Courseview, Inc. v. Phillips Petroleum Co.

298 S.W.2d 890, 7 Oil & Gas Rep. 1068, 1957 Tex. App. LEXIS 2377
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 24, 1957
Docket12981
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 298 S.W.2d 890 (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., 298 S.W.2d 890, 7 Oil & Gas Rep. 1068, 1957 Tex. App. LEXIS 2377 (Tex. Ct. App. 1957).

Opinion

HAMBLEN, Chief Justice.

The general nature of this litigation is disclosed by the following statement of the nature and result of the case taken from the appellant’s brief:

“On February 16, 1939, Plaintiff’s predecessor 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 ‘⅞. 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 given written notice of such purchase and such party would have twenty days thereafter within which 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 suit was brought by Plaintiff to require Phillips Petroleum Company to disclose purchases which it has made within the restricted area specified in the 1939 contract so that Plaintiff might exercise its rights thereunder and to enforce Plaintiff’s right to buy its pro rata, share of’ various minerals, royalties and .fee titles heretofore purchased .by Phillips Petroleum *893 Company and with respect to which purchases no notice was ever given as required by the 1939 contract, and if necessary to the granting of such, relief for reformation of certain instruments on grounds of fraud and mistake. Plaintiff pleaded in the alternative for damages. Defendants pleaded limitations and that Plaintiff did not own the purchase option right under the 1939 contract which it sought to enforce.

“At the conclusion of the first trial, the Trial Court entered a mistrial and required Plaintiff to make Dr. E. W. K. An-drau (since deceased and his estate has been substituted and has filed a disclaimer in favor of Plaintiff) and Mid-Coast Oil Company additional parties on the ground that it was necessary to construe certain deeds from Plaintiff’s predecessor in title to these parties. The Court also ordered Phillips to disclose its purchases in the restricted area.

“On a second trial at the conclusion of all the evidence the Trial Court overruled motions for instructed verdicts of Plaintiff and Defendant, Phillips, granted the motion of Defendant, Mid-Coast Oil Company, and notwithstanding it had overruled Phillips’ motion for an instructed verdict, directed the jury to return a verdict that the Plaintiff take nothing. Upon appeal to this Honorable Court the judgment of the Trial Court was reversed and the case remanded for a new trial, Courseview, Inc., v. Phillips Petroleum Company, 258 S.W.2d 391, writ refused.

“Following the remand to the Trial Court the case was again tried and submitted to a jury and thereafter Defendants’ motions for judgment were granted and judgment entered that Plaintiff take nothing. Plaintiff’s motion for judgment * * *, Motion to correct the judgment * * *, and Amended Motion for new trial * * were denied.”

Appellees, Phillips Petroleum Company and Mid-Coast Oil Company, agree that the foregoing statement is factually correct except insofar as it asserts that the appellant “has succeeded to the purchase rights of Amos L. Beaty & Company under the February 16, 1939, agreement”, which assertion, they say, is incorrect. Appellees say that all of such rights under the jury findings were held by the trial court to have passed to and to be presently owned by Mid-Coast Oil Company; therefore, appellees further say appellant’s statement that the suit is for specific performance of its claimed option rights under the 1939 contract is correct as to appellee, Phillips Petroleum Company, but as between appellant and appellee Mid-Coast Oil Company the suit is one to determine which owned the option rights under the 1939 contract.

The judgment from which this appeal was taken was rendered after an extended trial, which has produced a record consisting of a 465 page transcript and a statement of facts of over 800 pages, including 80 original exhibits. The factual issues raised by the evidence were submitted to the jury in 93 special issues. Appellant’s points of error, when condensed as much as the complexity of this litigation will permit, number 37. Appellee Phillips Petroleum Company has answered such points in 11 counter-points. Appellee Mid-Coast Oil Company has adopted the counter-points of Phillips Petroleum Company and has presented two in addition thereto. Phillips Petroleum Company’s counterpoints Nos. 1 and 2 are that the judgment of the trial court is correct because appellant does not own the rights on which it sues. These counter-points are stated to be in reply to all of appellant’s points of error. Since, as appellees say, it is axiomatic that if appellant does not own such rights it cannot have specific performance thereof, such counter-points do present a determinative issue in this appeal; however, the counter-points appear to be directly in reply to appellant’s point of error No. 32, which is as follows:

“The court erred in failing to hold as a matter of law that the deed from Wil *894 liam W. Burch to Mid-Coast Oil Company did not convey any purchase option right under the 1939 contract.”

Since, as stated, appellant’s point No. 32 and appellee’s counter-points Nos. 1 and 2 present an issue which may be completely determinative of this appeal, we consider it appropriate to pass upon such points first. To properly do so requires a more detailed statement of the factual basis of this controversy.

In 1939 Amos L. Beaty & Company, Inc., and Victor H. Borsodi assigned to Phillips Petroleum Company certain oil, gas and mineral leases in the Chocolate Bayou area in Brazoria County, Texas. In such assignment the assignors reserved one-fourth of the net profits from the development and operation of the lands covered by such leases. The agreement further 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. This last-mentioned provision, which is by the litigants referred to, and will hereinafter be referred to, as the “purchase rights”, is contained in paragraph 7 of the assignment and is in the following language:

“7. 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 (2½) miles of the center of Section Five (5), H. T. & B.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
298 S.W.2d 890, 7 Oil & Gas Rep. 1068, 1957 Tex. App. LEXIS 2377, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/courseview-inc-v-phillips-petroleum-co-texapp-1957.