Porter v. Thalman

516 S.W.2d 755, 1974 Tex. App. LEXIS 2777
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 13, 1974
Docket15349
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 516 S.W.2d 755 (Porter v. Thalman) 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
Porter v. Thalman, 516 S.W.2d 755, 1974 Tex. App. LEXIS 2777 (Tex. Ct. App. 1974).

Opinion

BARROW, Chief Justice.

Appellant has perfected her appeal from a judgment entered after a jury trial whereby her deed, which conveyed forty acres of land in Dimmit County to appel-lee, was reformed so as to delete a mineral reservation by appellant of a one-half interest of the oil and mineral rights underlying said premises for a period of twenty-five years.

The deed was executed by appellant pursuant to an agreement entered into on September 3, 1969, by these parties in settlement of a pending suit which had been filed by appellant and her lessee against appellee and his father to enjoin the defendants from trespassing upon appellant’s property or damaging same. The agreement provides in part:

“ . . . Mr. Thalman, will exchange a forty acre tract of land, which he owns, and which appears to be Survey 84 in the portion of the county map, which is here in evidence as Joint Exhibit #1, which forty acre tract would then be adjoining Mrs. Porter’s 321.85 acre tract; and Mrs. Porter will in consideration for said conveyance to her convey to Mr. Thalman her forty acre tract which abuts and adjoins the forty acre tract of Mr. Thalman, conditioned, however, that the mineral rights which the parties may convey to each other in this exchange of forty acre tracts is equal, not referring to value but equal in realty interest.”

Some delay was encountered in exchanging deeds in that fee title was not actually in Thalman and he had to exchange and release certain liens. Mrs. Porter’s deed was executed on December 16, 1969, and Thalman’s deed was executed on March 18, 1970; however, they were held by the escrow agent, Andrew P. Johnson, Esq., until delivered on March 31, 1970. Thalman’s deed to Mrs. Porter was subject to a reservation of one-half interest in the mineral estate for twenty-five years from August 22, 1969, as set out in the deed from Esther Carlson et al. to C. L. Thalman. Thus, he conveyed a one-half interest in the mineral estate to Mrs. Porter together with the remainder interest in the other one-half. Production was discovered in 1971 on the tract conveyed to Thalman by Mrs. Porter and when he did not receive any royalty payments, he made inquiry of *757 his attorney and of the lessee, Sun Oil Company. Thalman learned at this time that Mrs. Porter had not unequivocally conveyed one-half of the minerals to him.

Thalman filed his suit shortly thereafter on May 31, 1971, wherein he alleged that the parties had covenanted by the agreement of September 3, 1969, to convey to the other all of the surface and the minerals such grantor then possessed in the respective ' tracts. He sought specific performance to correct Mrs. Porter’s deed so that it conveys the minerals owned by her at such time. Shortly before this case proceeded to trial, Thalman filed an amended petition wherein he abandoned his prayer for specific performance. Instead, he alleged that the conveyance from Mrs. Porter was not clear in the sense that the mineral reservation could possibly be construed as reserving all of the minerals under said tract to Mrs. Porter. 1 He prayed that the court order reformation of said deed so that it conveys to him one-half of the minerals underlying said tract and further that he recover the amount of royalties received by Mrs. Porter after September 3, 1969.

Mrs. Porter specially denied in her answer that the agreement was that each would convey all the minerals that they owned in their respective tracts. She alleged that on the contrary, the agreement was that conveyance of the mineral interests would be optional, but if they did choose to convey same, the exchanges would be equal in realty interest. She also affirmatively asserted the defenses of res judicata, waiver and estoppel.

Four issues were submitted to the jury and the answers thereto form the basis of the court’s judgment. The jury found substantially as follows:

1. Thalman and Mrs. Porter DID agree in the settlement agreement that each would transfer to the other a certain 40-acre tract of land if each could also convey to the other an equal mineral interest under said 40-acre tract.
2. Thalman and Mrs. Porter DID intend that the deed from Mrs. Porter to Thalman dated December 16, 1969, convey one-half of the minerals underlying the 40-acre tract therein described.
3. The general warranty deed from Mrs. Porter to Thalman DID fail to express the real intention of the parties to convey one-half of the minerals underlying the 40-acre tract described as a result of mistake, misapprehension or inadvertence of the attorneys representing Thalman and Mrs. Porter.
4. The deed from Mrs. Porter to Thalman IS ambiguous in referring to the mineral reservations therein as it is doubtful and is capable of more than one construction.
(This issue was conditionally submitted and was answered in violation of the court’s instruction.)

Appellant asserts eighteen assignments of error which we have grouped under several propositions. She urges by several points that the judgment should be reversed and a take-nothing judgment rendered. Appellant asserts that the order of dismissal in the prior suit is res judicata of the claim asserted herein or operated to release her from such claim. It is further urged that appellee waived his right to assert a claim for reformation or is estopped from asserting such claim in that he accepted appellant’s deed without complaint. She urges under several assignments of er *758 ror that her deed is clear and unambiguous and there is no pleading or proof to justify reformation of the deed. Finally, it is urged that appellee is not entitled to equitable relief since he does not appear with clean hands.

There are other points which seek a reversal and remand because of procedural errors. She complains of the submission of Questions Nos. 2 and 4 because there was no proper pleading of mutual mistake. In this connection it is urged that the trial court erred in permitting appellee to plead mutual mistake by a trial amendment filed nine days after the verdict was received. Error is urged also in the submission of Question No. 1 in that it is a law question and not an ultimate issue. Appellant further urges that the court erred in refusing to submit two issues she requested. Complaint is made of the erroneous admission of parol testimony to explain the agreement of September 3, 1969, and Mrs. Porter’s deed to Thalman. Finally, it urged that the jury finding of mutual mistake is so against the great weight and preponderance of the evidence as to be manifestly unjust.

We must first consider whether the claim asserted here by appellee is barred by the agreement and subsequent dismissal of the prior suit. It is true that appellant and appellee, along with two others, were adverse parties in the prior suit and that this claim arose out of the agreement executed in settlement of same. Nevertheless, the claims are not identical and the claim asserted here by appellee could not have been decided in the first suit. Therefore, the doctrine of res judicata is not applicable. State v. Standard, 414 S.W.2d 148 (Tex.1967).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
516 S.W.2d 755, 1974 Tex. App. LEXIS 2777, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/porter-v-thalman-texapp-1974.