MacDonald v. Follett

175 S.W.2d 671, 1943 Tex. App. LEXIS 649
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 14, 1943
DocketNo. 11551.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 175 S.W.2d 671 (MacDonald v. Follett) 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
MacDonald v. Follett, 175 S.W.2d 671, 1943 Tex. App. LEXIS 649 (Tex. Ct. App. 1943).

Opinions

MONTEITH, Chief Justice.

This action in trespass to try title was brought by appellees, Lewis H. Follett and Mrs. Lottie B. Follett, against appellants, R. D. MacDonald, his wife and others, and certain Oil Companies, to recover overriding royalties on 570 acres of land, a part of the M. B. Nuchols League in Brazoria County, Texas.

In addition to a statutory trespass to try title action, appellees pled in detail the grounds upon which they based their claim for the recovery of a ⅜4 'overriding royalty in the land in controversy, and an additional undivided ½ of ⅜4 overriding royalty on said land which had been conveyed to appellant R. D. MacDonald by certain oil companies.

Appellants answered by defensive pleas and by a denial under oath of an alleged joint adventure agreement between Fol-lett and MacDonald to divide said overriding royalties. They specially pled the statute of frauds against said alleged agreement; that there was no consideration to support it; that it was against public policy, void, and unenforceable, and that it had been rescinded by the parties. They also pled specially the four-year statute of limitation, laches, stale demand, and estoppel.

The case was tried before the court with a jury. At the conclusion of the evidence the plaintiffs and both groups of defendants filed their separate motions for an instructed verdict. The court granted the motion of the Harrison-Abercrombie group, and the motion of appellants as to the additional ⅛ interest in a ⅜⅛ undivided royalty, but overruled the motion of appellants as to the ½ interest in the ⅝2 overriding royalties, and as to that interest granted the motion of appellees and instructed a verdict in their favor. Verdict was rendered and judgment entered in accordance with such instructions.

The record shows that by instrument dated April 23, 1934, appellant R. D. MacDonald, through his secretary, J. L. Poutra, acquired from F. W. Mueller and his associates, the oil, gas, and mineral leases on the 570 acres in controversy, consisting of two tracts of 240 and 330 acres, respectively. The leases in question were ordinary corn-mercial leases, with a primary term of three years. No development was had under these-original leases and they expired on April 23, 1937. Said leases had been assigned by appellant, R. D. MacDonald, to the Harrison-Abercrombie oil interests during the year 1934. Prior to said assignment, R. D. MacDonald had caused J. L. Poutra, in whose name the leases had been taken, to assign to Lewis H. Follett a ⅝2 overriding royalty under said leases, with the understanding that Follett would assign the ½ of the ⅜2 interest, so assigned, to him, MacDonald. The %i overriding royalty retained by Follett was conveyed to him as attorney’s fees or compensation for his legal services to the owners of the land. The title to said %i undivided royalty interest remained in Follett until the expiration of said leases on April 23, 1937. On April 2, 1937, R. D. MacDonald acquired through J. L. Poutra new or top leases on the 570 acres of land in controversy for a three-year period, at an increased bonus and increased yearly rentals. Shortly after these 1937 leases were acquired, appellee Follett asserted a claim to a ⅜4 overriding royalty under them and demanded a conveyance of this interest from MacDonald. MacDonald refused to assign this interest to Follett. On or about April 12, 1937, these leases were assigned by Poutra to Harrison-Abercrombie. Pou-tra retained a ½2 overriding royalty in the leases, which he later transferred to MacDonald. After the execution of said 1937 leases, no development having been done under them, MacDonald on or about October 10, 1938, purchased from the Mueller interests new or top leases on said lands to begin on April 2, 1940, at the expiration of the 1937 leases. These leases were assigned by MacDonald to Harrison-Aber-crombie on June 2, 1939, MacDonald reserving to himself a ⅝2 non-participating overriding royalty. The first oil produced from said land was produced under these last mentioned leases.

The 1934 leases were made by J. L. Pou-tra as lessee on April 23, 1934. They expired, by their own terms, in the absence of production or drilling operations, on April 23, 1937. The 1937 leases were dated April 2, 1937. They were made .to J. L. Poutra as lessee and also expired by their own terms on April 2, 1940, in the absence of production or drilling operations.

The 1938 leases were made to R. D. MacDonald, lessee. They were dated October *674 10, 1938, and their primary term was for a period of two years from April 2, 1940. The overriding royalty interests involved in this suit are based upon and grow out of the 1938 leases upon which production was had.

The consideration paid to the lessors for the 1934 leases was $1,710. The leases provided for a yearly payment during the primary term of $1.50 per acre in lieu of development. These payments were made by the Oil Companies.

The consideration paid to the lessor for the 1937 leases was $2,280. The cash consideration for each of these leases was paid by the check of R. D. MacDonald.

The first drilling operations were shown to have been begun on May 30, 1941, after the 1937 leases had expired by their own terms.

Appellees contend that R. D. MacDonald and Lewis H. Follett were tenants in common in the ownership of the royalty interest involved herein, in that each owned a ⅜4 royalty interest carved out of the ⅞ working interest in the 1934 leases, under such circumstances that each occupied such a fiduciary relationship to the other that, as a matter of law, the action of appellant MacDonald in taking additional mineral leases on the same property and retaining therein a ⅜2 overriding royalty in himself, inured to the benefit of appellee Follett and constituted appellant, R. D. MacDonald, a trustee of an undivided ½ interest in the royalty retained by MacDonald.

It is now well settled that overriding royalties similar to those held by MacDonald and Follett under said 1934 leases were real property and that they, as royalty owners thereunder, were joint owners or joint tenants in the land in question. Veal v. Thomason, 138 Tex. 341, 159 S.W.2d 472, and cases therein cited.

While there is a general rule in this state that the purchase by a joint tenant of an outstanding title in the common property inures to the benefit of his coten-ant, it is the settled law that this rule does not forbid one joint tenant or cotenant from acquiring his cotenant’s share in the common property where it is shown that the sale was not the result of collusion and that the property brought a fair price. This exception to the general rule is based on the fact that a cotenant is under no legal or moral obligations to protect the other owners of the common property in their enjoyment thereof. Vaughn v. Kiesling, Tex.Civ.App., 150 S.W.2d 435; 11 Tex. Jur. 470.

It is also held that the general rule, above referred to, has no application where the claimants are asserting hostile claims against each other to the common property, in which case either party may buy the real title for himself (Niday v. Cochran, 42 Tex.Civ. 292, 93 S.W. 1027; 62 Corpus Juris, 461), and that, in order for the general rule to apply, there must be a relation of mutual trust and confidence between the parties.

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Bluebook (online)
175 S.W.2d 671, 1943 Tex. App. LEXIS 649, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/macdonald-v-follett-texapp-1943.