Jenkins v. Pure Oil Co.

53 S.W.2d 497
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 1, 1932
DocketNo. 11035.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 53 S.W.2d 497 (Jenkins v. Pure Oil 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.

Bluebook
Jenkins v. Pure Oil Co., 53 S.W.2d 497 (Tex. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

VAUGHAN, J.

This is an appeal prosecuted by Wallace Jenkins, Roy Jenkins, Myer Rabinowitz, M. E. Davis, and Mrs. Nettie Davis, as appellants, from a judgment rendered on February 14, 1931, in favor of the Pure Oil Company, a private corporation, appellee, against appellants and V. T. Davis, Mary Davis, and R. O. Wylie, defendants. Appellee pleaded the usual action of trespass to try title, and in addition thereto alleged that on June 9, 1927, V. T. Davis and wife, Mary Davis, executed an oil, gas, and mineral lease in favor *498 of one E. G. Lewis, conveying, in fee simple, oil, gas, and mineral, except a one-eighth royalty in, on, and under 199.8 acres of land in Van Zandt county, Tex., except ten acres sold to W. V. Slaton, and 50 acres sold to M. E. Davis, said tract of land being duly described by field notes; that said Lewis assigned said lease to appellee; that the appellants Roy Jenkins, Wallace Jenkins, and Myer Rabino-witz obtained an oil lease from appellants M. E. Davis and wife, Nettie Davis, covering 66 acres of land out of the 199.8 acre tract, and were attempting to drill a well thereon, and prayed for a writ of injunction restraining appellants from drilling on said land, and for judgment canceling the lease and any' claim of the appellants in and to the land. Appellants filed their motion to dissolve said writ of injunction, which was heard and granted by the court on July 10, 1930.

By their second amended original answer, appellants, in addition to a general demurrer, certain special exceptions, general denial, and plea of not guilty, alleged that they had developed said 66-acre tract for mineral pur-, poses, acting in good faith, and believing they had good and valid title thereto, and had made permanent and valuable improvements on said 66 acres of land, completing an oil well thereon, and equipping the same at a reasonable cost. The improvements so claimed to have been made were specified, with the aggregate costs thereof alleged to be the sum of $32,250. They prayed in the alternative that they have judgment- for the improvements so made in good faith. The defendants Y. T. Davis and Mary Davis filed their answer disclaiming any interest in the 66 acres of land involved in this suit, or'to the mineral right in, on, or under said land, and alleged that they did not own the land in controversy on June 9, 1927, when they executed and delivered the oil and gas lease; that such acreage was included in the lease to E. G. Lewis through error, and that since the discovery of said error they had refused to accept rentals covering said 66 acres, and had tendered back the nominal amount so received.

The evidence, without dispute, established the following facts, viz.: That on November 1, 1920, V. T. Davis and wife, Mary Davis, being the owners of the 199.8 acres of land described in the field notes in the mineral lease executed by them to E. G. Lewis, conveyed to their son, appellant M. E. Davis, the involved 66-acre tract out of said original tract, as shown by their deed of that date, which had been duly recorded prior to the execution of the mineral lease to Lewis. To sustain its cause of action, appellee assumed the position that on October 6, 1926, appellants M. E. Davis and wife, Nettie Davis, executed a deed to said Y. T. Davis, reconveying to him said 66 acres of land, whereby V. T. Davis became and was. the owne.r of the entire tract. when the oil and gas lease was executed by himself and wife to Lewis on June 9, 1927.

Appellants countered said contention by claiming that no such deed reconveying said 66 acres of land to Y. T. Davis was ever executed, acknowledged, or delivered, but, on the contrary, that appellants M. E. Davis and wife, Nettie Davis, remained the owners of said 66-acre tract’ of land at all times after the execution of the deed by V. T. Davis and wife to said M. E. Davis in 1920. The appellants Roy Jenkins and Wallace Jenkins also sought, in the alternative, to recover the value of the improvements made by them on said land whereby and on account thereof the value of the mineral lease on, as well as the value of the involved land, was enhanced by reason of the drilling and completing of a producing oil well upon said land, as alleged by them.

Following are, in effect, the special issues submitted and answers made thereto by the. jury:

(1) That M. E. Davis and wife on or about October 6, 1926, signed and acknowledged a deed of conveyance to V. T. Davis covering the 66 acres of land in controversy.
(2) That M. E. Davis and wife on or about said date delivered said deed to said V. T. Davis.
(3) That Roy Jenkins and Wallace Jenkins, acting in good faith and under an honest and reasonable belief that they had good title to the leasehold, drilled and equipped an oil well on said tract of land.
(4) That the reasonable cost of drilling said well was $15,000.
(5) That the reasonable cost of the necessary equipment of said oil well was $7,500.
(6) That the reasonable value of the well equipment which could be moved without injury or damage to the well and its operation was $7,500.
(7) That the value of the mineral lease on the 66 acres immediately before the drilling and equipping of the well thereon was $400 per acre.
(8) That the value of the mineral lease after the drilling and equipping of the well was $1,000 per acre.

Appellee and appellants respectively moved for judgment on said verdict. The court sustained appellee’s motion, and entered judgment in its favor against all of the adverse parties to the suit, vesting in it title and possession of the oil, gas, and mineral estate, except one-eighth royalty, in and to the involved 66-acre tract, and further provided that appellants recover nothing of appellee by reason of their plea of improvements in good faith, and accorded to appellant's the right to go upon''said tract and remove the equipment placed thereon by them.

It. is contended by appellants that tbie *499 court erred in not dismissing appellee’s suit, on the ground that it failed to introduce proof showing that a permit to do business in the state of Texas had been issued to it as a foreign corporation, or that a permit had been issued to it to establish a general or special office in the state.

In its first amended original petition, ap-pellee alleged: “That plaintiff is a foreign corporation, organized under and by virtue of the laws of the State of Ohio, having a permit to do business in the State of Texas, duly issued to it under and by virtue of the laws of said State, and with its home office and principal place of business in said State in the City of Port Worth, Tarrant County,” and also alleged that it owned the oil and gas lease in controversy, was in possession of the same, and that the defendants unlawfully dispossessed it of the premises; that Y. T. Davis and wife executed the oil and gas lease in question to E. G. Lewis; that E. G.

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53 S.W.2d 497, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jenkins-v-pure-oil-co-texapp-1932.