JOHN R. BROWN, Circuit Judge:
This case is another chapter in the litigation arising out of the recent slant hole oil episode in the East Texas field, this time involving two parties innocent of any purposeful wrongdoing. The question here is whether the slanted-on oil company may recover from a financial institution the proceeds of the stolen oil received by it from the purchasing pipelines in payment of loans and production payments made to or purchased from the slant-holing operator. There are two subsidiary questions. One is whether the Texas two-year Statute of Limitations, Vernon’s Ann.Tex.Civ.Stat. art. 5526 (1958), applies to limit the oil company’s recovery to proceeds received during the two-year period immediately preceding the filing of this action. The other is whether the financial institution must be given credit for the amount it received but paid over to its debtor pursuant to the mortgage or production payment agreement, such amount being in excess of the required monthly payments. We have concluded that the Trial Court was correct in holding Southwestern Life liable for conversion to the extent of all proceeds received during the two-year period. We therefore affirm.
Pan American and Soeony Mobil,1 leaseholders on the east side of the field brought this action for conversion2 of oil and gas beneath their tracts against (1) the operator (H. L. Long) of the Long lease adjoining them to the west, (2) the owners of various interests in the Long lease (W. W. Long, Charles R. Stubblefield, and Mrs. Sarah Long Erickson), and (3) Southwestern Life and Valley Royalty.3 The jury in response to special interrogatories found that of the eleven wells on the Long lease, three were deviated and bottomed under the Pan Am lease and one, under the Soeony lease; that all production from the Long lease came from the Pan AmSocony leases; that the slanted wells were drilled with Long’s knowledge; that operator Long had fraudulently concealed the slant drilling from Pan Am; and that Pan Am had no actual knowledge of facts which would have put them to inquiry, nor through the exercise of [214]*214reasonable diligence would they have known of the slant drilling.
With this foundation, the Trial Judge entered judgment against Operator Long for the market value of % of the oil produced over the entire 13-year period of operation of the Long lease against the other lease interest owners for the amounts they actually received during this same period; and against SWL for amounts received by it during the last two years (with interest, $232,145.42).4 Because of Operator Long’s fraudulent concealment and Pan Am’s not being put on notice, the statute of limitations was tolled as to him, but not as to SWL. Only Pan Am and SWL have appealed.
The Loan and Production Payment Transactions
Between 1955 and 1960, SWL, by itself and through its subsidiary Valley Royalty, engaged in a series of loan and production payment transactions 5 with the owners of the operating interest in the Long lease. The first was a loan of $140,000 by SWL to H. L. Long which a year later was renewed and increased to $221,366.87. Both of these loans were secured by essentially identical deeds of trust (mortgages) on Long’s interest in the leasehold. These instruments in addition to restricting Long’s actions through various covenants 6 and giving [215]*215SWL various and considerable powers with regard to the operation of the well,7 as an additional security, contained an “assignment of runs” clause,8 whereun[216]*216der all proceeds from the sale of oil and gas would go directly from the purchasing pipeline to SWL. Under the provisions of the initial and renewal mortgages, 80% of .the amount received from the pipeline each month would be applied to retire the debt, any excess, under ordinary conditions, going to the debtor-Long. In the event 80% came to less than a fixed monthly figure ($1,963.00 in the first instrument), the percentage retained by SWL could be escalated as high as necessary to reach the specified amount, up to 100%.9
The “assignment of runs” clause contained a direction by the “grantor”-Long to any purchaser (pipeline) to pay all proceeds to SWL.10 In addition, a separate division order to the pipeline was executed by Long and SWL which recited that production having been transferred, credit should be given SWL for oil extracted from the Long lease. The division order, executed on a pipeline company form, declared the undersigned to be the “legal owners of the interest” and warranted their title thereto. Paragraph 4 then purported to dispose of the oil:
“4. In the absence of written agreement to the contrary, oil received under this division order shall become your property when delivered to said pipeline company, and shall be paid for to the party or parties according to the divisions of interest shown above * *
By a stamped clause above its signature, SWL made the express disclaimer “without warranty of any kind either expressed or implied.” When the loan was renewed and enlarged, the same division order was continued in effect.
There were several production payment transactions, the principal one presumably being in the form, or to achieve the effect, of the customary ABC transaction.11 H. L. Long first conveyed his interest in the leasehold to Stubblefield re[217]*217serving a production payment equal to 90% of the production until he had received, free of expense, $190,000 plus interest12 and specified taxes. On the same day, Long then transferred this production payment to Valley Royalty in ex-change for $190,000. Valley Royalty borrowed this amount from SWL giving as security a deed of trust13 on the production payment which contained an assignment of runs similar to the one previously described in the SWL-Long transaction. All four parties (Stubble-field, Long, Valley Royalty and SWL) [218]*218executed a division order,14 again similar to the one previously described, directing the pipeline to make payment for the oil it purchased to SWL (90%) and Stubble-field (10%). About a year and a half later, Valley Royalty assigned the production payment to SWL in exchange for cancellation of the debt and the deed of trust.
Thus the end result was that SWL stood in the shoes of the original Grantor-Owner of the reserved production payment. It had the same rights to payment as did Long and all of the obligations which were binding on the Grantee Stubblefield inured to its benefit. Although the production payment was out of 90% of the production, the conveyance prescribed that under ordinary conditions 85% of the proceeds would be applied to the production payment, so long as 85% was equal to $2,800 for each month (any excess going to the Grantee Stubblefield). If it was not, then the amount to be retained and applied could go as high as 90%. If 90% was less than $2,800 for any month, the deficiency was recoverable in future months by raising the percentage of the proceeds retained to 90%. This rather elaborate system of payment could be laid aside at any time, however, by the simple expedient of SWL giving Stubblefield 30 days’ notice that it intended to retain the full 90% reserved.15
The activities of Grantee Stubblefield as a co-owner and the operator of the lease were seriously restricted by numerous covenants in the reservation of the production payment. In addition to limiting the Grantee’s own actions,16 [219]*219paragraph 10 of the covenants gave SWL, as the owner of the production payment, the right, upon determining that the property was not being operated in a prudent manner, to take over complete operation of the well.17 The other loan and production payment transactions18 were substantially similar in form and content19 to those described above.
I.
Conversion
In this case, ascertainment of the applicable legal rules governing the tort of conversion presents no real difficulty, and the problem is whether under these circumstances, conversion is made out. Although the formula has been variously worded by the Courts of Texas, the fundamentals of conversion have been fairly consistently defined. In its brief SWL states a definition which apparently has garnered wide acceptance. Conversion is
« * -* * the unlawful and wrongful exercise of dominion, ownership, or control by one person over the property of another, to the exclusion of [220]*220the same rights by the owner, *
France v. Gibson, Tex.Civ.App., 1907, 101 S.W. 536.20
From all definitions encountered the rubric seems to be some distinct act of dominion or control over the personal property of another.21 The convertor may either have actual or constructive possession of the property.22 Although the act of control or dominion must be positive and affirmative23 (mere non-feasance will not do), a wrongful or fraudulent intent or purpose is not required,24 and the presence of good faith in the convertor is relevant only on the issue of damages.25 Only where the owner is seeking to recover the actual property itself rather than the value thereof, or with more particular reference to the slant hole cases, where the slanted-on owner seeks recovery from the adjoining working interest owner, who in developing and operating the lease has incurred “costs of production”26 does the presence of good faith mitigate or alter the recovery.27
The question then, one of pure law, is whether by the receipt and disposition of the sales proceeds from the pipeline purchaser pursuant to the terms' and conditions of the mortgages and production payment instruments, assignments of runs, and the division orders— all of which invested SWL with the broadest operational powers — there is present the necessary exercise of dominion or control over the property of Pan Am by SWL to constitute conversion.
To vary the facts slightly, if under the terms of a mortgage SWL had actually, physically received the oil— either directly or through a specifically designated agent — and then made some disposition of it, even though the funds were applied in payment of the note, SWL concedes, as it must, that it would be liable for conversion.
But since this did not physically take place, SWL insists throughout its several briefs that this case must be treated as one where the thief sells the stolen property and then pays the proceeds to an innocent third party on a debt, and the general rule that the wronged owner in his action for conversion can only trace the property, not the proceeds,28 applies to prevent recovery.
[221]*221But the case cannot be so viewed. Of course, from the standpoint of benefit, SWL although exercising a different and perhaps lesser control over the oil, has nevertheless been benefited in the same manner as though it had obtained actual possession of the oil and then disposed of it. But this may not be pressed too far. For the nature or amount of the benefit to the party accused of conversion is not decisive because had the person who stole the oil simply sold it to a third party and then paid the proceeds to SWL on a debt, there being no mortgage assignment of runs plus a division order and the like, there would be no conversion by SWL. What is critical is the nature and degree of control over the property in question.
But before examining the nature and sufficiency of control as such, the analogy of the simple case of a debtor using proceeds of stolen property to pay a debt is a long way from the situation here involved. Pursuing this approach, the case is more like that in which T, the thief, pledges or mortgages stolen property as security for a loan from C, the creditor, who thereafter obtains and applies on the debt the proceeds of a foreclosure sale. The Holly concept of the negotiability of currency would hardly protect C against a conversion claim by 0, the rightful owner.
But the case easily satisfies the requirement of control. Here SWL’s control over the property, though less than actual possession as mentioned above, is far more extensive than that which attaches to whatever proceeds a debtor may have in a simple creditor-debtor relationship. Here we are confronted with an elaborate and sophisticated scheme of financing bearing the marks of the careful hand of knowledgeable counsel, obviously designed primarily to securely bind up and protect the financial institution’s investment in an enterprise having its own known hazards and risks, both legal and operational.29' In concluding that SWL exercised enough dominion or control over Pan Am’s property to be held for conversion, we focus primarily on three things, which both the deeds of trust and production payments have in common. These are the covenants, the assignments of runs, and the division orders.
The Covenants
A casual reading of the covenants30 reveals that SWL had considerable power over both the person of the operator and the lease itself. In the deeds of trust (note 6, supra), the mortgagor covenanted, among other things, to keep the lease in full effect and to operate it continuously in accord with government agency regulations, to pay promptly all bills, to prevent materialmen’s or laborer’s liens from arising, to pay promptly all taxes and other assessments, to keep and maintain — and not remove — any and all improvements and personal property located on the lease, and to permit SWL full inspection. Should the pipeline fail to> make payment promptly, SWL had the power to change connections and designate another purchaser (note 8, supra).
And further in the production payment instrument (note 16, supra), the operator was bound to maintain, preserve, and renew all rights of way and easements necessary to production, to replace any damaged lease property including the obligation to insure with such carrier and in [222]*222such amount as was satisfactory with SWL.
In all instruments there was provision for SWL, upon the failure of the obligated party to perform properly any covenant, to take over the lease and do whatever was necessary to operate the wells to obtain and sell the production (see notes 7, 17, and 19, supra). The operative language in the instruments indicates that it would take only slight nonperformance to trigger this power, allowing SWL to come in to run the whole show, if it chose to do so. Under the terms of the Long Mortgage, SWL was empowered to take over should Mortgagor-Long “at any time fail to properly operate the mortgaged properties in the manner required herein” (note 7, supra). In the long production payment instruments, SWL was given the express power to determine itself that the property was not being “operated im a prudent manner,” and then to take over all aspects of operation31 (note 17, supra). Likewise, the W. W. Long and Sarah Long Erickson carved-out production payment instruments provide that on the Grantor-Assignor’s failure after 30 days’ notice to “strictly” comply with all “covenants, obligations, promises and undertakings,” SWL may “take over, manage, develop and operate” the lease, and “sell all of the oil, gas and other hydrocarbons produced * * * [from the lease] * * * ” and “ * * * apply the proceeds * * * to the liquidation of the Production Payment * * *
The right to take over and operate the lease, selling the production and applying the proceeds in the specified manner, involved far more substantial dominion and control over the mortgaged property and its yield than if SWL had been limited to the Trustee’s outcry atop the courthouse steps. And the fact that these powers to take over the lease were not exercised does not detract from the substantiality of the control which these powers gave SWL over Long,32 who, in turn, was in control of all the lease operations. To the contrary, the pudding’s eating proved the wisdom of those who conceived and those who executed this intricate arrangement which allowed SWL to profit with safety — or would have, had the underlying security not been “hot.”
The Assignments of Runs and the Division Orders
The assignments of runs (see notes 8, 13 and 19, supra) in express terms are an absolute conveyance to SWL, for a limited purpose, of the minerals “saved and sold” or the “proceeds” of the minerals “saved and sold”, or both, from the Long lease. In addition to this terminology, there is also language directing the purchasing pipeline to pay the proceeds to SWL, according to its designated fractional interest, until notified to cease by SWL. The function of the division orders (see note 14 and in text following note 10, supra) was to put this conveyance and direction into practical effect.
As previously outlined, these division orders were executed by all parties having an interest in the production and instructed the pipeline as to the parties entitled to payment. The pipeline protected itself by obtaining a warranty that the parties who appeared on the order were in fact the legal owners of the interest in question or entitled to receive the designated payment for the oil. That SWL qualified its signature with the phrase — “without warranty of any kind either expressed or implied” — is of no significance. This limitation, perhaps effective to protect SWL from some claims by the pipeline, can have no effect in this suit by the owner of the stolen oil, who, of course, was not a party to the division order. More importantly, although SWL did not affirmatively warrant its title, it did at least represent that it was [223]*223entitled to payment for the oil as between itself and the purchaser. Moreover, Pan Am does not seek recovery on a theory of warranty, but rather of conversion, and the fact that the division order, as to SWL, was not a warranty of title, does not keep it from being a spectacularly significant indicia of the exercise of substantial dominion and control over the oil by SWL. In the business world at least, the sale and the asserted right to receive payment are the strongest indication of control.
In answer to Plaintiffs’ conversion theory, SWL urges alternatively (1) that the division order does not amount to a contract to sell any oil, or (2) if it is a sale contract, it purports to sell and transfer only that oil which was produced from the Long lease, and not any of that produced from Pan Am’s adjacent lease. Therefore, it argues, under either view, the division order is no evidence either of constructive possession, of control or the right to control, of any of Pan Am’s property.
First, as to the nature of division orders in general, what judicial statements there are refer to other kinds of situations. The Texas Supreme Court extended its “error refused” imprimatur to Stanolind Oil & Gas Co. v. Terrell, Tex.Civ.App., 1944, 183 S.W.2d 743, which contained the statement that “A division order is ordinarily the contract under which the production is purchased or accepted for transportation by the pipeline company” (183 S.W.2d at 745). SWL, however, relies strongly on Smith v. Liddell, 1963, Tex., 367 S.W.2d 662, where the Supreme Court, with a different question before it, said a division order conveys no interest. The problem in Smith was whether, as between the grantor and grantee of a fractional royalty interest, a division order which described more land than it should have amounted to a contract under which the grantee’s rights were expanded to include the additional production. The Supreme Court answered in the negative that a division order was merely a direction to the pipeline telling it whom to pay, and was revocable. But under this decision there was no question that as to the oil produced and paid for in the past, the terms of the division order controlled. Moreover, Smith did not present to the Supreme Court the necessity of ruling on the nature of a division order as between the transferors of the oil and the purchasing pipeline. We therefore believe that with regard to this latter context, the law of Texas is that a division order is the operative instrument of transfer, whether called a contract or not, and until revoked is binding on the parties, who thereunder declare their present ability and intent to transfer, sell, or otherwise dispose of the oil to the pipeline, and their entitlement to payment for this same transfer. Indeed, SWL’s right to revoke the division order is perhaps the strongest proof of its real control.
SWL’s second argument is based on a technical, literal reading of the instruments which refer to and purport to transfer only oil produced from the Long lease (see notes 8, 13, and 14, supra). Under this view the matter of critical importance is whether the language of the assignment of runs or the division order was in terms of oil in and under the lease rather than in terms of oil produced from certain wells on the lease — no conversion in the former, but conversion in the latter. In our case the language takes more of a middle course 33 [224]*224and might pose some problems of construction for' situations in which the precise wording would be the critical factor.34
But the answer to this case is not to be found in a literal reading of these precise words. This argument overlooks the glaring fact that all of the oil for which SWL was paid — and which funds it has retained or disbursed to other than Pan Am — came from Pan Am’s lease. Of course SWL never intended to get mixed up with stolen oil. But on the natural assumption that oil coming out of a well on a lease was oil coming from that lease, it is obvious that what SWL was really after was to secure its interest by getting its hands on the proceeds of whatever was produced from the Long lease. Oil, and the proceeds from the sale of oil, was the indispensable element. SWL, a life insurance company under heavy duties to policy holders and stockholders as well, had to have security for the loans and a real interest in production as to production payments it acquired. It was oil which Long would produce ostensibly from this lease, not Long’s personal credit which made the transaction either economically attractive or feasible. It is perfectly understandable that SWL, a reputable institution, disclaims any purpose of intending to acquire an interest in oil owned, not by Long, but by others. But while preserving its honor and integrity as a proposition of initial intent, it does just that when it seeks to retain the benefits received directly from sales of stolen oil, made under its direction and control.35
II.
Credit For Conduit Disbursements
SWL asserts that if it is found guilty of conversion, its liability should be reduced by $100,085.18, this being the amount SWL received but did not retain. After satisfying its requirements as permitted under the terms of the deeds of trust or production payments, SWL paid this sum over to the other interest owners. The argument is that under the terms of the respective agreements (see notes 9 and 15, supra), SWL had no right to retain these funds and occupied the position of a mere conduit. But, as we explained earlier (see in text accompanying notes 9 and 15, supra), this is only part of the picture. If all went well and there was sufficient monthly production, so that the amount received from the pipeline was above the stated mínimums, then SWL was to retain only 80% under the mortgage or 85% under the production payment. However, should production lag to where 80% or 85% fell below the fixed monthly minimum figure, then SWL, under the terms of the respective contracts, had the right to exercise the great advantage of retaining the full amount received from the pipeline— 100% as to the mortgage, the full 90% as to the production payment. This process could be continued indefinitely— as long as was necessary for SWL to get its full share and to protect its contingent interests.
Secondly, SWL’s right to retain the full amount was an extremely valuable complement to its power, under the circumstances delineated in the covenants, to take over complete operation of the well. Besides incurring operational expenses, SWL might pay taxes or litigate as it saw fit in the best interest of the lease, and in such event, access to the full amount of the proceeds was of great advantage to it.
[225]*225To protect itself, as it properly could do, SWL armed itself with broad powers. These powers were exercisable in the first instance through covenants imposing substantial operational obligations on the mortgagor or grantee of the working interest under production payment conveyances. Backing up performance by those parties was the right of SWL to take them over itself. And adding additional economic sanctions was this valuable right to retain money to reimburse itself for the cost of such operations. SWL was entitled not merely to reimbursement — a right which depended on the obligor’s willingness or financial ability to perform, and the prospect of litigation to coerce it. SWL was given intial custody of the funds and the operational right to determine whether, and to what extent, some or all should be retained. Once SWL made that determination, it was perhaps a conduit. But the decision was its act, and one taken pursuant to protective powers which it had imposed. The right to make the decision, the right to make it effectively — i. e., by retaining money, thus putting the shoe on the foot of the other parties claiming it — were regarded as valuable rights to a businessman. The law is not required to debase them.
We therefore conclude that the Trial Court properly refused SWL credit for the stated amount. SWL exercised the same quality of dominion and control over the funds disbursed as over those retained — in both cases to the high disadvantage of their owner, Pan Am.
III.
The Two-Year Statute of Limitations
Pan Am, as Cross-Appellant, complains of the Trial Judge’s conclusion that the Texas two-year Statute of Limitations, Vernon’s Ann.Tex.Civ.Stat.Ann. art. 5526 (1958), applied to limit its recovery against SWL. The Trial Court correctly charged the jury on the issue of tolling the statute as to Operator Long under Pan Amer. Petroleum Corp. v. Orr, 5 Cir., 1963, 319 F.2d 612.36 The jury found that Long fraudulently concealed the slant drilling and that Pan Am was not put to inquiry. Thus the statute was tolled as to Long. Pan Am’s position is that as a matter of law the fraud of Long while operating the well (partially for the benefit of SWL) is imputable to SWL because of its agency relationship with Long. On this basis, the statute should be tolled as to SWL.
While the Court recognizes that one transaction may involve more than one kind of relationship, and even in this situation for some purposes Long may perhaps have been the agent of SWL,37 as well as covenantor-mortgagor-grantor, etc., Pan Am is seeking to capitalize on this observable phenomenon in a way which challenges the imagination. Pan Am is willing to admit that Long, as the agent of SWL, “may” have exceeded his authority by deviating these wells in violation of common law and Railroad Commission rules, but insists that under accepted agency concepts, there is here a ratification which saddles the principal with this unlawful conduct. The argument is that (a) retention by SWL of the [226]*226benefits of Long’s wrongdoing (b) with knowledge amounts to ratification. The theory is good if — and the if is a very big one — element (b) is satisfied.
But as to (b), SWL did not know — legally or actually — that it had received Pan Am’s property until the jury so found or at the earliest, when the slant hole scandal revealed Long’s misdeeds. Surely more is required for “retention with knowledge” than the circularly reasoned showing that when SWL found out (in court) where the oil came from, it failed to pay up — hence ratification. Apart from this theory of ratification which we find wanting, there is no basis under Texas law for tolling the statute. We thus hold that Pan Am’s cause of action against SWL was properly limited to two years.
IV.
Separate Findings for SWL
SWL complains of the Trial Judge’s overruling its motion for separate findings of fact and conclusions of law. The argument is that “no issues were or could be submitted to the jury with respect to these defendants [SWL], and with respect to them the case was tried upon the facts without a jury and they were entitled to findings of fact and conclusions of law under Rule 52.”
The judgment was based on facts as found by the jury and those stipulated. The only questions with regard to SWL were the legal issues we have discussed at length. These questions were adequately answered in the judgment, and no prejudice whatsoever appearing, there is no reversible error, F.R.Civ.P. 61.
The judgment in all respects withstands each attack.
Affirmed.