Robert Oil Corporation v. Jones

23 S.W.2d 472
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 12, 1929
DocketNo. 2332.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 23 S.W.2d 472 (Robert Oil Corporation v. Jones) 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
Robert Oil Corporation v. Jones, 23 S.W.2d 472 (Tex. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

HIGGINS, J.

This is a suit by R. Q. Jones, Geo. Abererombi, and A. D. Montgomery, as plaintiffs, and T. L. Looney, as intervener, ap-pellees herein, against Robert Oil Corporation, Atlantic Oil Producing Company, Allday Oil Corporation, and C. W. Clark, appellants here, to recover an undivided one-half interest in and to the minerals in a tract of land containing 8.85 acres, a part of fraction B of T. E. & L. Co. survey No. 3401 in Young county.

On October 23, 1919, J. M. Keen was the *473 owner of a tract of land out of fraction B in said survey 3401, which he called his “hog pasture.” J. M. Keen originally acquired the whole of “fraction B” prior to 1900; the deed to him describing “fraction B” as containing 853 acres. After his acquisition thereof, J. M. Keen conveyed two 100-acre tracts out of “fraction B” to third parties no way concerned in this suit. It was the remainder of fraction B that he called his “hog pasture”; and up to the time of his death in 1921 he seems to have considered that there were 710 acres in such pasture.

On October 23, 1919, J. M. Keen conveyed this tract in part to his son J. E. Keen, and in part to his daughter Mrs. O. E. Graham. These deeds were contemporaneous, both were made in consideration of love and affection ; the north portion of the tract being conveyed to the son J. E. Keen, and the southern portion to the daughter Mrs. O. E. Graham, The deed to J. E. Keen described the tract conveyed as follows: “250 acres out of Abstract No. 1221, being the Northern end of Hog Pasture now owned by me, Survey No. 3401 located in Young County, Texas, the tract herein conveyed being 250 acres off the north end of said Hog Pasture tract which contains 710 acres in all.”

The deed to Mrs. C. E. Graham described the tract conveyed as follows: “All that certain tract or parcel of land located in Young County, Texas, and being the 400 acres off the South end of the Hog Pasture tract now owned by me, which said tract contains in all 710 acres of land, same being out of TEL Co. Survey No. 3401, Abstract 1221, located in Young County, Texas.”

On September 3, 1926. J. E. Keen and wife made an oil and gas lease to Y. A. Porter and W. C. Chapman, describing the land covered thereby, as follows: “Being the East 200 acres of the North 250 acres out of the 710 acre tract formerly owned by ■ J. M. Keen, said 710 acres being out of the TEL Co. Survey No. 3401, Abstract 1221 located in Young County, Texas, and containing 200 acres more or less.”

On November 12, 1926, J. E. Keen and wife made an oil and gas lease to the Robert Oil Corporation, describing the land conveyed as follows: “The West 39 acres of the North 239 acres owned by J. E. Keen out of Fraction B, T E L Co. Survey No. 3401.”

Both of these leases passed by mesne conveyance to the defendants below.

J. E. Keen was a resident of Aspermont, in Stonewall county, Tex., and left the matter of negotiating for oil and gas leases on his land in Young county, Tex., to ,his brother, Charles N. Keen, who resided in Young county; and the negotiations resulting in the two oil and gas leases above mentioned were conducted on his behalf by his brother, upon whom he relied to attend to the matter and “left it flp to him.”

The 200-acre lease was the consummation of an agreement between Chapman & Porter and Charles N. Keen on behalf of his brother, whereby Chapman and Porter were to get “200 acres off the East side to drill a well on” and 'the tract was described as “the East 200 acres of the North 250 acres” because it was supposed by all parties at the time the lease was drawn that there was 250 acres of land in the J. E. Keen tract.

After the execution of this lease, and before the execution of the second lease, some character of survey was made, as a result of which it was discovered that there were not 710 acres in the “hog pasture”; and the surveyor reported to Charles N. Keen “that he thought there was only 239 acres in the part that would go to Eddie, my brother”; i. e., J. E. Keen. Mr. Welch, acting for the Robert Oil Corporation, went to see Charles N. Keen about leasing the balance of his brother’s land, and the latter testified: “I told him I would lease him the balance of the land, that is, the balance of my brother’s land, and we thought at that time it was surveying out 39 acres that was not already covered with the lease. So we drew it up, the West 39 acres of, the North 239 acres. * * * When Welch came to me I agreed to lease him the balance of my brother’s land unleased and we figured out at 39 acres. It was my intention in drawing the lease in the manner in which it was done to cover the unleased land. I communicated such back to my brother to whom I had sent the lease. He executed- it and returned it and I'delivered it.”

He also testified at the time he made the Chapman and Porter lease: “I thought the Hog Pasture had 710 acres in it. I had thought that ever since my father owned it. ⅜ * * rpjjg firsj. j ]jnew that ⅛ contained less than 710 acres was when Mr. Martin reported his survey to me. As to whether it was before or after the execution of the 39 acre lease, well it was after the survey was made otherwise it would have been 50 acres as I leased them the balance of it.”

It later developed that there was only 231 acres in the .T. E. Keen tract.

After the execution and delivery of these leases, but before the lease upon which plaintiffs and interveners rely, J. E. Keen and wife conveyed a one-half interest in -the minerals in and under all of the land material to this suit to the Robert Oil Corporation, and that interest was at the time of the suit owned by appellants, and also conveyed a one-fourth interest in the minerals under all the land material to this suit to R. Q. Jones, who conveyed it -to J. E. Bridwell and L. C. Heyrick, by whom it was owned at the time of the suit, and who were not parties thereto.

These' two conveyances to the Robert Oil Corporation and R. Q. Jones are the two royalty deeds later herein described; one being dated February 23, 1927, and the other dated November 25, 1927.

It is obvious that a lease covering the east *474 200 acres of the north 250 acres of any given tract of land, and a lease covering the west 39 acres of the north 239 acres of the same tract of land will, when laid out on a map, leave a small strip between, not included in either description. Mr. A. D. Montgomery, one of the plaintiffs (appellees herein), having occasion to examine the title to the Keen land for a client who was about to purchase an interest in the royalty, discovered this discrepancy and communicated it to appellee Jones, who went to Aspermont, Tex., and procured J. E. Keen and -wife to execute a lease to Jones & Montgomery, on December 15, 1927, covering “all the interest we have in the North 250 acres of what is known as ‘Fraction B’ of the T E L Co. Survey No. 3401, and being all the land owned by the grantors in said survey. It is the intention of this instrument to cover all of said land on which there is no valid oil and gas lease at this time and containing 9 acres more or less.”

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Bluebook (online)
23 S.W.2d 472, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robert-oil-corporation-v-jones-texapp-1929.