Magnolia Petroleum Co. v. King

271 S.W. 201
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 10, 1925
DocketNo. 10910. [fn*]
StatusPublished

This text of 271 S.W. 201 (Magnolia Petroleum Co. v. King) 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
Magnolia Petroleum Co. v. King, 271 S.W. 201 (Tex. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinions

DUNKLIN, J.

As shown in the opinion of this court appearing in the case of Bearden v. Schenecker, 240 S. W. 996, there was a judicial partition of a tract of land, a part of the Juana Selinas survey in Eastland county, which was known as the W. A. Bearden tract, between,the widow of W. A. Bearden and their children. In the decree of partition, a tract of 15 acres was set aside to Mrs. Lizzie Queen, one of those children. That tract was described by metes and bounds in which the field notes fixed the ■north boundary as coincident with the south boundary of another tract owned by N. E. Dabney. Mrs. Lizzie Queen, joined by her husband, executed an oil and gas lease upon the. tract so set apart to her. In a suit between the assignees of that lease as plaintiffs and the widow and children of W. A. Beard-en, it was determined that the tract so set apart to Mrs. Lizzie Queen in fact included 15.56 acres instead of 15 acres as designated in the partition decree; the .56 acres'being in an irregular shape lying north of the plat of the 15 acres, shown as tract 2 in the plat, which tract was set apart to Mrs. Lizzie Queen.

The suit reported in 240 S. W. 996, was a controversy between the widow and heirs of W. A. Bearden and the assignees of the oil and gas lease above mentioned; as to whether or not the 15-acre tract extended northward to the south boundary line of 'the Dab-ney tract. In other words, the controversy in that suit between the parties was whether or not the irregular strip containing .56 of an acre, lying north of the tract that was decreed to Mrs. Lizzie Queen, was in fact included in that tract. That the disputed strip was included in and covered by that tract was finally settled by the decree rendered in that suit, which was affirmed by this court.

In the oil and gas lease executed by Mrs. Lizzie Queen and her husband, referred to above, a royalty interest of one-eighth of all the oil and gas that might be produced from the land by the lessees and assignees thereof was reserved to Mrs. Queen. Thereafter, on May 16, 1919, she and her husband executed a deed, which was duly recorded in the deed records of Eastland county, conveying to P. B. King an undivided one-fourth of that royalty interest. The oil and gas lease was executed by Mrs. Queen and her husband to L. O. Turman, and, by successive assignments from Turman and other parties claiming through him, Paul W. Smith, A. T. Jergins, and George H. Campbell became the final owners of the lease.

On June 30, 1919, Mrs. Lizzie Queen, joined by her husband, executed to T. P. Gris-ham an oil and gas lease on the .56 excess acre, which was the disputed strip in controversy determined in Bearden v. Schenecker, reported in 240 S. W. 996. Grisham .assigned that lease to the Alamo-Duke Oil Company, who drilled a well on that strip which produced large quantities of oil. The Magnolia Petroleum Company was engaged in the business of common carrier, transporting oil from wells in that vicinity, and as such common carrier received and transported a large quantity of oil that was run from the well drilled by the Alamo-Duke Oil Company on the disputed strip of .56 acre, as well as from the wells drilled on the 15 acres lying south of the disputed strip, and described in .the plat as lot 2, set apart to Mrs. Lizzie Queen in the partition decree.

The present suit was instituted by P. B. King against the Magnolia Petroleum Company to recover one-fourth of the one-eighth royalty interest of Mrs. Lizzie Queen in the oil which the defendant company received and transported from the Alamo-Duke well; and, from a judgment in plaintiff’s favór for [202]*202the sum of $3,061.20 as plaintiff’s portion of that oil, the defendant has prosecuted this appeal.

The plaintiff’s suit was based upon an instrument in writing, dated August 9, 1919, which was accepted by the defendant company and signed by Paul W. Smith, A. T. Jergins, E. M. Seheneeker, Lizzie Queen, W. D. Queen, her husband, and F. B. King. The agreement was designated as a “division order,” addressed to the Magnolia Petroleum Company, and reads in part as follows:

“The undersigned certify and guarantee that they are the legal owners of Paul W. Smith et al. Wells No. 1 and up on Lizzie Queen farm, more particularly described as follows: Lot No. 2 containing 15 acres of land set apart to Mrs. Lizzie Queen in the partition of the W. A. Bearden lands, in Eastland county, state of Texas, including the royalty interest, and you are authorized to receive oil from said wells and pay the owners for their respective interests stated to be as follows:

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Related

Bearden v. Schenecker
240 S.W. 996 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1922)
Coffin v. Douglass
61 Tex. 406 (Texas Supreme Court, 1884)
Smith v. Brown
1 S.W. 573 (Texas Supreme Court, 1886)

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Bluebook (online)
271 S.W. 201, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/magnolia-petroleum-co-v-king-texapp-1925.