Mann v. Rio Bravo Oil Co.

107 S.W.2d 653, 1937 Tex. App. LEXIS 710
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 24, 1937
DocketNo. 2835.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 107 S.W.2d 653 (Mann v. Rio Bravo 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
Mann v. Rio Bravo Oil Co., 107 S.W.2d 653, 1937 Tex. App. LEXIS 710 (Tex. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinions

November 1, 1881, Martha Janes was the owner of the Douthitt 152-acre survey of land in Jefferson county, Tex. On that date she conveyed to the Sabine East Texas Railway Company, for railway purposes, a right of way 200 feet in width across the northeastern end of said survey. The Texas New Orleans Railroad Company succeeded to the rights of the Sabine East Texas Railway Company, and at all times herein involved has used said right of way for railway purposes.

March 4, 1884, by mesne conveyances, Jeff Chaison and J. M. Hebert became the owners of said 152 acre survey. December 14, 1894, Chaison and Hebert sold to the Gulf, Beaumont Kansas City Railway Company 100 acres off of the southwestern end of said tract, leaving them the northeast 52 acres across which the said Texas New Orleans Railroad right of way extended. Chaison died leaving surviving him a wife and several children.

On April 13, 1901, in due conformance with law, the Chaisons and Hebert, by written deed, duly partitioned between them the said 52 acres (which partition included the 200-foot right of way, Rio Bravo Oil Co. v. Weed [Tex. Civ. App.] 300 S.W. 171), by dividing the 52 acres into eight lots or parcels numbered 1 to 8. Lots 3 and 4 on the one side, and lots 5 and 6 on the other (opposite) bordered on the railroad track. Lots 1, 3, 5, and 7 were allotted to the Chaisons, and lots 2, 4, 6, and 8 to Hebert. For delineation of the 52 acre tract, as divided into the eight lots, see plat in Rio Bravo Oil Co. v. Weed (Tex. Civ. App.) 300 S.W. 171.

On April 17, 1901, Hebert conveyed to James F. Weed an undivided half of lots 2, 4, and 8, and specifically the southeast half of lot 6. Lot 6 contained 6.9 acres, so after the sale of the southeast half of lot 6 to Weed, Hebert had 3.45 acres remaining in the northwest half of said lot.

On April 24, 1901, Hebert conveyed to the Trenton Rock Oil Company a portion of his northwest half of lot 6 off of the east end, described by metes and bounds and as "containing one acre of land." This acre did not border the railroad track, but called to border on the western line of said right of way, that is the northeasterly line of the one-acre tract coincides with the southwesterly line of the railroad right of way. In other words the one-acre tract was entirely west of the right of way, bordering on the western line of the right of way.

On March 25, 1902, J. M. Hebert sold the remainder of the northwest half of lot 6 to J. B. Treadwell, describing it as 2.45 acres and being all of the northwest half of lot 6 save and except the one acre previously sold by him to the Trenton Rock Oil Company, and describing the said one acre by the same metes and bounds as in the deed to said oil company, and referred to the plat attached to the partition deed between him and the Chaisons wherein they had partitioned the 52 acres for location of lot 6. The portion sold Treadwell is not involved in the instant suit. By mesne conveyances J. M. Nearen became the owner of this Trenton Rock Oil Company acre on July 7, 1908. It was his separate property. He died intestate on July 22, 1909, leaving his wife, Mrs. J. M. Nearen, the present Jeanette Mann, and W. S. Nearen, Hal Nearen, Ollie Nearen, Annie Nearen Thompson, and Ida Nearen Stone (his brother and sisters), hereinafter referred to as the "Nearens," surviving him as his heirs at law. On January 10, 1910, Mrs. J. M. Nearen (now Mrs. Jeanette Mann) conveyed the one acre of land to W. D. Gordon, describing it by metes and bounds as in the deed from J. M. Hebert to the Trenton Rock Oil Company, and on April 6, 1914, W. D. Gordon reconveyed *Page 655 said acre of land to Mrs. J. M. Nearen by the same description.

April 27, 1917, Mrs. J. M. Nearen married Charles H. Mann, and in 1921, they moved to California. In the fall of 1925, oil was discovered near what was known as "Spindletop" in Jefferson county, and near this one acre of land, and on January 23, 1926, Mrs. Mann, joined by her husband, Charles H. Mann, executed and delivered to Thos. J. Baten an oil lease on said one acre of land, reserving a 1/8 royalty of all oil produced and saved from the leased premises. This lease after describing the one acre by metes and bounds as in the prior deeds conveying same, contained this provision: "being all of the lands, and it being lessors intention hereby to lease all of the lands, owned by lessor in said surveys or any of them." The lease specially provided that it could be assigned.

On April 14, 1926, Baten in writing assigned the lease to the Gulf Production Company, reserving to himself a 1/24 overriding royalty in the oil and gas produced.

The Rio Bravo Oil Company, asserting its right claimed by virtue of a lease to it by the Texas New Orleans Railroad Company covering its right of way, took possession of the property here involved (4/10 of an acre in the right of way) and was developing same, producing oil in large quantities.

On April 30, 1926, the Nearens brought suit in trespass to try title, No. 26612 in the Fifty-Eighth district court of Jefferson county, against the Manns, et al., for the "one acre of land" known as the Trenton Rock Oil Company acre, describing it as it was described in the several deeds of conveyance up to the deed from W. D. Gordon in his reconveyance heretofore mentioned to Mrs. Nearen, The Gulf Production Company answered that it claimed no interest in the land in controversy other than its lease rights under a lease from the Manns to Thos. J. Baten dated January 23, 1926, and which lease was assigned to it by said Baten, and prayed that if plaintiffs in the suit recovered, that the judgment ratify and confirm its said lease. Baten plead his overriding royalty interest and defendant King Jackson plead the interest conveyed to them by the Nearens. June 11, 1926, an agreed judgment was entered in said cause awarding to Mrs. Mann one-half of the land in controversy, and to the Nearens and King Jackson, their vendees, the other half. The judgment also, in all things confirmed, ratified and established the lease from Mrs. Mann to Baten and by him assigned to the Gulf Production Company as valid and binding upon all parties to the suit, they having ratified and confirmed same, and agreed to the proportions of the royalty to be paid to each, setting out same.

On July 8, 1926, James F. Weed and the Gulf Production Company filed suit, No. 26969, in the Sixtieth district court of Jefferson county, in trespass to try title against the Rio Bravo Oil Company and the T. N. O. Railroad Company, and to enjoin the Rio Bravo Oil Company from developing for oil the railroad right of way adjacent to Weed's land (43/100 of an acre in the right of way) a part of southeast half of lot 6 before mentioned. An agreement was entered into by the parties and filed in the cause by which the defendant parties should continue the operations and the interests of the parties adjudged and concluded according to the judgment of the court of last resort to which the case might be taken.

On July 22, 1926, the instant suit No. 27039 was filed in the Sixtieth district court of Jefferson county by Mrs. Jeanette Mann, joined by her husband, Charles H. Mann (hereinafter referred to as the Manns), W. S. Nearen, M. F. Nearen, L. P. Nearen, Al Nearen, W. L. Nearen, Ollie Nearen, Anna Thomason, joined by her husband, J. H. Thomason, Addie Stone, joined by her husband, Early Stone (hereinafter referred to as the Nearens), Thomas J. Baten, S. M. King, John C. Jackson, J. E. Broussard, and the Gulf Production Company, against the Rio Bravo Oil Company, Texas New Orleans Railroad Company, Jeff Chaison Townsite Company, Marrs McLean, J. M. Hebert, and Chas. J.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
107 S.W.2d 653, 1937 Tex. App. LEXIS 710, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mann-v-rio-bravo-oil-co-texapp-1937.