Henry Gilbert Ayala and Chesapeake Exploration, LLC v. Natividad A. Soto

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 23, 2014
Docket04-12-00860-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Henry Gilbert Ayala and Chesapeake Exploration, LLC v. Natividad A. Soto (Henry Gilbert Ayala and Chesapeake Exploration, LLC v. Natividad A. Soto) 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
Henry Gilbert Ayala and Chesapeake Exploration, LLC v. Natividad A. Soto, (Tex. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Fourth Court of Appeals San Antonio, Texas MEMORANDUM OPINION No. 04-12-00860-CV

Henry Gilbert AYALA and Chesapeake Exploration, LLC, Appellants

v. Natividad A. Natividad A. SOTO, Appellee

From the 81st Judicial District Court, La Salle County, Texas Trial Court No. 11-03-00037-CVL Honorable Fred Shannon, Judge Presiding

Opinion by: Karen Angelini, Justice

Sitting: Karen Angelini, Justice Marialyn Barnard, Justice Rebeca C. Martinez, Justice

Delivered and Filed: April 23, 2014

REVERSED AND RENDERED IN PART; REVERSED AND REMANDED IN PART

Chesapeake Exploration, L.L.C. and Henry Gilbert Ayala appeal the trial court’s grant of

summary judgment in favor of Natividad A. Soto. We reverse the trial court’s judgment, render

judgment that Soto take nothing against Chesapeake, and remand the cause for further proceedings

consistent with this opinion. 04-12-00860-CV

BACKGROUND

Soto is a seventy-five year-old man who owns 119.400 acres of land in LaSalle County,

Texas. In his suit to quiet title against Chesapeake and Ayala, Soto alleged that he was approached

by Ayala, a prison guard at the local prison and the mayor pro tem for the city of Cotulla, Texas.

Soto and Ayala met through Soto’s niece, Barbara Soto-Ruel, who was also a guard at the prison.

Soto alleged that Ayala pressured him to sign an oil lease, repeatedly telling him that he would

“lose out” if he did not immediately sign a lease. According to Soto, on a hot summer day on June

9, 2010, he met Ayala in a parking lot outside of a bank. In his petition, Soto alleged that Ayala

told him that he needed to come quickly to a hotel in Cotulla to meet some “oil people,” who were

going to leave soon. According to Soto, Ayala then changed his story and said that the oil people

had a room at the bank in Cotulla and that Soto should come to the bank immediately. Soto alleged

that when he arrived at the bank on June 9, 2010, Ayala met him in the parking lot and told him

that the oil company representatives had left and produced a paper for Soto to sign, which Soto

believed to be an oil and gas lease. Soto, who can neither read nor write English, alleged that the

document was not read or explained to him. A notary then came to the parking lot from the bank

and notarized the document, which was not an oil and gas lease but instead was a durable power

of attorney.

While the above are Soto’s allegations, the following facts are undisputed. On June 9, 2010,

Soto signed a durable power of attorney, which granted Ayala authority to act as Soto’s attorney-

in-fact

in any and all matters necessary or desirable to participate actively as a mineral and/or royalty owner, including but not limited to the following:

1) to execute and deliver Oil, Gas and other Mineral Leases, containing unitization and pooling agreements and other provisions as my Attorney-in- Fact shall deem advisable; 2) to execute Mineral and Royalty Stipulations and Conveyances; -2- 04-12-00860-CV

3) to execute Seismic or Exploration Permits; 4) to execute Options covering Oil, Gas and other Mineral interests; [and] 5) to execute Division Orders.

Also on June 9, 2010, Ayala filed the power of attorney with the LaSalle County Clerk’s office,

and it was recorded on page 746 of volume 504. The next day, June 10, 2010, Ayala signed as

Soto’s agent two documents: Paid Up Oil, Gas and Mineral Lease with Chesapeake, and a

Memorandum of Oil, Gas and Mineral Lease acknowledging Chesapeake’s interest in Soto’s

property. That same day, Ayala approached Soto and asked him to sign a W-9 Form (Request for

Tax-payer Identification Number and Certification). Soto refused and Ayala signed the form

himself. On June 11, 2010, after consulting an attorney, Soto filed three revocations with the

LaSalle County Clerk’s Office. One revocation specifically revoked any power of attorney

appointing Ayala as attorney in fact. Another revocation revoked any powers of attorney

appointing Soto’s niece as attorney in fact. 1 The final revocation revoked any prior powers of

attorney executed before June 11, 2010. All three revocations were recorded in the official records

of the LaSalle County Clerk’s Office on June 11, 2010. That same day, Soto informed his niece of

the revocations and asked her to tell Ayala about them. Ayala acknowledged in his deposition

testimony that he knew about the revocation about a week after it was filed and before Chesapeake

issued payment of any consideration pursuant to the lease. On June 17, 2010, the Memorandum of

Oil, Gas and Mineral Lease was filed with the LaSalle County Clerk’s Office. It was recorded on

June 22, 2010, and appears on page 263 of volume 505. On June 23, 2010, Chesapeake issued a

check in the amount of $238,800.00 to Ayala as Attorney-in-Fact for Soto. Before issuing the

check, Chesapeake did not check the official deed records of LaSalle County, Texas. On June 24,

2010, Ayla received the check and approached Soto to sign the check, but Soto refused, telling

1 Soto testified in his deposition that [], he had signed a power of attorney appointing his niece [when he had surgery].

-3- 04-12-00860-CV

him he had withdrawn the authority for him to do anything and to send the check back. Ayala

endorsed the check and deposited it into his personal account. After the check cleared, Ayala

withdrew funds in June, July, and August 2010 totaling $34,400.

In his deposition, Ayala disputed Soto’s right to the $238,800.00 paid by Chesapeake.

Ayala claimed that he and Soto orally agreed all bonus money paid under any lease would be

Soto’s fee. According to Ayala, Soto “just wanted an oil and gas lease to give him at least twenty

percent because somebody else was trying to give him eighteen, and everything else – any other

monies would be for my compensation, bonuses or whatever other monies I would get.”

“Basically, all he wanted was just the oil and gas lease.” Soto disputed that any agreement was

made between him and Ayala to compensate Ayala for obtaining the oil, gas, and mineral lease.

Soto filed a suit to quiet title against Chesapeake and Ayala, seeking cancellation of the

lease. He also brought claims for negligent misrepresentation, statutory fraud, fraud by non-

disclosure, fraud in the inducement, and fraud in real estate transactions. Chesapeake filed a

traditional and no-evidence motion for summary judgment, arguing that Chesapeake was a bona

fide purchaser who acquired legal title to the property in good faith and that there was no evidence

to support Soto’s fraud and negligent misrepresentation claims against Chesapeake. Two days

later, Soto also filed a motion for summary judgment on his suit to quiet title, arguing that the

consideration paid by Chesapeake was ineffective to bind the lease because at the time

consideration was paid, Ayala had no actual or apparent authority to accept the consideration on

behalf of Soto. According to Soto, at the time Chesapeake paid the consideration to Ayala, it was

deemed to have actual knowledge of the revocation of Ayala’s power of attorney as it had been

filed and recorded in the official records of the LaSalle County Clerk, resulting in the failure of

consideration to bind Soto to the lease. The trial court agreed with Soto and granted Soto’s motion

for summary judgment. It declared the lease and memorandum of the lease to be null and void, -4- 04-12-00860-CV

and ordered them set aside.

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Henry Gilbert Ayala and Chesapeake Exploration, LLC v. Natividad A. Soto, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/henry-gilbert-ayala-and-chesapeake-exploration-llc-texapp-2014.