Hynson v. Gulf Production Co.
This text of 232 S.W. 873 (Hynson v. Gulf Production Co.) 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.
Opinion
(after stating the facts as above). The contention presented by the assignments in appellants’ brief is that the trial court erred when he refused to instruct the jury to find in their favor. In support of the contention appellants insist that the instrument in question did not operate as a conveyance to the petroleum company and its assigns of the legal title to minerals in and under the land, but operated, instead,’ only as “a lease,” quoting from the assignments, “granting to the petroleum company the right to obtain oils and minerals from under the land.” There was therefore an implied undertaking on the part of the- petroleum company, they say, to discover and develop such minerals, if any, within a reasonable time from the date of the instrument. And it appearing without dispute in the testimony that no steps had been taken during the period of more than 10 years which elapsed between the date of said instrument and the date of the trial to discover such minerals, if any, they insist it appeared as a matter of law that the petroleum company and appellee as its assign, had breached such implied undertaking, and thereby forfeited all rights conferred on them by the instrument.
That the instrument evidenced a sale and was intended by the parties to operate as an absolute conveyance of the minerals appeared about as conclusively, it séems to us, as language could have made it appear. That intention, sufficiently shown, perhaps, by the recital that appellants, for the substantial consideration stated, had “granted, bargained, sold, and conveyed” all the minerals “in and under the land” to .the petroleum company, “to have and to hold * * * forever,” was emphasized and placed beyond question by the further' recital that] it was intended that the instrument should “have the effect to sever all the minerals in or under said land from the surface thereof and to sell and convey all such minerals.”
“A fee may pass by deed upon a condition subsequent to the same extent as though the condition did not exist, subject to the contingency of being defeated according to the condition.”
The argument ignores a difference which made the rule applicable" to the facts of the Daugherty Case and inapplicable to the facts of this rule to wit, that in the Daugherty Case the condition of defeasance was one expressed, in the instruments, while in this case, if there was an undertaking on the part of the petroleum company to discover and develop minerals in and under the land within a reasonable time, as claimed by appellants, it was an undertaking the law implied. It was expressly held by the Supreme Court in Grubb v. McAfee, 109 Tex. 527, 212 S. W. 464, that an undertaking of that kind should not be construed as a condition subsequent, failure to comply with which entitled the *875 grantor to a cancellation of tire contract, but should be construed as a covenant, a breach of which entitled the grantor to recover damages he was able to show he thereby suffered.
There is no error in the judgment; therefore it is affirmed.
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232 S.W. 873, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 519, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hynson-v-gulf-production-co-texapp-1921.