Gulf Production Co. v. Warren

99 S.W.2d 616, 1936 Tex. App. LEXIS 1099
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 19, 1936
DocketNo. 2788
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 99 S.W.2d 616 (Gulf Production Co. v. Warren) 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
Gulf Production Co. v. Warren, 99 S.W.2d 616, 1936 Tex. App. LEXIS 1099 (Tex. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinions

WALKER, Chief Justice.

This is a suit by appellee, the Oakwood Realty Company, against appellants, the Gulf Production Company, Rio Bravo Oil Company, and Texas & New Orleans Railroad Company, to recover % of the value of the oil produced, less the expenses of production, from 7%oo of an acre in the Texas & New Orleans Railroad right of way, in the John Douthit survey, Jefferson county, Tex. We quote as follows from appellee’s petition:

“The Oakwood Realty Company prior to the year 1925 acquired and was the lawful owner in fee simple title of two certain tracts or parcels of land situated in the Douthit Survey in Jefferson County, Texas, which are described as follows:
‘“First Tract:
“ ‘Block No. 3, containing five and twenty-seven one hundredths acres (5.27) specified and described in a subdivision or partition of a portion of said John Douthit Survey made between J. M. Hebert and Clara Chaison and the heirs of Jef Chaison, deceased, which is more fully described by a deed of partition with accompanying plat thereto attached, dated the 13th day of April, 1901, filed for record on the 17th day of that month, and recorded in Vol. 38, page 427, of the Deed Records of Jefferson County, Texas, to which reference is hereby made for descriptive purposes. Said Block No. 3 is limited as to its southwest boundary by the eastern line of the T. & N. O. Railroad Company right-of-way, and is bounded on the north by Block No. 4 of said Subdivision and on the east by Block No. 2, and on the south by the south boundary line of said Douthit Survey, except about, however, twenty-seven one hundredths (2%>o) of an acre of said survey theretofore sold and conveyed by the heirs of Jef Chaison, deceased, situated in the north corner of said block.’ * * *
“‘Second Tract:
“ ‘The said Oakwood Realty Company likewise owned adjacent to the foregoing Block No. 3, the following tract or parcel of land located within what is known as the T. & N. O. Railroad right-of-way, to-wit:
“ ‘Beginning at the northwest corner of said Lot or Block No. 3 at a stake in the east line of said railroad company right of way, it being coincident with the southwest corner of Lot or Block No. 4;
“ ‘Thence South 45 degrees west approximately 102 feet to a stake in the center line of the said T. & N. O. Railroad Company’s main line railroad;
“ ‘Thence South 27 degrees 40 minutes east with the center line of said railroad 354.4 feet to a stake in the center thereof, being the south line of the Douthit Survey;
“ ‘Thence North 45 degrees east approximately 102 feet to a stake in the east line of the railroad company right of way, it being the southwest corner of Lot or Block No. 3, above described;
“‘Thence north 27 degrees 40 minutes west with the east line of said railroad right of way coincident with line of s,\id Lot or Block No. 3, approximately 354.4 feet to the place of beginning.’ * *
“The ownership, however, of the last above described tract is subject to the easement right of said railroad company to use the surface exclusively for its own purposes under a deed of conveyance made to it by the predecessor in title of all parties.”

It was further alleged that on the 12th day of December, 1925, Oakwood Realty Company executed and delivered to Gulf Production Company a written mineral lease upon the tract of land designated in its petition as “First Tract: Block No. 3 containing five and twenty-seven one hundredths acres (5.27)” and described in the lease as follows: “Block No. Three, containing five and 2%oo (5.27) acres according to a subdivision or partition of a tract of about fifty-two (52) acres of the John Douthit survey, situated in Jefferson [618]*618County, Texas, between J-. M. Hebert and Clara Chaison and the heirs of Jef Chai-son, deceased, said Block Three (3) being bounded on the Southwest by the right-of-way of the T. ■& N. O. Railroad; on the North by Block Four (4) of said subdivision, on the East by Block Two (2) and on the South by the South Boundary line of the said John Douthit survey; except however, about twenty-seven one-hundredths (2%oo) acres of said survey heretofore sold and conveyed by the heirs of Jef Chaison, deceased, situated in the North corner of said Block.”

Appellee has brought forward in its brief the following conditions of this lease as material to this appeal:

"First. Said Lessee shall have the exclusive right to make as many attempts, if and as Lessee shall desire, to find oil or gas in paying qúantities on or in said premises.”
“Second. If, during the continuance of said exclusive right, there shall be found on said premises oil or gas or other minerals in paying quantities, then from and after such discovery none of the conditions or provisions of Paragraph First shall have any application, and said Lessee shall have the exclusive right to mine for and produce any and all of the minerals underlying said premises, so long as any one of them can be produced in paying quantities, and without any requirement to make any further payment to continue this lease in force, except to deliver the royalties as hereinafter stipulated.”
“Third. If oil should be found in paying quantities on said premises, the Lessee shall deliver as royalty to said Lessor, free-of expense, one-seventh (¾) part of the oil saved from that produced.”

. Appellee alleged further that the lease from Oakwood Realty Company. to Gulf Production Company covered only the first tract of land described in their petition as “Block No. 3,” containing 5,27 acres of land, and that the lease did not cover the “second tract” of 7%oo of an acre of land; that the 7%oo of-an acre was not within the boundaries nor a part of the 5.27 acres, and that no obligation of the Gulf Production Company was contained in said instrument in any way in connection with the 7%>o acre of land, but that the description of the land a'nd the obligation, in conneption therewith, as contained in the instrument, pertained only to the first tract of land. It was then alleged:

“Rio Bravo Oil Company procured the right and privilege to enter upon said railroad right of way exclusively under the dominion and control of the Texas & New Orleans Railroad Company (of which the %o of an acre in controversy was a’ part) and moved a derrick upon the second tract above described, belonging to your plaintiff’s corporation, the Oakwood Realty Company. It secured no right or privilege from the Oakwood Realty Company to enter upon said land or to drill for oil thereon. It was in fact a trespasser without right as against your petitioner’s corporation, the Oakwood Realty Company.
“Thereupon the Oakwood Realty Company about the - day of July, 1926, filed a suit in the Sixtieth District Court in its name against the said Rio Bravo Oil Company and Texas & New Orleans Railroad Company (No. 2704 on the docket of the lower court), seeking an injunction qgainst them from entering upon said land and from drilling wells thereon and from producing oil therefrom.

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Bostwick v. Bucklin
190 S.W.2d 818 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1945)
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Bluebook (online)
99 S.W.2d 616, 1936 Tex. App. LEXIS 1099, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gulf-production-co-v-warren-texapp-1936.