Ehlinger v. Clark

284 S.W. 974, 1926 Tex. App. LEXIS 505
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 15, 1926
DocketNo. 8750.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 284 S.W. 974 (Ehlinger v. Clark) 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
Ehlinger v. Clark, 284 S.W. 974, 1926 Tex. App. LEXIS 505 (Tex. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

PLEASANTS, C. J.

This suit was brought by plaintiffs' in error against the defendant in error to recover the amount due upon two notes for the sum of $2,000 each, executed by the defendant in favor of plaintiff Ehlinger, county judge of Fayette county.

The answer of defendant contains exceptions to plaintiffs’ petition, on the ground that it shows upon its face the lease contract, in consideration of which the notes sued on were executed, was illegal and void, and therefore said notes were without consideration and their .payment unenforceable. These exceptions are followed by the following special plea:

“Defendant shows that he made and entered into said transaction in good, faith, believing that said transaction was legal and valid, and that the oil and gas lease so executed to him was authorized by law, and that by it he was vested with' the rights and interests expressed in said lease, and that said transaction would result to the material advantage and benefit of the permanent school fund of Fayette county as well as to this defendant. But subsequently this defendant was advised, and he now upon information and belief charges and alleges the fact to be, that the commissioners’ court of Fayette county, Tex., was and is forbidden by law to make and enter into said contracts and agreement, and to execute and deliver said oil and gas lease, and had and has no authority or legal power to make, execute, and deliver said oil and gas lease, or to authorize the same to be done by the county judge or any one else, and that same were-and are illegal and totally void, and were ineffectual to pass and did not pass any such right or interest in or in regard to the oil and gas in said land as are described in said lease and attempted therein to be leased or conveyed to defendant.
“Defendant alleges, upon his own knowledge, that there was no other consideration of any sort whatever for the execution and delivery by this defendant to Fayette county of the notes, or either of them, described in plaintiffs’ petition, than the said oil and gas lease hereto attached and marked as an exhibit, and defendant alleges that said lease was and is utterly worthless and o'f no value to defendant. Defendant has heretofore offered, and does now offer to-cancel all of said lease and contract, and has frequently demanded of Fayette- county that it cancel and return to him both the promissory notes described ifi plaintiffs’ petition.
“Wherefore defendant says that there was not and has. never been any consideration whatever for the two notes which are sued upon in this cause, and that all pretended or apparent consideration therefor was and is totally null and void, and defendant has received nothing for said notes, or either of them, and the consideration shown or recited in said lease, contracts, and documents for said notes wholly failed, and this he is ready to verify.”

*975 The trial in the court below without a jury resulted in a judgment in favor of defendant.

The oil lease contract,-in consideration of which the notes ■ sued on were executed, is evidenced by written instruments containing many stipulations and agreements which are not material to the question presented by this appeal and need not be set out in detail.

The instrument leases to appellee, for a consideration of $5 cash and the two notes for $2,000 described in plaintiffs’ petition, 4,000 acres of school lands of Fayette county, situated in Baylor county, for the purpose of mining and operating for oil and gas. The lease is for a term of five years, and as long thereafter as active drilling operations are carried on by the lessee, or oil or gas is produced from the land by the lessee. The lessee agrees to deliver to the lessor one-eighth of all the oil produced from the land, and to pay an agreed price for the gas that he might produce therefrom not used in carrying on the drilling operations on the property.

Drilling operations were to begin in one year, but might be deferred from year to year during the five-year period of the lease by the payment by the lessee, in advance, of the sum of $200. The lessee is also given the right to transfer the lease or to sublease the land or any part thereof, and agrees to pay to the county a portion of the bonus or royalty he might receive from such assignment or sublease.

We think the trial court correctly held that the commissioners’ court was not authorized to’make the lease because it was in effect a conveyance of an interest in the school lands of Fayette county for a consideration which in part was not money, and because it gives the lessee the right to sell and dispose of the oil and gas in said lands upon such terms as he might deem proper, thus in substance and effect delegating to the lessee an authority and discretion in the disposition of the county school lands which the law vests in the commissioners’ court, and which is nondelegable.

The contract of lease gives the appellee the right to. take the oil from the school lands of Fayette county for a consideration of one-eighth of such oil to be delivered by the lessee to the county. In the case of Thompson v. Upshur County (Tex. Civ. App.) 211 S. W. 325, in which a writ of error was denied by the Supreme Court, it is held that a lease of this kind is a conveyance of the oil, which is a part of the land, and that such conveyance is void when made for other consideration than money. In the ease of Stephens County v. Oil Co., 113 Tex. 160, 254 S. W. 290, oúr Supreme Court holds that a lease of this kind is a conveyance of an interest in the land.

Section 6 of article 7 of the Constitution of 1876, under which Fayette county acquired title to -the lands leased to appellee, as amended in 1883, contains the following provision: •

“Said lands and the proceeds thereof, when sold, shall be held by said counties alone as a trust for the benefit of public schools therein; said proceeds to be invested in bonds of the United Státes, the .state of Texas, or counties in said state, or in such other securities and under such restrictions as may be prescribed by law.”

In the case of Dallas County v. Land & Cattle Co., 95 Tex. 200, 66 S. W. 294, our Supreme Court declares the word “proceeds,” as used in this provision of the Constitution, to mean “the entire proceeds, and not the net proceeds,” and holds that a contract by which Dallas county gave an agent a portion of its school lands in compensation for his services in surveying, mapping, .and classifying. the lands to facilitate thejr sale by the county was unauthorized and void in that it was an expenditure of a trust fund for a purpose not authorized by the donor. If a county under this provision of the Constitution cannot use a part of its school lands or the proceeds of their sale in payment of the necessary costs of such sale, it logically follows that it cannot use a portion of the oil or minerals in the land, which are a part of the land itself, in payment of the necessary costs of bringing the minerals to the surface for sale.

In discussing the question in the case cited, the court, speaking through Chief Justice Gaines, says:

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Related

Ehlinger v. Clark
8 S.W.2d 666 (Texas Supreme Court, 1928)

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284 S.W. 974, 1926 Tex. App. LEXIS 505, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ehlinger-v-clark-texapp-1926.