Robichaux v. Bordages

48 S.W.2d 698, 1932 Tex. App. LEXIS 344
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 11, 1932
DocketNo. 2148.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 48 S.W.2d 698 (Robichaux v. Bordages) 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
Robichaux v. Bordages, 48 S.W.2d 698, 1932 Tex. App. LEXIS 344 (Tex. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

' O’QUINN, J.

Plaintiffs in error were plaintiffs in the court below, and defendants in error were ■defendants. We shall refer to them as such.

Plaintiffs, S. Robichaux, J. M.- Piekerill and Dr. A. W. Roark, sued J. A. Bordages in the district court of Jefferson county, January 5, 1927. By an amended petition filed September 4, 1930, O. G. Hooks and the Gulf Production Company were made defendants.

Plaintiffs alleged that they and Hooks formed a partnership for the purpose of procuring, mineral leases on the W. H. Smith league and surrounding lands, in Jefferson county — desiring to' secure a “block” of leases covering from 5 to 15,000 acres — said, leases calling "for the actual prospecting and drilling of test or formation wells”; that, for the purpose of accomplishing their purpose, it was agreed by said partnership to employ, and they did enter into a contract with, defendant Bordages of leasing for the partnership, upon agreed and authorized terms, the lands upon which leases were desired; that Bordages agreed with the partnership to go upon the ground, and, as the agent of said partnership, lease the largest area obtainable on, around, and in the vicinity of said Smith league, for said plaintiffs, he to receive for his services an undivided one-fifth of. the profits derived from the venture whereby he became the sole agent of plaintiffs and Hooks for the purpose of obtaining said leases, the said leases to be taken for the sole benefit of and as the sole property of plaintiffs and Hooks.

They further alleged that, after said employment, Bordages went upon the ground and interviewed certain owners of land in said vicinity, and was promised leases upon their lands, and could have promptly obtained all or a large portion of the land desired “upon terms agreed and authorized by plaintiffs” ; but that, after Bordages had entered upon his duties in securing leases on said lands, he delayed and suspended his efforts on behalf of plaintiffs and Hooks, and thereafter said Bordages opened negotiations with the Gulf Production Company, by the terms of which' he would abandon his contract with plaintiffs, and would obtain leases for the Gulf Production Company for which he would receive a royalty of one twenty-fourth of the oil and gas, and 25 cents per ton for sulphur upon all the leases he could procure for the Gulf Production Company within said territory, by which action said Bordages was unfaithful to and violated his obligations to plaintiffs and said Hooks.

They further alleged that, after entering into negotiations with the Gulf Production Company, Bordages failed to close leases with the parties with whom he had theretofore negotiated for plaintiffs, and failed to make any further efforts to obtain leases for plaintiffs as he had agreed to do, but, without consulting plaintiffs, said Bordages entered into negotiations with the Gulf Production Company, with the view of repudiating his obligations to plaintiffs, by the terms of which he should take leases which should be delivered to said company and not to plaintiffs; that, by reason of the relationship of Bordages, it was his duty to communicate to plaintiffs full information as to all the facts of his negotiations with the Gulf Production Company and to enter no agreements except with the consent of his principals, and it was his duty to diligently proceed with the work of taking leases for plaintiffs as he had agreed to do, but, on the contrary, he wholly failed to inform plaintiffs as to his secret negotiations until they were practically, if not wholly, consummated; that thereafter said Bordages communicated the situation to plaintiffs, but represented and pretended that he would be unable to secure the development leases because of the competition of the Gulf Production Company who were represented to have an eye upon the same territory in which he had agreed to lease for plaintiffs, but that Bordag-es informed them that the Gulf Production Company was willing to take over the territory to be leased by him for plaintiffs, and the leases negotiated for, and that Bordages represented to plaintiffs that the Gulf Production Company would pay one twenty-fourth overriding royalty upon oil and gas and a royalty of 25 cents per ton on sulphur, and proposed to his. principals that all of them permit him to co-operate with said company, and, in lieu of taking the leases on their own behalf, that the said leases theretofore negotiated, and thereafter to be negotiated, should be turned to said Gulf Production Company, and that the royalties received be equally divided among the five parties (the plaintiffs, Hooks and Bordages) instead of the profits from the leases, as theretofore agreed.

They further alleged that Bordages further agreed with said syndicate (plaintiffs and Hooks) that, in addition to the overriding Royalty to be obtained, he would be able to obtain for said Hooks and plaintiffs from the Gulf Production Company information as to the progress of their geophysical explorations, and that, if a salt dome should be located, he would promptly communicate said facts to plaintiffs and Hooks in order that fee royalties might be purchased by and on behalf of said plaintiffs and Hooks, which it was contemplated said Bordages should purchase for said plaintiffs and Hooks with the same carried interest to himself as in said leases, and that, upon said representations and agreement of Bordages, plaintiffs did agree that said leases might be taken and turned to the Gulf Production Company in consideration that plaintiffs receive three-fifths of a one *700 twenty-fourth royalty on oil and gas and three-fifths of all overriding royalties obtained from the G-ulf Production Company.

They further alleged that Bordages agreed to purchase for plaintiffs and Hooks and himself, as equal owners, and that plaintiffs should be permitted to participate to the same extent in any fee royalties which might be purchased in said vicinity, and that but for said agreements plaintiffs would not have agreed that Bordages might take said leases for the Gulf Production Company.

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Bluebook (online)
48 S.W.2d 698, 1932 Tex. App. LEXIS 344, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robichaux-v-bordages-texapp-1932.