Edith Elizabeth Ramsey, Buck Bryan Ramsey and Optimal Utilities, Inc. v. Joe Grizzle, Charles Calhoun and Donna Kay Calhoun

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 19, 2010
Docket06-09-00026-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Edith Elizabeth Ramsey, Buck Bryan Ramsey and Optimal Utilities, Inc. v. Joe Grizzle, Charles Calhoun and Donna Kay Calhoun (Edith Elizabeth Ramsey, Buck Bryan Ramsey and Optimal Utilities, Inc. v. Joe Grizzle, Charles Calhoun and Donna Kay Calhoun) 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.

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Edith Elizabeth Ramsey, Buck Bryan Ramsey and Optimal Utilities, Inc. v. Joe Grizzle, Charles Calhoun and Donna Kay Calhoun, (Tex. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

                                                         In The

                                                Court of Appeals

                        Sixth Appellate District of Texas at Texarkana

                                                ______________________________

                                                             No. 06-09-00026-CV

                EDITH ELIZABETH RAMSEY, BUCK BRYAN RAMSEY

AND OPTIMAL UTILITIES, INC., Appellants

                                                                V.

                                JOE GRIZZLE, CHARLES CALHOUN,

AND DONNA KAY CALHOUN, Appellees

                                      On Appeal from the 102nd Judicial District Court

                                                          Red River County, Texas

                                              Trial Court Nos. CV00756 & CV-01432

                                          Before Morriss, C.J., Carter and Moseley, JJ.

                                                          Opinion by Justice Carter



                                                                   O P I N I O N

            Very often determining which party has the burden of proof is perfunctory and does not have a great effect.  In this case, we believe the burden of proof is crucial. 

            Buck Bryan Ramsey and his wife, Edith Elizabeth Ramsey,[1] became the owners of real property in Lamar County upon which an oil well was located, the well having been drilled pursuant to a pre-existing oil and gas lease (the Hancock lease).  Joe Grizzle became the holder of the leasehold estate.  The operators of the well experienced problems with it, and its production was intermittent for several years.  Thinking that he had been excluded from operating the well, Grizzle filed suit to enjoin Ramsey from excluding him and to declare his lease valid; Ramsey countered with an allegation that the lease had terminated by its own terms because for more than ninety consecutive days Grizzle had no production or other operations at the well site.  Thinking the lease had expired, Ramsey entered into another oil and gas lease on the same property with Optimal Utilities, Inc., who intervened in the suit and likewise alleged Grizzle’s lease had terminated for lack of operations.  Grizzle sold a ten percent interest in the lease to Charles and Donna Kay Calhoun.  Optimal brought in the Calhouns as defendants. 

            All parties filed what were designated as declaratory judgment actions.  The purchaser of the oil, Eastex Oil, filed an interpleader action; not knowing who to pay, Eastex deposited the money into the registry of the court.  The two cases were consolidated for trial.

            Trial was to a jury who found that Ramsey and Optimal had not shown a cessation of operations for more than ninety consecutive days.  Based on that verdict, the trial court entered a declaratory judgment that the Grizzle lease was valid and awarded Grizzle attorney’s fees of over $49,000.00 plus additional amounts on appeal.  Ramsey and Optimal’s appeals raise several issues:  (1) lack of standing by Grizzle; (2) default in proof of title; (3) insufficiency of evidence to uphold the jury verdict; (4) improper attorney’s fees; and (5) incurable jury argument.  We affirm the judgment of the trial court in some respects, but reverse the attorney’s fee award. 

I.          FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

            A.        History of Leases

            Pauline Hancock, G. T. Hancock, Ollie Gill, and W. E. Gill first leased the Hancock well in 1975 to Oil Development Company of Texas.  A series of assignments throughout the years led to a 1999 lease to Dale Glass, who would later assign his interest to Grizzle.

            When the Ramseys purchased the real estate in 2002, the ownership they acquired was subject to the existing Hancock lease. 


            B.        Acquisition of Lessees= Rights by Grizzle; Assignment(s) by Grizzle

            Grizzle claims, and it appears to be generally accepted, that he got the interest in the Hancock lease by assignment from Glass in June 2003, to be effective July 1, 2003.  Glass was the lessee from the 1999 lease and the man working for Grizzle as Apumper.@  Grizzle later fired Glass in January 2005 and hired Michael Brooks as pumper somewhere around February 2005.

            Glass explained the confusing set of circumstances leading up to the assignment to Grizzle.  He had an interest in the well and was involved in some litigation with Jack Atkins.  Grizzle got part of the interest from Atkins, but required that Glass release Atkins.  Glass would sell his claims against Atkins, then Grizzle was to furnish the money to keep the well pumping and would serve as the operator.  A man named Sparkman was the operator when Grizzle first got his interest.  Then Grizzle became operator and, according to Glass, that was Awhen it went to hell.@

II.        DISCUSSION

            A.        Standing:  Trespass to Try Title or Declaratory Judgment Action

                        1.         Title was at issue in this case

            Ramsey and Optimal argue that Grizzle lacks standing to assert this claim because this case was in reality a trespass to try title case and Grizzle failed to prove a title interest in the Hancock lease. 

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