Doornbos was April 23, 1945. The evidence further shows that both C. Doornbos, until the date of his death July 12, 1954, and the defendant, until 1959, treated this deed as a conveyance of all royalty in excess of Ys th. Even though there is no direct evidence that either the defendant or C. Doornbos intended to incorporate a provision in the deed that C. Doornbos should receive all royalty in excess of J4th, it is apparent that both parties not only intended that C. Doornbos receive such interest, but also thought this was the legal effect of such1 conveyance. Under these circumstances, that is, a mutual mistake as to the legal effect of words used *613 in a conveyance, the remedy of reformation is available in order to carry out the intention of the parties. Miles v. Martin, 159 Tex. 336, 347, 321 S.W.2d 62.

Once we arrive at the true intentions of the parties, we find a conflict in the conveyance.

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Related

Continental Oil Company v. Doornbos
402 S.W.2d 879 (Texas Supreme Court, 1966)

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Bluebook (online)
386 S.W.2d 610, 22 Oil & Gas Rep. 394, 1964 Tex. App. LEXIS 2867, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/continental-oil-company-v-doornbos-texapp-1964.