Mobil Oil Corporation, Formerly Socony Mobil Oil Company, Inc. v. Leonard J. Brennan Et Ux.

385 F.2d 951
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedDecember 4, 1967
Docket24260
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 385 F.2d 951 (Mobil Oil Corporation, Formerly Socony Mobil Oil Company, Inc. v. Leonard J. Brennan Et Ux.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mobil Oil Corporation, Formerly Socony Mobil Oil Company, Inc. v. Leonard J. Brennan Et Ux., 385 F.2d 951 (5th Cir. 1967).

Opinions

THORNBERRY, Circuit Judge:

Appellee, owner of the surface estate of a 3,009-acre ranch in Duval County, Texas, brought this diversity suit against the Mobil Oil Corporation, present owner of % of the mineral estate. By this suit, Mr. Brennan sought to compel Mobil to bury pipelines running over the surface of the land, to remove abandoned concrete foundations, and to pay damages for failure to bury pipelines and remove concrete foundations upon prior request. In overruling appellant’s motion for summary judgment, the district court held that appellee, as successor in title to the surface estate, could enforce the provisions of a mineral deed executed in 1926 by his predecessor A. Weil to appellant’s predecessor, the Magnolia Petroleum Company. At the conclusion of an extensive trial on the merits, the district court, sitting without a jury, held that the terms of the 1926 deed required appellant to bury its pipelines to a depth of at least twelve (12) inches below the surface of the land and to remove all abandoned concrete foundations. The judgment entered on August 15, 1966 ordered the company to satisfy these requirements “as rapidly as is reasonably possible” and further ordered it to pay damages in the amount of $5,660.83, plus interest. We affirm.

I.

By the 1926 mineral deed, A. Weil and his wife conveyed to Magnolia an undivided % interest in the oil, gas, and other minerals in the tract involved herein, together with the necessary surface rights. The Weils reserved a % interest in the oil, gas, and other minerals produced from the land and limited the surface rights given to Magnolia by language providing in pertinent part that ‘on Grantors’ request all pipe lines laid across any of said land to be tilled shall be placed below plow depth” and that, although Magnolia was granted such use of the surface as might be necessary, it “shall in no manner interfere with the use of lands for grazing purposes, except herein granted and stipulated.” By warranty deed dated December 28, 1959, Mr. Brennan acquired the surface estate from successors in title to the Weils. This deed reserved all minerals and surface rights for minerals and made the conveyance subject to the rights of Magnolia under the 1926 deed. A clause in the 1959 deed lists the particular surface rights reserved for the owner of the mineral estate, but the instrument does not contain the language employed by the Weils in 1926 to limit these rights. Finally, in 1965 Mobil acquired from the Weils’ trustee a conveyance purporting to grant the surface rights reserved by the 1959 deed. Thus, Mobil succeeded to the title originally held by Magnolia, and appellee succeeded to the title originally held by A. Weil. The primary question is whether appellee can enforce against Mobil the limitations on the mineral owner’s surface rights made express by the 1926 deed but not by the 1959 deed.

Appellant’s argument on its unsuccessful motion for summary judgment and before this Court is that the right to require the burial of pipelines and the right to prevent interference with grazing never passed to appellee, that these rights were not expressed in the 1959 deed to appellee and therefore remained with his grantor. By its line of reasoning, the right to enforce these limitations on the mineral owner and the concomitant right not to enforce them passed from appellee’s grantor to Mobil under the 1965 [953]*953conveyance.1 While this argument that the company acquired the right not to comply with the limitations in 1965 has the merit of ingenuity, the heart of its position is that appellee cannot enforce them because they were not contained in the 1959 deed by which he acquired the surface estate. The district court disagreed, taking the view that the limitations contained in the 1926 deed were covenants running with the land with the consequence that appellee acquired the right to enforce them as successor in title to the surface estate.

At an early date, Texas courts began to state the fundamental proposition that a covenant running with the land is one which touches or concerns the land and that such a covenant “accompanies a conveyance of the land, and passes from one purchaser to another, through each successive link in the chain of title.” Flanniken v. Neal, 1887, 67 Tex. 629, 4 S.W. 212; see Panhandle & S. F. Ry. Co. v. Wiggins, 161 S.W.2d 501 (Tex.Civ. App.—Amarillo 1942, writ ref’d. w o.m.); Beckham v. Ward County Irr. Dist., 278 S.W. 316 (Tex.Civ.App.—El Paso 1925, writ ref’d). The generalization that a covenant running with the land is one which touches or concerns the land was carefully explained by the late Judge Charles E. Clark:

If the promisor’s legal relations in respect to the land in question are lessened — his legal interest as owner rendered less valuable by the promise —the burden of the covenant touches or concerns that land; if the promisee’s legal relations in respect to that land are increased — his legal interest as owner rendered more valuable by the promise — the benefit of the covenant touches or concerns that land. It is necessary that this effect should be had upon the legal relations of the parties as owners of the land in question, and not merely as members of the community in general, such as taxpayers, or owners of other land, in order that the covenant may run. Thus, an agreement by the lessee to leave part of the leased land unploughed each year restricts the lessee’s privilege of user, while it gives a right benefiting the lessor in his reversion in the land by securing a crop rotation; hence both right and duty should run.

Clark, Real Covenants and Other Interests Which “Run With Land” 97 (2d ed. 1947). In the instant case, it is apparent that the original covenants by Magnolia to place pipelines below plow depth upon request and to refrain from interference with grazing made its interest in the land somewhat less valuable by restricting its use of the surface and at the same time made the Weils’ interest in the surface more valuable for ranching purposes. Hence both “right and duty should run” to the successive owners of the surface and mineral estates.

There may be cases for which the above analysis will not provide a satisfactory answer without considerable refinement, but the covenants involved in the instant case seem so clearly to relate to the land that we need not belabor the point. Further, there is no doubt that the requirement of privity of estates is satisfied, Panhandle & S. F. Ry. Co. v. Wiggins, 161 S.W.2d 501 (Tex.Civ.App. —Amarillo 1942, writ ref’d w. o. m.), since the parties to this litigation have succeeded to substantially the same legal interests in the land as were held by the original parties to the covenants. Though its language may have been too broad, we must agree with the district court’s conclusion that the limitations on the mineral owner’s surface rights “attached to the surface estate, and will remain with the same forever unless expressly detached therefrom by the sur[954]*954face owner” (R. 133). It is not necessarily true that covenants continue to run with the land until expressly abrogated, but in this case appellant does not argue that the covenants have ceased to run because they have always been disregarded or because conditions have so changed over the years as to make their enforcement unreasonable. See Morton v. Sayles, 304 S.W.2d 759 (Tex.Civ.App.

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385 F.2d 951, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mobil-oil-corporation-formerly-socony-mobil-oil-company-inc-v-leonard-ca5-1967.