Day & Co., Inc. v. Texland Petroleum, Inc.

786 S.W.2d 667, 105 Oil & Gas Rep. 590, 33 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 297, 1990 Tex. LEXIS 36, 1990 WL 31752
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 7, 1990
DocketC-6007
StatusPublished
Cited by52 cases

This text of 786 S.W.2d 667 (Day & Co., Inc. v. Texland Petroleum, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Day & Co., Inc. v. Texland Petroleum, Inc., 786 S.W.2d 667, 105 Oil & Gas Rep. 590, 33 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 297, 1990 Tex. LEXIS 36, 1990 WL 31752 (Tex. 1990).

Opinion

OPINION ON MOTION FOR REHEARING

PHILLIPS, Chief Justice.

We grant the motion for rehearing of Texland Petroleum, Inc., withdraw our opinions and judgment of July 12, 1989, and substitute the following.

This is an appeal from a declaratory judgment establishing the validity of a mineral lease on an eighty acre tract of land and the ownership of the executive rights in a ten acre subtract. The court of appeals affirmed the summary judgment of *668 the trial court, holding (1) that the lease assigned to Texland Petroleum, Inc. (hereinafter “Texland”) was valid as to the eighty mineral acres, and (2) that the executive right to half the minerals on the ten acre subtract, which had previously been severed and conveyed to Day & Company, Inc. (hereinafter “Day, Inc.”), passed under a warranty deed to the grantee of Day, Inc. absent a reservation or exception. 718 S.W.2d 384. For the reasons that follow, we affirm the judgment of the court of appeals.

Mildred Keaton and Francell Young conveyed eighty acres of land by warranty deed to Day, Inc. By this deed, Keaton and Young reserved an undivided one-half mineral interest, but they expressly conveyed all executive rights. After the conveyance, therefore, Keaton and Young owned a non-executive, one-half mineral interest in the eighty acres and Day, Inc. owned the surface, one-half the minerals, and all of the executive right. Subsequently, Day, Inc. conveyed the eastern ten acres of the eighty acre tract to John and Genel-da Shoaf, excepting and reserving an undivided one-fourth mineral interest. The deed also excepted the one-half mineral interest previously reserved to Keaton and Young. The deed, however, did not mention the executive right granted to Day, Inc. in the conveyance from Keaton and Young.

The Shoafs and Day, Inc. executed mineral leases. Texland subsequently acquired the leases covering all eighty mineral acres and completed a well on the Shoafs’ ten acre tract. Day, Inc., however, believing that Texland’s predecessor in interest had failed to pay delay rentals to maintain its lease to the non-executive mineral interest owned by Keaton and Young, attempted to exercise the executive right to this interest by leasing those minerals to Bobby Day, the president of Day, Inc. After executing this lease, Day. and Day, Inc. filed suit against Texland and the Shoafs, seeking a declaration that Day, Inc. owned three-fourths of the executive right to the minerals under the ten acre tract and that the lease from Day, Inc. to Day was valid. Both sides moved for summary judgment, and the trial court granted Texland’s motion.

I. The Executive Right Issue

Regarding ownership of the executive right in the ten acre tract, the trial court declared the Shoafs to be the holders of an undivided three-fourths interest and Day, Inc. to be the holder of the remaining one-fourth interest. The court of appeals affirmed, holding that the executive right severed from the one-half mineral interest owned by Keaton and Young had passed to the Shoafs under the general warranty deed from Day, Inc. because the executive right was “so significantly and intimately connected with the mineral estate as to be within the general rule that a warranty deed passes all estate owned by the grant- or at the time of the conveyance unless there are restrictions or exceptions which reduce the estate conveyed.” 718 S.W.2d at 389.

In this court, Day, Inc. argues that the court of appeals erred in treating the severed executive right as a property interest which was conveyed by implication as a result of its failure to except the right from the granting clause of a general warranty deed. Day, Inc. contends that a severed executive right is in the nature of a power and should transfer only by express assignment under applicable principles of contract law.

Texland, on the other hand, argues that an executive right is essentially an interest in property and thus is governed by property law principles. Texland suggests that the applicable principle here is the “greatest possible estate” rule, a common law property principle which states “that a warranty deed will pass all of the estate owned by the grantor at the time of the conveyance unless there are reservations or exceptions which reduce the estate conveyed.” Cockrell v. Texas Gulf Sulphur Co., 157 Tex. 10, 15, 299 S.W.2d 672, 675 (1957).

Day, Inc. relies principally on our decision in Pan American Petroleum Corporation v. Cain, 163 Tex. 323, 355 S.W.2d *669 506 (1962). In that case, the owner of the mineral estate conveyed an undivided one-fourth mineral interest to grantee, reserving to himself the right to execute leases on this one-fourth interest. The reservation of the executive right did not include the word “héirs and assigns.” When the grantor died, the question arose whether the executive rights went to the successors to the grantee’s non-executive mineral interest or passed to the grantor’s heirs. By a vote of five to four, this court held in Cain that a severed executive right, retained by the grantor, did not survive his death and pass to his heirs, but rather passed to the owners of the mineral interest to which the right related.

The court reasoned that the executive right was not an interest in land, but was rather in the nature of a power of appointment. In describing the executive right as a power, the court wrote that “a power is an authority given to dispose of real or personal property of which the donor has the right of disposition. It is not an estate in the property, and its scope and extent is governed by the instrument creating it.” Id. 355 S.W.2d at 510, quoting Hupp v. Union Coal and Coke Co., 284 Pa. 529, 530, 131 A. 364, 365 (1925).

Under the approach in Cain, a severed executive right appears to be a right based in contract, in the nature of a power, the duration of which is a matter of the parties’ intent. In fact, the executive right is a property interest subject to principles of property law when bundled with the other rights and attributes comprising the mineral estate 1 . Once separated, however, Cain suggests that the executive right loses this nature, becoming subject to principles of contract and agency law. Under Cain, the executive right is different from all the other attributes comprising the mineral estate. We believe that this analysis is wrong.

We erred in Cain when we compared the executive right to a power of appointment. Although the executive right is similar to a power, it is not a product of contract, but rather a creature of property rights. See 2 H. Williams & C. Meyers, Oil and Gas Law, § 338 (1989); 1 E. Kuntz, Oil and Gas, § 15.7 (1987). Even when it is severed from the other rights or attributes incident to the mineral estate, it remains an interest in property. As the dissent in Cain

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786 S.W.2d 667, 105 Oil & Gas Rep. 590, 33 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 297, 1990 Tex. LEXIS 36, 1990 WL 31752, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/day-co-inc-v-texland-petroleum-inc-tex-1990.