Harris v. Currie

176 S.W.2d 302, 142 Tex. 93
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1943
DocketNo. 8145
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 176 S.W.2d 302 (Harris v. Currie) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harris v. Currie, 176 S.W.2d 302, 142 Tex. 93 (Tex. 1943).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Critz

delivered the opinion of the Court.

On and prior to March 7, 1928, F. L. Harris and R. H. Harris owned jointly, as cotenants, about 40,320 acres of land, consisting of 63 surveys in Tom Green, Sterling, and Irion counties, Texas. On the date just mentioned, R. H. Harris and F. L. Harris, joined by their respective wives, made deeds to one another. By one deed, R. H. Harris, joined by his wife, conveyed to F. L. Harris his undivided one-half interest in the 63 surveys above mentioned. By the other deed, F. L. Harris, joined by his wife, conveyed to R. H. Harris his undivided one-half interest in about 26,906 acres of land in Coke County, Texas. Each of these deeds contained the following mineral or royalty provision:

“The said R. H. Harris (or F. L. Harris as the case may be) by his wife, conveyed to R. H. Harris his undivided one-half interest in and to all oil, gas, or other minerals of whatsoever kind that may be found in, on or under the above described lands during a term of fifteen (15) years next ensuing after date of this deed and no part of same is conveyed by this deed.
“And it is further agreed that if any development of the oil, gas or mineral rights on said lands is begun under any lease or drilling contract during the next fifteen (15) years, and such royalty payments are begun to accrue within the said term of fifteen years, that when once begun or having accrued within the said time they shall continue thereafter to be paid in equal one-half portions to the said R. H. Harris and F. L. Harris as long and whenever such royalty payments shall be made without respect to the time or term thereof.”

On February 20, 1941, Lula C. Harris, widow of F. L. Harris, deceased, and R. H. Harris executed and delivered to Humble Oil & Refining Company a ten-year oil and gas lease, covering eight sections of land in Sterling County, Texas. These eight sections constituted a part of the 63 sections covered by the deed dated March 7, 1928, from R. H. Harris and wife to F. L. Harris. It will here be noted that this lease was made within the fifteen-year mineral reservation named in such deed. This lease contract states that Lula C. Harris, a feme sole, and R. H. Harris and wife are “lessor (whether one or more) ” and that [96]*96Humble Oil & Refining Company is lessee. Also, this lease provides for annual delay rentals in the sum of $2,560.00 per year for ten years, under the usual “unless” clause. This lease also provides that these rentals shall be paid to “lessor or to credit of lessor” in a named bank.

On February 20, 1941, the same date as the oil and gas lease just mentioned, Lula C. Harris, surviving widow of F. L. Harris, deceased, and R. H. Harris executed and delivered to Humble Oil & Refining Company another ten-year oil and gas lease, covering 12 sections of land in Sterling County, Texas. These 12 sections also constituted a part of the 63 sections covered by the deed dated March 7, 1928, from R. H. Harris and wife to F. L. Harris. In all other respects the two leases are identical, except this lease provides for annual delay rentals in the sum of $4,480.00.

On December 22, 1941, R. H. Harris, described as “party of the first part,” and S. C. Currie and E. M. Wahlenmaier, described as “parties of the second part,” entered into a written contract with each other. We here refer to the opinion of the Court of Civil Appeals for a full statement of the contents and other circumstances surrounding this contract. It is sufficient to here state that it does not mention the Humble Oil & Refining Company lease. This contract contains the following clause of conveyance:

“In consideration of the foregoing R. H. Harris does hereby grant, bargain, sell and convey to E. M. Wahlenmaier and Stephen C. Currie the one-half () interest in all oil, gas and other minerals and royalty payments reserved by R. H. Harris in his deed heretofore described to F. L. Harris in the following surveys in Block Six (6), H. & T. C. Ry. Co., Sterling County: (Here was inserted a description of the 20 sections by number covered by the two Humble leases.)”

On February 20, 1942, during the fifteen-year period provided for in the mineral reservation clause in the deed from R. H. Harris to F. L. Harris, R. H. Harris received from Humble Oil & Refining Company the sum of $1,280.00, as one-half of the delay rental on the land described in the lease contract first above mentioned, and the sum of $2,240.00, as one-half of the delay rental on the land described in the lease contract second above mentioned. (The other one-half of such lease money, payable to Mrs. Lulu C. Harris, surviving widow of F. L. Harris, is not here involved.) S. C. Currie and E. M. Wahlenmaier claimed the lease money collected by R. H. Harris under their [97]*97contract with him of date December 22, 1941. Harris refused to recognize such claim, and Currite and Wahlenmaier brought this suit against him in the District Court of Tom Green County, Texas, to recover the same. Trial in the district court, before the court without the intervention of a jury, resulted in a judgment for R. H. Harris. This judgment was reversed by the Austin Court of Civil Appeals, and judgment rendered for Currie and Wahlenmaier for the amount sued for. 172 S. W. (2d) 404. Harris brings error.

OPINION.

It is evident that prior to the deed from R. H. Harris and wife to F. L. Harris, all the land leased to Humble Oil & Refining Company was owned by R. H. and F. L. Harris jointly, or as tenants in common. This joint ownership covered the entire estate in such land, mineral as well as surface. The deed from R. H. Harris and wife to F. L. Harris had effect to sever one-half the mineral estate from the surface estate for 15 years. During such period F. L. Harris owned all the surface estate and one-half the mineral estate, and R. H. Harris owned the other one-half of the mineral estate. Lula C. Harris had succeeded to the title and rights of F. L. Harris at the time the Humble Oil & Refining Company leases were entered into. R. H. Harris then still held the mineral interest reserved in his deed to F. L. Harris. When Lula C. Harris and R. H. Harris joined as “lessor (whether one or more) ” in making the two lease contracts with Humble Oil & Refining Company, and in such lease contracts agreed that rentals should be paid to “lessor or to the credit of lessor” at a named bank, nothing else appearing, they in legal effect agreed, as between themselves, that the two named lessors, during the fifteen-year priod in which F. L. Harris rtained one-half the minerals, should own such delay rentals in equal portions. So far as this record shows, Lula C. Harris and R. H. Harris must have recognized that, as between themselves, this lease money belonged to them half and half.

From all that we have said it is evident that the part of the delay rentals here involved belonged either to R. H. Harris or to Currie and Wahlenmaier. It is also evident that such delay rentals belong to R. H. Harris unless he conveyed them to Currie and Wahlenmaier by the conveying clause in the contract between him and them of date December 22, 1941.

An examination of the statement we have made discloses that the two leases to Humble Oil & Refining Company had been [98]*98entered into at the time the contract between R. H. Harris and Currie and Wahlenmaier was made. In this connection, we note that such two leases were then duly recorded.

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176 S.W.2d 302, 142 Tex. 93, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harris-v-currie-tex-1943.