Roberto Villarreal, Ramona Villarreal, Viola Villarreal Garcia and Gloria Villarreal Salinas v. Javier Ramirez

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 3, 2024
Docket04-22-00563-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Roberto Villarreal, Ramona Villarreal, Viola Villarreal Garcia and Gloria Villarreal Salinas v. Javier Ramirez (Roberto Villarreal, Ramona Villarreal, Viola Villarreal Garcia and Gloria Villarreal Salinas v. Javier Ramirez) 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
Roberto Villarreal, Ramona Villarreal, Viola Villarreal Garcia and Gloria Villarreal Salinas v. Javier Ramirez, (Tex. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Fourth Court of Appeals San Antonio, Texas OPINION

No. 04-22-00563-CV

Roberto VILLARREAL, Ramona Villarreal, Viola Villarreal Garcia, and Gloria Villarreal Salinas, Appellants

v.

Javier RAMIREZ, as Co-Trustee of the Ramirez Mineral Trust; Sonia Rodriguez, as Co-Trustee of the Ramirez Mineral Trust; Victor M. Ramirez, as Co-Trustee of the Ramirez Mineral Trust; Santiago Ramirez Jr., as Co-Trustee of the Ramirez Mineral Trust; Sonia Rodriguez, Individually and as Heir to the Estate of Blas Garza Jr.; Blas Garza III, Individually and as Heir to the Estate of Blas Garza Jr.; Priscilla Garza Lozano, Individually and as Heir to the Estate of Blas Garza Jr.; All Unknown Heirs of the Estate of Blas Garza Jr.; Sonia Rodriguez, as Co- Executor of the Estate of Blas Garza Jr.; Blas Garza III, Individually as Co-Executor of the Estate of Blas Garza Jr.; Priscilla Garza Lozano, as Co-Executor of the Estate of Blas Garza Jr.; and Javier Ramirez, Appellees

From the 49th Judicial District Court, Zapata County, Texas Trial Court No. 5,937 Honorable José A. López, Judge Presiding

Opinion by: Patricia O. Alvarez, Justice

Sitting: Patricia O. Alvarez, Justice Luz Elena D. Chapa, Justice Liza A. Rodriguez, Justice

Delivered and Filed: January 3, 2024

REVERSED AND REMANDED

In this dispute involving proceeds from oil and gas leases, Appellants argue the trial court

erred by granting Appellees’ plea to the jurisdiction and dismissing the case. Appellants contend 04-22-00563-CV

they have live claims, their claims are not barred by res judicata, and their quasi-admissions did

not negate the trial court’s jurisdiction.

Appellees argue that the trial court’s Agreed Final Judgment was final, it disposed of all

parties and all claims, and the trial court could have granted their plea based on standing, mootness,

judicial admissions, or “finality of judgments.”

Because Appellants met their burden to plead facts showing the trial court’s jurisdiction,

and none of the grounds in Appellees’ plea negated the trial court’s subject matter jurisdiction, we

reverse the trial court’s order and remand this cause.

BACKGROUND

The underlying dispute over the ownership of surface and mineral estates, leases, and

proceeds has involved multiple parties, suits, claims, and defenses. For purposes of this appeal,

we limit our recitation of facts to those that pertain to the issues now before us.

A. Parties 1

Appellants, who are now plaintiffs below, are members of the Villarreal family: Roberto

Villarreal, Ramona Villarreal, Viola Villarreal Garcia, and Gloria Villarreal Salinas (collectively

the Roberto Group).

Appellees, who are now defendants below, include members of the Ramirez family,

primarily those who are co-trustees of the Ramirez Mineral Trust, and others (collectively the

Ramirezes).

Earlier defendants included Chesapeake Zapata, L.P. and Chesapeake Operating, Inc.

(collectively Chesapeake).

1 The pleadings below define the parties: plaintiffs, intervenors, and defendants. Over the course of the underlying litigation, the parties in the suit have changed. Our description of the parties is for the reader’s benefit; it is not a legal determination.

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B. Original Suit (5937)

In 2002, an oil and gas production company executed a lease with the Ramirez Mineral

Trust for about 734 acres, and that lease was later assigned to Chesapeake. Chesapeake drilled

two wells on property it understood it had leased, but the Villarreals claimed the wells were sited

on their property.

In April 2005, members of the Villarreal family sued Chesapeake, the Ramirez Mineral

Trust, and members of the Ramirez family; the suit was assigned cause number 5937. Two of the

Villarreal plaintiffs were Gloria Villarreal Salinas and Viola Villarreal Garcia. In June 2007,

Roberto and Ramona Villarreal intervened.

In a hearing on August 31, 2010, the plaintiffs and intervenors confirmed that “[w]e seek

not a penny from the Ramirezes . . . and it’s a stipulation on this case.”

A few weeks later, the plaintiffs filed their seventh amended petition, and the intervenors

filed their second amended plea in intervention. The pleadings identified Chesapeake, the

Ramirezes, and others as defendants; they included claims for trespass to try title, trespass to real

property, conversion, constructive trust, enhanced value damages, attorney’s fees, accounting, and

violation of the Natural Resources Code.

C. Settlement Agreement

After some negotiations, the plaintiffs and intervenors who controlled more than 98% of

the mineral interests reached an agreement with Chesapeake. On January 26, 2011, in open court,

the parties advised the trial court they had reached an agreement, and it was read into the record.

Under the settlement agreement, Chesapeake was to lease about 1,600 acres from the

Villarreals for a period of ten years with a 22.5% royalty and a bonus of about $2.5 million. The

agreement would resolve competing property ownership claims between the Villarreals and the

Ramirezes. The Villarreals would execute quit claim deeds to the Ramirezes for a particular sixty-

-3- 04-22-00563-CV

seven-acre tract, and for another approximately 3,718 acres. In turn, the Ramirezes would execute

quit claim deeds to the Villarreals for the surface and mineral estates for about 2,024 acres.

D. Actions on Settlement Agreement

In March 2011, Chesapeake sent the Roberto Group proposed leases for the approximately

238 acres the Roberto Group believed it owned. After the Roberto Group learned that they did not

own all of the mineral interest in the 238 acres, they advised Chesapeake, and it sent them revised

leases covering about 223 acres.

Some of the parties disagreed on how to implement the settlement agreement, but in

September 2011, they agreed to mediate, and the court ordered mediation.

E. Status Hearing on Settlement Agreement

On October 4, 2011, the trial court held a hearing on the parties’ progress on finalizing the

settlement agreement.

The parties proposed some modifications to the settlement agreement. For example, the

parties would not execute quit claim deeds; instead, the conveyances would be included in the

judgment. The Roberto Group explained that they had conveyed some interest in the 223 acres to

another party, their mineral interest was reduced by those conveyances, and their bonus should be

reduced accordingly. Chesapeake agreed that the “leases and the consideration would be adjusted

proportionately.”

After additional colloquy, in concluding the hearing, the trial court noted that the judgment

would incorporate “the terms of the announcement made on January 2011 and modified only by

what was announced here today and agreed to by the parties.”

F. Severance Order

After the status hearing, several of the Villarreals, not including those in the Roberto

Group, moved to sever their claims against Chesapeake and the Ramirezes. In December 2011,

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the trial court granted the motion, and the claims for the “Certain Villarreal Plaintiffs-Intervenors”

were severed into cause 5937-A.

G. Agreed Final Judgment

On January 18, 2012, the trial court signed a fifty-three-page Agreed Final Judgment.

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Roberto Villarreal, Ramona Villarreal, Viola Villarreal Garcia and Gloria Villarreal Salinas v. Javier Ramirez, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roberto-villarreal-ramona-villarreal-viola-villarreal-garcia-and-gloria-texapp-2024.