Gulley v. Davis

321 S.W.3d 213, 180 Oil & Gas Rep. 1039, 2010 Tex. App. LEXIS 5613, 2010 WL 2650548
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 1, 2010
Docket01-08-00572-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 321 S.W.3d 213 (Gulley v. Davis) 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
Gulley v. Davis, 321 S.W.3d 213, 180 Oil & Gas Rep. 1039, 2010 Tex. App. LEXIS 5613, 2010 WL 2650548 (Tex. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

OPINION ON REHEARING

ELSA ALCALA, Justice.

Appellants, Joe B. Gulley Jr. and Imelda Gulley (“the Gulleys”), have filed a motion for rehearing. We deny rehearing but withdraw our opinion and judgment of April 14, 2010 and substitute this opinion and judgment in their place.

In this case involving adverse possession of the mineral rights in a 52-acre tract, the Gulleys appeal from a summary judgment in favor of appellees, Wirt Davis, II, individually; Catherine B. Taylor, individually; Valley Oak Investments, L.P.; Camilla R. Blaffer and Texas Gulf Bank, N.A., co-trustees of the Camilla B. Mallard Trust; Joan B. Johnson and Bessemer Trust Co., co-trustees of the Joan B. Johnson Trust; and PDB Properties, Ltd. (collectively, “the Davises”). In three issues, the Gulleys assert the trial court erred by excluding a deed and six affidavits from summary-judgment evidence and by granting summary judgment in favor of the Davises. We conclude the error, if any, in excluding the deed is not reversible error and any error in excluding the affidavits is waived. We further conclude the trial court properly granted summary judgment on the grounds that the evidence established as a matter of law the possession in this case was not exclusive of and adverse to the title owner of the property. We affirm.

Background

In 1835, the State of Coahuila and Texas granted one league of land in Polk County, Texas to Lowrey T. Hampton (“the League”), and, through various conveyances, George Davis acquired title to all the real property within the League. This case concerns a dispute over ownership of the minerals in a 52-acre tract located within the League. The Davises claim to be the successors in interest to George Davis and his wife, Camilla Davis. The Gulleys claim to be the successors in interest to William and Rosia Moore.

In the 20 years between 1872 and 1892, George Moore, William’s father, was the tenant of George Davis. In 1872, George Davis leased the entire League to George Moore. In 1879, George Davis conveyed 200 acres out of the League to George Moore. These 200 acres did not include the 52 acres at issue in this case. At the same time, George Moore conveyed to George Davis “all my right, title or claim to the [League] ... save and except those Two Hundred acres of said League ... this day conveyed by said Davis to me by metes and bounds in a Deed now in my possession therefor.” The 1879 deed also stated, in pertinent part,

This Instrument is also given by me to said Davis to Evidence the fact that I am his tenant of said League representing and holding the same. All save and except the above mentioned Two Hundred acres for him and those he may represent in the premises.
That I am agent for him and them and will look after said Land and protect the same from trespassers and assist them in the sale thereof at such prices and such times as said Davis may from time to time direct and that I will on *216 demand of him said Davis surrender up the possession of said Land to him ... whenever called for and allow no one else to occupy same without the consent of said Davis given either to me or to such persons as he may designate.

(Emphasis added). In 1884, George Moore sold his 200 acres and moved to another part of the League, where he built his homestead on a 143-acre tract. In 1888, George Davis sold 120 acres of the League to a party not involved in this case. In 1892, George Moore’s son William, who by then was 20 years of age, married Rosia Thomas. William and Rosia began living on a portion of the League that included the 52-acre tract presently at issue.

In 1898, the District Court of Polk County rendered judgment in a lawsuit concerning the League that included the 52-acre tract at issue here. The lawsuit, styled Prussia Harney, et al. v. Geo. S. Davis, et al., had been filed in 1889 and both George Davis and George Moore were named defendants. William Moore was not a party to the suit. This judgment adjudicated title to the entire League as of 1898 to George Davis, less the 320 acres in the sales described above. The 1898 judgment recites that George and Ann Moore “have claimed” the land in the League, less the 320 acres sold, as tenants in possession for George Davis. The judgment states,

[TJhe said defendants Geo. A. Moore and his wife Ann M. Moore being shown to be tenants in possession of said defendant Geo. W. Davis for whom alone they claim and have claimed said Land in controversy herein it is ordered and adjudged that they go hence without day [sic] and recover of said plaintiffs their costs herein respectively incurred....

Thus, in 1898, George Davis was the titleholder of the entire League (less the 320 acres he conveyed to George Moore and the third-party as described above).

The same year the Prussia Harney judgment was rendered in 1898, George Davis died, leaving the League to his wife, Camilla. Approximately six years later, in 1904, Camilla conveyed 3,948 acres of the League to William Carlisle and Company, reserving the mineral estate — including the mineral estate to the 52-acre tract presently at issue — for herself. Shortly after that, George Moore died.

In 1909, almost five years after Camilla had sold the surface acres to which she held title in the League to William Carlisle and Company, William and Rosia Moore conveyed 78 acres of a 130-acre tract out of the League to William Carlisle and Company. William and Rosia Moore excepted from the grant the 52 acres involved in this case. In pertinent part, the 1909 deed states,

The said William Moore and Rosia E. Moore wife of the said William Moore hereby covenant and agree with the said William Carlisle and Company that they have occupied, claimed and been in peaceable possession of the 130 acre tract first above described, for more than 10 years prior to this date.

Thus, the 1909 deed that sells 78 adjacent acres to William Carlisle and Company states that William and Rosia Moore “occupied, claimed, and [had] been in peaceable possession” of the 52 acres involved in this case. Since 1904, Camilla held title to the mineral estate in the 52 acres, but William and Rosia Moore claimed occupation and peaceable possession of that land since at least 1899.

Almost one century later, the Davises leased the 52 mineral acres in 1998 to Sun Operating Limited Partnership, who assigned its lease to Kerr-McGee. In 2001, the Gulleys leased the 52 mineral acres to Comstock Oil & Gas, Inc. Kerr-McGee *217 and a neighboring lessee formed a pooled unit, which included the 52 mineral acres, and drilled a well on the pooled land. After the well was drilled, a title opinion revealed the Gulleys’ claim to the 52 mineral acres.

The Davises filed suit against the Gulleys 1 for trespass to try title, to quiet title, for breach of contract, for unpaid shares of proceeds derived from the sale of oil and gas production, and for attorney’s fees. The Gulleys responded with a general denial and by asserting several affirmative defenses, including that their predecessors in interest — William and Rosia Moore— adversely possessed the 52 mineral acres.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
321 S.W.3d 213, 180 Oil & Gas Rep. 1039, 2010 Tex. App. LEXIS 5613, 2010 WL 2650548, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gulley-v-davis-texapp-2010.