Pfluger v. Clack

897 S.W.2d 956, 1995 WL 262129
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 1, 1995
Docket11-94-010-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 897 S.W.2d 956 (Pfluger v. Clack) 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
Pfluger v. Clack, 897 S.W.2d 956, 1995 WL 262129 (Tex. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinion

OPINION

ARNOT, Chief Justice.

William Carl Pfluger and LuNeil Stribling, Independent Executrix of the Estate of Stanley C. Stribling, Deceased, (hereinafter referred to as the Pflugers) agreed to sell the surface estate of a ranch in Nolan County to James H. Clack and his wife, Barbara Culver Clack. The Pflugers and the Clacks executed a standard contract of sale. 1 The contract provided that the Pflugers would furnish an owner’s title policy. The Clacks made an earnest money deposit of $5,000, and Beall Abstract & Title Co., Inc. issued a title commitment on the property. The Clacks raised a title objection and refused to close on the contract. When both the Pflugers and the Clacks requested that the escrow money be paid to them, Beall Abstract filed this suit as an interpleader action. Trial was to the court which found that the Clacks were entitled to terminate the contract, to the return of their $5,000 earnest money deposit, and to the award of reasonable attorney’s fees and court costs. The court filed its findings of fact and conclusions of law. The Pflugers appeal, bringing seven points of error. We affirm.

In their Points of Error Nos. 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, and 7, the Pflugers complain that the trial court erred in its construction of the contract and the title commitment and in its findings that the Pflugers had an obligation to cure the Clacks’ objections to the title. The Pflu-gers assert that the title objections made by the Clacks were not valid, permissible, or timely under the plain and unambiguous language of the contract and commitment.

By the terms of the contract of sale, the Pflugers agreed to sell to the Clacks the surface estate of approximately two sections of ranch land in Nolan County. All of the minerals under these tracts of land had been previously conveyed by the Pflugers’ predecessors in title to third parties. The contract provided for the sale of the property together with “all rights, privileges, and appurtenances pertaining thereto; including but not limited to, water rights.” (Emphasis added)

The contract of sale further stated that the property would be subject to the following exceptions and reservations:

A. Minerals, royalties, and timber interests:
(i) Presently outstanding in third parties:
All oil, gas, coal, lignite, iron, uranium, sulphur and other minerals in and under and that may be produced from the above property, together with the right of ingress and egress at all times for the purpose of mining, drilling, exploring, operating, and developing said lands for oil, gas, coal, lignite, iron, uranium, sulphur and other minerals and removing the same therefrom, by whatever method produced or extracted, have been previously conveyed to third parties by predecessors in title.
(ii) To be additionally retained by Seller:
None: it is the Seller’s intention to convey to the Buyer the SURFACE ESTATE ONLY of the herein-described Property.
B. Mineral Leases:
This agreement is subject to oil and gas leases of record.

Beall Abstract issued a title commitment on behalf of the Chicago Title Insurance Company. In its commitment, Chicago Title specifically excepted from its coverage title to all of the oil, gas, and minerals previously conveyed by the Pflugers’ predecessors in title and further specifically excepted specific easements and rights of way of record by reference to their respective dates, grantors, *959 grantees, and recording information and specific oil and gas leases of record by reference to their respective dates, lessors, lessees, and recording information.

Prior to closing, James H. Clack requested that his son examine the title. After a title search, Gene Clack, an attorney, raised an objection to the Pflugers’ title based on the following instruments of record: a general warranty deed which contained a reservation of the water rights dated December 28, 1965, from R.H. Jordan and wife to Robert R. Petty and wife and which was recorded in Volume 199, Page 328 of the Deed Records of Nolan County and three oil and gas leases not specifically set out or described in the title commitment. All three leases were beyond their primary term, and there was no production on the ranch at the time the contract was executed. 2

The question presented by this appeal is whether a seller can contractually force a buyer to close on title insurance when the buyer raises an obvious title defect that was omitted by the title company in its commitment letter. To answer this question, we must first address the three issues which run throughout the Pflugers’ points of error.

First, the Pflugers urge that the Clacks’ title objections were not valid under the plain language of the contract of sale and title commitment. It is clear that the parties agreed to sell and purchase the fee simple title to the surface estate of the ranch. The objectionable reservation contained in the 1965 deed recites:

(1) GRANTORS do hereby EXCEPT and RESERVE from this deed, unto themselves and the other record owners thereof, all of the oil, gas and other hydrocarbons and all other minerals in and under the above described land ... subject to and excepting the surface minerals conveyed to GRANTEES hereby.
(2) GRANTORS do further EXCEPT and RESERVE from this deed all subsurface water of whatsoever kind and character in and under said land necessary and proper for the purpose of investigating, through seismograph and any other scientific procedures, exploring, prospecting, drilling, mining for, producing, whether through primary or secondary recovery by water flooding, and owning oil, gas and/or all other minerals reserved by GRANTORS and the further purpose of saving, treating, storing, transporting and disposing of said oil, gas and other minerals from said land, to the end that GRANTORS shall have the right to use and enjoy all of said subsurface water in and under said land necessary and proper for the aforesaid purposes according to the usual practices and procedures of the oil industry.

Water, surface or subsurface, unsevered expressly by conveyance or by reservation, is part of the surface estate. Sun Oil Company v. Whitaker, 483 S.W.2d 808 (Tex.1972); City of Corpus Christi v. City of Pleasanton, 154 Tex. 289, 276 S.W.2d 798 (1955); Texas Co. v. Burkett, 117 Tex. 16, 296 S.W. 273 (1927); Fleming Foundation v. Texaco, 337 S.W.2d 846 (Tex.Civ.App. — Amarillo 1960, writ ref d n.r.e.). The mineral owner having the dominant estate has an implied easement to use such water, both surface and subsurface, as is necessary for the exploration and development of the mineral estate. See Sun Oil Company v. Whitaker, supra.

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897 S.W.2d 956, 1995 WL 262129, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pfluger-v-clack-texapp-1995.