Estate of Grimes v. Dorchester Gas Producing Co.

707 S.W.2d 196, 90 Oil & Gas Rep. 539, 1986 Tex. App. LEXIS 12553
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 27, 1986
Docket07-84-0308-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 707 S.W.2d 196 (Estate of Grimes v. Dorchester Gas Producing 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
Estate of Grimes v. Dorchester Gas Producing Co., 707 S.W.2d 196, 90 Oil & Gas Rep. 539, 1986 Tex. App. LEXIS 12553 (Tex. Ct. App. 1986).

Opinions

BOYD, Justice.

Appellants E.B. Grimes, Frances Grimes, the Estate of Marie E. Grimes, deceased, acting by E.B. Grimes, Independent Executor, and the Estate of T.M. Grimes, deceased, acting by Frances Grimes, Independent Executrix, bring this appeal from an adverse judgment in favor of appellees Dorchester Gas Producing Company, Northern Natural Gas Company, L.R. Hagy, Frank Aderton, Jr., Elaine Aderton Lisle, Sybil B. Harrington, and the Don and Sybil Harrington Foundation. In their suit, appellants sought a declaration that an oil and gas lease covering their 191.22 acres of land, which had been included in a 640.22 acre “consolidated area,” had terminated. At trial and at the conclusion of appellants’ presentation of their case-in-chief, the trial court withdrew the case from the jury and rendered the questioned take-nothing judgment. We affirm that judgment.

Appellants attack the judgment in nine points of error. In those points, they assert the trial court erred in rendering its judgment because (1) there was probative evidence that the oil and gas lease here in question had terminated under its provisions; (2) there was probative evidence that there had been no consolidation of the lease with other leases in accordance with the applicable contractual provisions; (3) there was probative evidence that any gas production from the Bednorz No. 4 well, Dor-chester Unit No. 9, was not legal production and therefore did not keep in force the Grimes lease; (4) there was probative evidence that appellants’ claims were not barred by any statute of limitations, waiver, estoppel, ratification, or adverse possession; (5) there was probative evidence that appellee Dorchester wrongfully refused to release an oil, gas, and mineral lease, resulting in damage to appellants; (6) defendant John Kotara, Jr.’s answer was a disclaimer which asked that judgment be [199]*199granted to appellants; and (7) no answers had been filed by defendants Erskin Gray-son and Tom Marsh, agent for the Ida Marsh heirs, who did not appear at trial and were in default.

On December 31,1936, appellants’ predecessors-in-title, E.H. Grimes, Marie E. Grimes, and Amanda Busch executed an oil and gas lease in favor of Dorchester’s predecessor-in-title, Stanley Marsh. The lease was dated December 31, 1936, and was for an initial term of five years beginning December 13, 1937, and continuing thereafter so long as there was production of oil or gas under the lease. Under the lease, the lessee was required to begin drilling operations on or before the first anniversary date or to pay annual delay rentals of $1.00 per annum until drilling commenced. The lease granted the lessee the right to consolidate the leased lands with “adjacent lands, provided any resulting consolidated estate shall not cover and include more than 640 acres consisting of contiguous tracts or tracts that are adjoined,” with drilling or production from any well on any of the consolidated lands being sufficient to satisfy the terms of the lease. The property covered by the lease was described as:

That part of the W ½ of Sec. 2 and that part of Sec. 3, Blk. 7, I. & G.N. Ry. Co. Survey, which are situated south of the right-of-way of P & SP Ry. Co., containing 131.22 acres, more or less; NW ¼ of NW ¼ and W ½ of NE ¼ of NW ¼ of Sec. 21, Blk. 7, I. & G.N. Ry. Co. Sur., containing 60 acres, more or less; and containing 191.22 acres, more or less.

The railroad right-of-way was obtained by condemnation in 1887 and, admittedly, was an easement for surface use.

On June 18, 1937, an instrument denominated as a “Gas Division Order and Operating Agreement” was executed by appellants’ predecessors-in-title which covered 108.95 acres of the leased property. That portion of the leased property was described as “situated” south of the railroad right-of-way. In the instrument, other lands were specifically described and were consolidated with the 108.95 acre tract in a 637.95 acre tract designated as the “consolidated area.” The owners of the other tracts of land also executed the agreement. In the agreement, it was provided that the completion of a well producing gas in paying quantities within the “consolidated area” would perpetuate lessee’s rights under all the leases in the entire area. Moreover, in the instrument, appellants’ predecessors-in-title ratified and affirmed the December 31, 1936 lease “as hereby modified.”

Drilling of a well designated as the Bed-norz No. 4 well commenced on October 14, 1937. Although the well was not located upon any part of the property here in controversy, it was located upon other property included in the “consolidated area” described in the 1937 operating agreement. The well was completed as a gas well on November 12, 1937, and production commenced on November 15, 1937. Physical production from the well in paying quantities has continued since that time. Monthly royalty checks were paid to appellants continuously until November 1979, when appellants refused any further payments. Subsequent to November 1979, the payments have been placed in a suspense account.

Delay rentals on the 82.27 acres not included in the 1937 operating agreement were paid to appellants’ predecessors-in-title in November of 1938 and 1939. On June 1, 1940, appellants’ predecessors-in-title executed a “Gas Order and Operating Agreement” which was in substitution for and superseded the June 18, 1937 agreement. In this instrument all of the property in the original oil and gas lease was included with other property in a 640.22 acre tract collectively designated as a “consolidated area.” Parenthetically, we note that, in describing property covered by the agreement, reference was made to the Grimes lease and the 191.22 acre tract was described exactly as it was in the original lease. In this instrument, payment of the royalty due thereunder was calculated and set out and it was again agreed that any [200]*200production within the “consolidated area” would continue the included leases in force. It also provided that the underlying leases, including the one here in question, were, “as hereby modified,” ratified and affirmed. Again, we note the Bednorz No. 4 well, although not located upon the property of appellants’ predecessors-in-title, was located upon lands included within the property included in the 1940 “consolidated area.” The property in question and the railroad right-of-way dividing the lands are shown on the plat below.

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Initially, appellants argue that their testimony that there was no production upon the specific tract covered by the Grimes oil and gas lease was sufficient to establish a prima facie case that the lease had terminated. At that point, they reason, appel-lees had the burden to present evidence on their own which would justify a continuation of the lease. Then, they say appellants would have had the opportunity to “offer rebutting evidence and exhibits to those affirmative defenses.” By rendering judgment when it did, they say that “[t]he trial court failed to determine correctly the point at which Plaintiffs’ [appellants’] burden ended, and Defendants’ [appellees’] burden began.” The thrust of this argument is that appellees’ claims of legal consolidation and legal production from the consolidated unit were “affirmative defenses” which must have been established by evidence produced by appellees other than that introduced by appellants. We disagree.

[201]

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Bluebook (online)
707 S.W.2d 196, 90 Oil & Gas Rep. 539, 1986 Tex. App. LEXIS 12553, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-grimes-v-dorchester-gas-producing-co-texapp-1986.