Hunt Production Co. v. Dickerson

135 S.W.2d 597
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 27, 1939
DocketNo. 5393.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 135 S.W.2d 597 (Hunt Production Co. v. Dickerson) 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
Hunt Production Co. v. Dickerson, 135 S.W.2d 597 (Tex. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

HALL, Justice.

In July, 1935, appellee C. N. Dickerson, individually and as community administrator of the estate of his wife, Cora L. Dickerson, deceased, filed this suit in the District Court of Rusk County, in form of trespass to try title against Hunt Production Company, H. L. Hunt, individually and as trustee for undisclosed principals, and numerous other persons not necessary to mention, for title and possession of “about 148” acres of land, a part of the Dan Clark Survey. Appellee also asserted title to said land under the 3, 5, 10 and 25 years’ statutes of limitation. Appellants, Hunt Production Company, H. L. Hunt, individually and as trustee, answered by general demurrer, general denial, and plea of not guilty. And in response to this pleading of appellants, appellee Dickerson filed what he termed his first “supplemental petition” in which he alleged in part: “That if the defendants, or either of them, and particularly defendant Hunt Production Company, ever had any oil or gas lease on the land and premises described in plaintiff’s original petition filed herein, which is not admitted, the same has become forfeited, abandoned, void and of no further force or effect, and judgment cancelling the same should be entered by this court for the following good and sufficient reasons:” (a) Because Hunt Production Company has failed and refused for many years to develop said property for oil and gas “as required by their implied obligations so to do;” (b) that H. L. Hunt, Trustee, individually and as President of Hunt Production Company, advised appellee Dickerson that appellants named above had abandoned said land for oil and gas purposes and disclaimed any interest therein; (c) that Roy Lee, Secretary and Treasurer of said Hunt Production Company, advised appellee, Dickerson, that his company had abandoned said land and refused to develop same for oil and gas, and also by his acts and conduct “openly and notoriously” abandoned said land by refusing on behalf of his company to render same for taxes; (d) that Hunt Production Company acting by and through its agent H. B. Harder abandoned said land “that all of said acts and conduct took place during the years 1934 and 1935, and said defendants (appellants) continued their acts of abandonment up to and including July, 1935, on which said date, after complete and final abandonment, the defendant (appellant) Hunt Production Company undertook to assert a new claim to said land, the nature of which is to this plaintiff (Dickerson) unknown, but which this plaintiff says is not a valid claim but is unlawful.” Then follows á plea of estoppel based upon all the alleged acts of abandonment together with the statements of Hunt, Lee and Harder, allegedly made to appellee Dickerson and one Perry Allen, wherein it is alleged: “That the defendants, and each of them, and particularly the defendant Hunt Production Company, are estopped as a matter of law, from claiming any rights in or to said land and premises, or any part, thereof, or any interest in or to the oil or gas of said land, or any part thereof, or any right of possession to any part of said land, or any right of ingress or egress over said land, or any part thereof.”

It was alleged further that appellee Dickerson relying upon the acts of abandonment of the Hunt Production Company, together with the statements made by its agents, Hunt, Lee and Harder, did on May 15, 1935, lease the premises here in controversy to appellee Perry Allen for the development of same for oil and gas. And for the same reasons the appellee Allen accepted the said oil and gas lease and obligated himself to carry out the terms and *599 provisions thereof “and (Allen) believing all of said acts, instruments, statements and conduct to be genuine, entered into a drilling contract with drillers to sink oil wells on said land, and has thereby bound and obligated himself to penalties, damages and claims which will exceed $5,000, all of which will be a total loss to him in event defendants, or either of them, is permitted to assert' any claim to said land or any part thereof. * * *” In this pleading damages were alleged at $30,000 instead of $5,000 as in appellees’ amended petition. Perry Allen intervened and adopted the pleadings of appellee Dickerson, claiming the ⅞ leasehold interest in said land under a lease from him.

In answer to this supplemental petition appellants filed their supplemental answer consisting in part of a general demurrer, arid the special exception to the effect that “the matters and allegations therein contained do not properly belong in a supplemental petition, but should be properly and lawfully alleged in an amended 'petition.” To the merits it was alleged that appellants were the legal owners of an oil and gas lease covering the land in controversy as well as other lands, assigned to them by C. M. Joiner, Trustee, as one indivisible lease contract, and that on land described in said lease contract six; producing oil wells had been drilled and completed to production, before, the filing of this suit, at a total expenditure of $100,000. It was alleged further that on October 2, 1936, the lease covering the land in controversy, together with the land on which the six wells were located, was assigned to P. G. Lake, Inc., and that this company has, since said assignment, expended $25,000 in developing same by completing two additional producing oil wells thereon, and but for the pendency of this suit would continue .to develop said land for oil in accordance with business prudence; that the land in controversy “is a part of the land covered by the oil and gas lease executed by Dickerson and wife to C. M. Joiner, Trustee, on the 30th day of March, 1927,” which lease was ratified by an instrument in writing signed by Dickerson and wife, in favor of Hunt Production Company on February 25, 1933. That said lease has been developed in a “prudent and reasonable manner” — there being six oil wells (eight at time of trial) on the land covered by the lease. That before and since the filing of this suit appellees have received and collected the royalties due them from said oil wells, and are therefore es-topped to declare a forfeiture of said oil and gas lease. This supplemental answer is also directed at the' claim of intervenor Allen.

P. G. Lake, Inc., filed an intervention in which it adopts the pleadings of Hunt Production Company and claims ownership of the original Joiner oil and gas lease covering this property by assignment from Hunt Production Company. It also seeks cancellation of the lease from Dickerson to Perry Allen of date May 15, 1935, as a cloud on its title. By cross action P. G. Lake, Inc., in an action of trespass to try title asserts its title to % leasehold interest in the land in controversy under the 10 years’ statute of limitation. To the answer of Lake, Inc., appellees filed a general demurrer and general denial.

The trial court appointed Hon. Frank Bolton, an attorney, to defend the numerous defendants cited by publication. Trial was to a jury upon special issues which were answered favorably to appellees and upon which judgment was rendered for them for title and possession of the land in controversy, subject to the previous sale of royalty interest by appellees from their ⅛ royalty retained, and for intervenor Perry Allen for the ⅞ leasehold in the land in controversy. The assignment of the oil and gas lease from C. M. Joiner to H. L. Hunt, Trustee, the assignment from Hunt, Trustee, to Hunt Production Company, the assignment from Hunt Production Company to Hunt Oil Company and P. G. Lake, Inc., the assignment from Hunt Oil Company to P. G. Lake, Inc., and the deed of trust from P. G.

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Bluebook (online)
135 S.W.2d 597, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hunt-production-co-v-dickerson-texapp-1939.