Mobil Oil Corp. v. Shores

128 S.W.3d 718, 166 Oil & Gas Rep. 618, 2004 Tex. App. LEXIS 902, 2004 WL 177718
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 29, 2004
Docket2-00-430-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 128 S.W.3d 718 (Mobil Oil Corp. v. Shores) 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
Mobil Oil Corp. v. Shores, 128 S.W.3d 718, 166 Oil & Gas Rep. 618, 2004 Tex. App. LEXIS 902, 2004 WL 177718 (Tex. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinions

OPINION ON REHEARING

JOHN CAYCE, Chief Justice.

INTRODUCTION

This case involves interlocutory appeals from the statutory probate court’s order denying appellants’ pleas to the jurisdiction and motions to transfer venue. On our own motion, we withdraw our opinion of April 5, 2001 and substitute the following.1 The motion for rehearing filed by [720]*720Shell Cortez Pipeline Company, Shell C02 Company, Ltd., Shell Oil Company, Shell Western E & P Ine., and SWEPI LP (the “Shell appellants”) and the motion for rehearing and for en banc rehearing filed by appellees are denied as moot. We will dismiss the appeals in part for want of jurisdiction and vacate the probate court’s order in part for want of subject matter jurisdiction.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

The underlying litigation is a suit to recover under-paid carbon dioxide royalties. The appellees are: Gary Shores, John Barfield, and Frank Gibson, in their representative capacities as co-trustees of the Alicia L. Bowdle Trust (collectively the “Bowdle Trust”); William G. Kemp and Marie J. Bench, in their representative capacities as co-trustees of the Bernard M. Bench Family Trust (collectively the “Bench Family Trust”); Bonnie Lynn Whiteis; and William C. Armor, Jr. (hereinafter also referred to collectively as “ap-pellees”). Appellees brought suit in the probate court of Denton County, Texas against appellants Mobil Oil Corporation, Mobil Producing Texas & New Mexico, Inc., and Mobil Cortez Pipeline, Inc. (the “Mobil appellants”), the Shell appellants, and Cortez Pipeline Company (hereinafter also referred to collectively as “appellants”).2 Appellees are overriding royalty interest owners of a unitized carbon dioxide pool, the McElmo Dome Unit, in Colorado and claim that since 1982 appellants have under-paid royalties for carbon dioxide produced from that pool.

The Bowdle Trust is a Texas inter vivos trust with its principal place of business and situs of administration in Denton County, Texas. The Bench Family Trust is a Colorado inter vivos and charitable trust with its principal office located in Denver County, Colorado. Whiteis is a Texas citizen who resides in Wichita County, Texas. Armor is a citizen of Florida who resides in Martin County, Florida. Denton County is not the location of any appellant’s principal Texas office.

Appellants filed pleas to the probate court’s jurisdiction and motions to transfer venue to Harris County asserting, among other complaints, that the Bench Family Trust, Whiteis, and Armor were improperly joined in the lawsuit under former section 15.003 of the Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code.

After a hearing, the probate court signed a November 30, 2000 order denying appellants’ pleas to the jurisdiction and their motions to transfer venue. The court did not specify the basis for its ruling. Appellants then perfected their interlocutory appeals to this court.3

[721]*721ISSUES ON APPEAL

Appellants assert the probate court erred by denying their motions to transfer venue of the claims of the Bench Family Trust, Whiteis, and Armor because they did not independently establish proper venue in Denton County and their joinder in the Bowdle Trust suit was improper. The Mobil appellants also contend that the order denying the motions to transfer venue is void because the probate court has no subject matter jurisdiction over the claims of the Bench Family Trust, Whiteis, and Armor. In a cross-point, appellees contend that the interlocutory appeals should be dismissed for mootness and lack of jurisdiction, or, alternatively, abated and the case remanded to the probate court for clarification.

APPELLATE COURT JURISDICTION

Before reaching appellants’ complaints, we must first address appellees’ contention that this court lacks appellate jurisdiction over appellants’ interlocutory appeals.

Generally, a party may appeal only a final order or judgment.4 An interlocutory appeal from a nonfinal order or judgment is permitted only when authorized by statute.5 Because interlocutory appeal from an order denying a plea to the jurisdiction is available by statute only to governmental agencies,6 we agree with ap-pellees’ contention that we have no jurisdiction to review the probate court’s denial of appellants’ pleas to the jurisdiction under section 51.014(a)(8).

Interlocutory appeal is, however, available under former section 15.003(c) of the civil practice and remedies code from a ruling allowing or disallowing joinder of a plaintiff who is unable to independently establish venue.7 To be appealable under former section 15.003(c), the venue ruling must “necessarily determine” an intervention or joinder issue under this section.8 If the trial court’s order necessarily determines an intervention or joinder issue, we conduct an independent de novo review of the record to ascertain the correctness of that ruling.9 If, however, a joined plaintiff has properly asserted a legally cognizable theory supporting venue in the county of suit independently of any other plaintiff, review of the trial court’s denial of a motion to transfer venue concerning that plaintiff must wait until direct appeal following a final judgment.10

Based on the record before us, we conclude that neither the Bench Family Trust, Whiteis, nor Armor pleaded any venue facts that would independently establish proper venue in Denton County under a legally cognizable venue theory. Consequently, they are “person[s] who [are] unable to establish proper venue” under former section 15.003(a) and cannot intervene or be joined in this suit unless they each independently satisfy the four [722]*722joinder factors contained in former section 15.003(a).11 Furthermore, because the probate court denied appellants’ motions to transfer venue as to these parties, the probate court “necessarily determined” that these parties did each independently satisfy the intervention or joinder requirements of former section 15.003(a). As á result, we have jurisdiction under former section 15.003(c) over appellants’ interlocutory appeals of the probate court’s determination of the intervention or joinder issues relating to the Bench Family Trust, Whiteis, and Armor.

The Mobil appellants contend that the order determining the intervention or join-der issues relating to the Bench Family Trust, Whiteis, and Armor should be vacated and dismissed because the probate court lacks subject matter jurisdiction over the joined parties’ claims. Appellees contend that we have no authority to review the probate court’s subject matter jurisdiction in an interlocutory appeal brought under former section 15.003(c).12 We disagree.

In Shell Cortez Pipeline Co., an interlocutory appeal from the probate court’s order certifying a class action in the same case, we recently observed:

The Texas Supreme Court and numerous courts of appeals have ... repeatedly recognized that when an appellate court is granted jurisdiction to review an interlocutory order or judgment, that jurisdiction encompasses a review of the validity of the interlocutory order or judgment....

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Bluebook (online)
128 S.W.3d 718, 166 Oil & Gas Rep. 618, 2004 Tex. App. LEXIS 902, 2004 WL 177718, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mobil-oil-corp-v-shores-texapp-2004.