Courseview, Inc. v. Phillips Petroleum Co.

258 S.W.2d 391, 2 Oil & Gas Rep. 1178, 1953 Tex. App. LEXIS 1790
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 23, 1953
Docket12487
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 258 S.W.2d 391 (Courseview, Inc. v. Phillips Petroleum 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
Courseview, Inc. v. Phillips Petroleum Co., 258 S.W.2d 391, 2 Oil & Gas Rep. 1178, 1953 Tex. App. LEXIS 1790 (Tex. Ct. App. 1953).

Opinion

GRAVES, Justice.

This appeal is from a judgment of the 130th District Court of Brazoria County, Honorable G. P. Hardy, Jr., judge presiding, with a jury, decreeing that the'appellant herein, Courseview, Incorporated, take nothing against either' appellee herein— that is, Phillips Petroleum Company and Mid Coast Oil Company — pursuant to an instructed verdict to that effect the attending jury had returned.

*392 In this Court the appellant challenges that action, through some 18 points of error, under the over-all claim that it had at least raised material issues of fact in support of its declared upon cause of action; whereas, each of the corporate ap-pellees asserts the correctness of the Court’s judgment, the Phillips Petroleum Company presenting 9 counter-points, while the Mid Coast Oil Company replies in its own behalf to appellant’s points, affecting it only, in its points Nos. XIV to XVIII, inclusive.

As indicated, appellant was the plaintiff below; at the expense of some prolixity, this statement of the sources of its cause of action is taken from its brief:

“On February 16, 1939, Plaintiff’s predecessors-in-title, Amos L. Beaty & Company, Inc., and Victor H. Borsodi, entered into an agreement with defendant, Phillips Petroleum Company, under which Amos L. Beaty & Company and Borsodi conveyed to Phillips Petroleum Company certain oil, gas, and mineral leases, in the Chocolate Bayou Area in Brazoria County, Texas, reserving ‘⅛ of the net profits that shall be derived by Second Party (Phillips) from the development and operation of the lands covered by said oil and gas leases for the purposes stated in said leases.’ The agreement, herein referred to as the 1939 contract, also provided that if either party should purchase any ‘royalty or mineral interest, or fee title’, within an area specified in the contract, the other party would be notified thereof, and given an opportunity to purchase from the acquiring party a specified fractional interest therein.

“Plaintiff, Courseview, Inc., has succeeded to the purchase rights of Amos L. Beaty & Company, under the February 16, 1939 agreement.

“This is a suit primarily for specific performance of Plaintiff’s purchase rights under the 1939 contract,. and to obtain an accounting by reason of Defendant Phillips Petroleum Company’s ■' having purchased various mineral, royalty, and fee titles within the restricted area, without disclosing’ same to Plaintiff, or .its predecessors-in-title, as required by the contract, but, on the contrary, fraudulently concealing such purchases and fraudulently inducing Plaintiff’s predecessor-in-title, Amos L. Beaty & Company, to execute certain instruments relied upon by Phillips to cut off Plaintiff’s purchase rights under the 1939 contract.”

The heart of such contract, as it affected this controversy, was its paragraph 7, in exact language this:

“ ‘Either party hereto shall have the right to purchase any royalty or mineral interest or fee title within the Chocolate Bayou Prospect area, which shall be deemed to include all lands within a radius of two and one-half (2i/2) miles of the center of Section Five (5), H. T. & B. Survey, Abstract 221; but it is agreed that, in the event First Parties shall purchase any such royalty, or mineral interest, or fee title, Second Party shall have the right to purchase- from First Parties an undivided three-fourths (¾) interest therein, upon paying First Parties three-fourths (¾) of the total cost of acquiring such interest; and, likewise, in the event Second Party shall purchase any such royalty, or mineral interest, or fee title, First Parties shall have the right to purchase from Second Party an undivided one-fourth (¼) interest therein, upon paying to Second Party one-fourth (¼)’ of the total cost of acquiring such interest. Either party, upon purchasing any such royalty or mineral interest or fee title, shall notify the other party thereof in writing and the other party shall have twenty (20) days thereafter within which to elect in writing whether or not to purchase cm undivided interest therein as above provided. The total cost of acquiring any royalty or mineral interest or fee title shall be deemed to include all commissions paid on such purchases and the cost of abstracts and. title examinations. * ” (Emphasis ours.)

Appellant, as indicated, in its trial petition, declared specifically upon all the recited violations of its claimed rights as such .successor in interest of Beaty and Borsodi, under such quoted contract, alternatively seeking $250,000 in monetary damages.

*393 In turn, both the corporate appellees chai-lenged the acquirement of any of appellant’s claimed rightsBy it, whether claimed as resulting from "the quoted contract, or otherwise; further denying that they had ever practiced any fraud upon the appellant, or its predecessors in interest, or that they had ever become liable to it in any way.

Because of the inordinate length of the record, the briefs, and arguments of all three parties, it would be impossible to detail full reviews thereof here; but, appellant, suffice it to repeat, grounded its claims upon the quoted contract, contending that there inured to it down under Beaty and Borsodi, extended oil, gas, and mineral interests in the described Chocolate Bayou area in Brazoria County, which the ap-pellees,, acting severally, had received and appropriated to their own interests, in violation and in fraud of the rights of the appellant therein, down under its succession to the rights of Beaty and Borsodi under the contract.

As recited, the trial court dismissed the jury, under its recited instruction to find in favor of both appellees in toto; the court’s instruction was absolute, no particular ground, or consideration therefor, being recited.

This Court concludes that the peremptory instruction was in error, and that there were material issues of fact raised by the pleadings and the evidence, as in support of the appellant’s declared upon causes of .action, which should have been submitted to the jury.

The appellee Phillips, in support of its answer to appellant’s arguments, has aided this Court by filing here this succinct written argument in support of its position, a copy of which is marked Exhibit “A”, and made a part hereof.

None of the six points so presented in such argument, it is determined, should be sustained. The first of them, contending that quoted paragraph 7 of the contract involved, violates the rule against per-petuities, forbidden by Article 1, § 26, of the Vernon’s Ann.St. Constitution of Texas, if entitled to consideration at all upon this appeal, is thought to be unsound. To say the least of it, this was an answering pleading to that of appellant, and it nowhere affirmatively set forth any such claimed “illegality” of appellant’s plea. It would therefore seem to have been waived, under Rule 94, T.R.C.P. But, if it should' be considered, its unsoundness still appears, under these authorities: Clarke v. Clarke, 121 Tex. 165, 46 S.W.2d 658; 41 Am.Jur. 78; Gray, The Rule Against Perpetuities, Section 329; National Oil & Pipe Line Co. v. Teel, 95 Tex. 586, 68 S.W. 979; Knox v. Brown, Tex.Com.App., 277 S.W. 91, 94.

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Bluebook (online)
258 S.W.2d 391, 2 Oil & Gas Rep. 1178, 1953 Tex. App. LEXIS 1790, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/courseview-inc-v-phillips-petroleum-co-texapp-1953.