Fort Apache Energy, Inc. v. Houston Energy, L.P.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 27, 2015
Docket09-14-00007-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Fort Apache Energy, Inc. v. Houston Energy, L.P. (Fort Apache Energy, Inc. v. Houston Energy, L.P.) 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
Fort Apache Energy, Inc. v. Houston Energy, L.P., (Tex. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

In The

Court of Appeals Ninth District of Texas at Beaumont ____________________ NO. 09-14-00007-CV ____________________

FORT APACHE ENERGY, INC., Appellant

V.

HOUSTON ENERGY, L.P., Appellee

_______________________________________________________ ______________

On Appeal from the 75th District Court Liberty County, Texas Trial Cause No. CV1206150 ________________________________________________________ _____________

MEMORANDUM OPINION

In this appeal, we consider whether the trial court properly granted a motion

for summary judgment in an oil and gas royalty dispute. Fort Apache, Inc. appeals

from the trial court’s judgment awarding Houston Energy, L.P. a 1.501981 percent

overriding royalty interest in all of the oil, gas, and other minerals produced by two

wells in Liberty County, Texas. We conclude that the trial court properly found

that the agreement between the parties is unambiguous, that Fort Apache’s

1 obligations under the assignment were not excused based on its claim of mistake,

and that the overriding royalty reserved by Houston Energy through the assignment

is 1.501981 percent of all of the minerals produced by the two wells that are

producing from the tracts whose minerals are the subject of the assignment. We

affirm the trial court’s final judgment.

Background

This dispute concerns an overriding royalty interest retained by Houston

Energy in an agreement in which it assigned Fort Apache its interests in the

minerals on several tracts of property. 1 The mineral interests that Houston Energy

owned are traced to several leases, but only the Balcon Steel and the Maley leases

are relevant to the arguments that the parties present in the appeal.

According to Fort Apache, it agreed to pay an overriding royalty based on a

Houston Energy fractional ownership in the minerals that it received under the

assignment. In other words, Fort Apache contends that the agreement should not be

construed to require that it pay an overriding royalty interest on all oil and gas sales

from the production relevant to the tracts at issue without reducing its payment to

1 There are two wells that produce minerals relevant to the tracts, which the parties refer to as the Penn Cat Number One and the Penn Cat Number Two. The record is not clear whether the tracts discussed that are relevant to these two wells had been pooled by the lessor of the minerals into pooled units. 2 account for the fact that Houston Energy did not own one hundred percent of the

minerals in the tracts that were the subject of its assignment.

In response, Houston Energy contends that the agreement is unambiguous,

and that it obligates Fort Apache to pay 1.501981 percent of all of the oil and gas

sold from the tracts relevant to the assignment, without reduction based on its

fractional ownership interest in the minerals that it owned on the tracts that were

assigned. With respect to Houston Energy’s reservation of an overriding royalty,

the assignment, which was executed by both of the parties in 2010, provides:

[Houston Energy] does hereby except and reserve a net overriding royalty interest of 1.501981% of 8/8ths (“Said Overriding Royalty Interest”) in and to all of the oil, gas and other minerals produced, saved and marketed pursuant to the terms and provisions of the Subject Leases, covering the lands described therein, hereinafter called “said lands,” including any extensions or renewals of the Subject Leases acquired by or for [Houston Energy].

. . . Such overriding royalty payments shall be paid or delivered to [Houston Energy] in the same manner as that provided in the Subject Leases for the payment of royalty to the Lessor therein, subject to the terms and provisions hereof.

According to Fort Apache, it never intended to agree to a provision that

would require that it pay Houston Energy an overriding royalty on all the minerals

produced by the wells without any reduction to account for the fact that Houston

Energy did not own all of the minerals in the tracts that are the subject of the

assignment. To support its argument, Fort Apache points to an overriding royalty 3 agreement that it negotiated with another entity approximately a week before

entering into the agreement at issue. Under that agreement, which relates to

minerals on the same tracts as those in Houston Energy’s assignment, the

percentage overriding royalty provision accounted for that entity’s fractional

ownership of the minerals in the tracts subject to its assignment.

In 2012, Houston Energy sued Fort Apache for breaching the assignment

after Fort Apache suspended payments of Houston Energy’s overriding royalty.

Additionally, Houston Energy asked the trial court to declare the agreement

between Houston Energy and Fort Apache to be valid and enforceable.

In 2013, Houston Energy filed a traditional motion for summary judgment,

seeking to resolve Fort Apache’s claim that it was not required to calculate the

overriding royalty as a product of the stated percentage multiplied by all of the

minerals produced from the tracts covered by the assignment. Additionally,

Houston Energy’s motion sought to establish that the total overriding royalty

burden created by the assignment did not exceed a five percent maximum

overriding royalty restriction provision that is found in two of the leases to which

Houston Energy traces its minerals. 2 Houston Energy’s motion is supported by the

2 The Balcon Steel and Maley leases, two of the leases subject to the assignment, contain provisions that restrict Houston Energy from creating an 4 affidavit of Allen Wilhite, Houston Energy’s vice-president. Wilhite’s affidavit

addresses the restriction on the maximum overriding royalty limitation in the

Balcon Steel and Maley leases.3 Wilhite concludes that the total overriding royalty

burden on the leases, including Houston Energy’s overriding royalty of 1.501981

percent, does not exceed the five percent restriction provision found in the Balcon

Steel and Maley leases.

In its response to Houston Energy’s motion, Fort Apache argued that the

agreement should be reformed so that the total overriding royalty burden to the

overriding burden that together with other overriding royalty reservations would burden those leases by an overriding royalty of more than five percent. 3 The restriction, which is found in an addendum to the Maley/Fort Apache lease, states: “Additional Burdens: It is agreed by and between Lessor and Lessee that Lessee shall not create additional overriding royalty burdens affecting the leased premises in excess of (5%) without the prior approval of Lessor.” The parties do not dispute that this same provision is found in the Balcon Steel/Fort Apache lease, another lease that is referenced in the assignment. Because many of the provisions in the copies of the leases that were filed as summary judgment evidence are illegible, we are unable to verify that an overriding royalty restriction identical to the one in the Maley lease is also contained in the Balcon Steel lease. Nonetheless, the parties do not dispute that the stated restriction is in these two leases, nor do they dispute that these two leases are among the leases that are the subject of Houston Energy’s assignment. Therefore, we treat the representation that the restriction is in both leases as undisputed for the purpose of this appeal. See Tex. R. App. P.

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