Ronald D. Smith and Kimberly Smith v. Kingdom Investments Limited Carl/White Trust Anita Collins Paul O'Farrell Gladys A. Stone Edna A. Avitts Priscilla Wells Johnny M. Glosson Ellen Avitts Management Trust Connie B. Brown Floyd N. Brown, Jr. Ona Mae Worden Stanley and Eloise Brown Revocable Trust Carmie J. Brown Living Trust Charles Richard Avitts Katherine Avitts Gipson Margaret L. Clark And Thomas E. Avitts

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 30, 2022
Docket14-20-00447-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Ronald D. Smith and Kimberly Smith v. Kingdom Investments Limited Carl/White Trust Anita Collins Paul O'Farrell Gladys A. Stone Edna A. Avitts Priscilla Wells Johnny M. Glosson Ellen Avitts Management Trust Connie B. Brown Floyd N. Brown, Jr. Ona Mae Worden Stanley and Eloise Brown Revocable Trust Carmie J. Brown Living Trust Charles Richard Avitts Katherine Avitts Gipson Margaret L. Clark And Thomas E. Avitts (Ronald D. Smith and Kimberly Smith v. Kingdom Investments Limited Carl/White Trust Anita Collins Paul O'Farrell Gladys A. Stone Edna A. Avitts Priscilla Wells Johnny M. Glosson Ellen Avitts Management Trust Connie B. Brown Floyd N. Brown, Jr. Ona Mae Worden Stanley and Eloise Brown Revocable Trust Carmie J. Brown Living Trust Charles Richard Avitts Katherine Avitts Gipson Margaret L. Clark And Thomas E. Avitts) 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.

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Ronald D. Smith and Kimberly Smith v. Kingdom Investments Limited Carl/White Trust Anita Collins Paul O'Farrell Gladys A. Stone Edna A. Avitts Priscilla Wells Johnny M. Glosson Ellen Avitts Management Trust Connie B. Brown Floyd N. Brown, Jr. Ona Mae Worden Stanley and Eloise Brown Revocable Trust Carmie J. Brown Living Trust Charles Richard Avitts Katherine Avitts Gipson Margaret L. Clark And Thomas E. Avitts, (Tex. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Affirmed and Memorandum Opinion filed August 30, 2022.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

NO. 14-20-00447-CV

RONALD D. SMITH AND KIMBERLY SMITH, Appellants

V. KINGDOM INVESTMENTS, LIMITED; CARL/WHITE TRUST; ANITA COLLINS; PAUL O’FARRELL; GLADYS A. STONE; EDNA A. AVITTS; PRISCILLA WELLS; JOHNNY M. GLOSSON; ELLEN AVITTS MANAGEMENT TRUST; CONNIE B. BROWN; FLOYD N. BROWN, JR.; ONA MAE WORDEN; STANLEY AND ELOISE BROWN REVOCABLE TRUST; CARMIE J. BROWN LIVING TRUST; CHARLES RICHARD AVITTS; KATHERINE AVITTS GIPSON; MARGARET L. CLARK; AND THOMAS E. AVITTS, Appellees

On Appeal from the 239th District Court Brazoria County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. 86021-CV

MEMORANDUM OPINION

In this dispute over the ownership of oil and gas royalties, appellants Ronald D. and Kimberly Smith (the Smiths) argue that the trial court erred in awarding a disputed royalty interest in lots 36 and 43 to the appellees.1 The Smiths undisputedly own the surface of lots 36 and 43. Appellees assert the Smiths own 1/6 of 1/4 of a 1/8 royalty pursuant to the oil and gas lease known as the Avitts B Lease,2 which is consistent with the manner in which the disputed royalty interest

1 Appellees are Kingdom Investments, Limited; Carl/White Trust; Anita Collins; Paul O’Farrell; Gladys A. Stone; Edna A. Avitts; Priscilla Wells; Johnny M. Glosson; Ellen Avitts Management Trust; Connie B. Brown; Floyd N. Brown, Jr.; Ona Mae Worden; Stanley and Eloise Brown Revocable Trust; Carmie J. Brown Living Trust; Charles Richard Avitts; Katherine Avitts Gipson; Margaret L. Clark; and Thomas E. Avitts. On December 15, 2020, we granted, in part, appellee Kingdom Investments’ motion to restyle the case as reflected above. Modeen O’Farrell was a party in the trial court. She died after the case had been tried but before rendition of judgment. Pursuant to Texas Rule of Civil Procedure 156, judgment was rendered as though she were alive. This court granted Paul O’Farrell’s motion to substitute as a party for Modeen O’Farrell. Paul died in September 2020. Pursuant to Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure 7.1, we adjudicate this appeal as if he were alive. Flora N. Young was a party in the trial court. She died after the case had been tried but before rendition of judgment. The trial court substituted the “Estate of Flora N. Young” as a party in the judgment. This court granted a motion to substitute Priscilla Wells for the “Estate of Flora N. Young.” Floyd N. Brown, Jr. was a party in the trial court. He died after the case had been tried but before rendition of judgment. Pursuant to Texas Rule of Civil Procedure 156, judgment was rendered as though he were alive. Charles Richard Avitts died intestate in October 2020. Pursuant to Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure 7.1, we adjudicate this appeal as if he were alive. Margaret L. Clark was a party to the interpleader action. She died during the pendency of the case in the trial court. Judgment was rendered in favor of the “Estate of Margaret L. Clark.” Two of Clark’s four adult children filed a motion to substitute a party in this court stating they now own all of Margaret Clark’s interest in the Avitts B Lease. Because no probate proceeding has been opened and because this court has no jurisdiction to determine Margaret L. Clark’s heirs or the disposition of her property, we denied the motion. Pursuant to Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure 7.1, we adjudicate this appeal as if she were alive. 2 The dispute in this lawsuit does not involve the mineral ownership of lots 36 and 43, just the royalty interest which has been separately conveyed. Cf. Luckel v. White, 819 S.W.2d 459, 463 (Tex. 1991) (“A royalty interest is an interest in land that is a part of the total mineral estate. The royalty interest is a property interest that is one of the rights and attributes comprising the mineral estate; the other rights and attributes include the right to receive delay rentals, the right to share in benefits secured from the lessee such as production payments and the like, the right to develop and produce minerals, and the executive right. A royalty interest derives from the grantor’s mineral interest and is a nonpossessory interest in minerals that may be separately alienated.”) (internal citations omitted). A royalty deed is, in general, subject to the same legal 2 has been paid to the Smiths and the Smiths’ predecessor-in-interest for several decades. However, the Smiths argue that they own a larger royalty interest by virtue of the conveyance of lots 36 and 43 from Ronald Smith’s grandfather, W.H. Avitts Jr. a/k/a Henry Avitts (Henry), to the Smiths without a mineral reservation. The resolution of this dispute turns primarily on whether Henry conveyed the disputed royalty interest into a trust for the benefit of his daughters.

The Smiths raise six issues on appeal, and all six of the Smiths’ issues assert the final judgment of the trial court was not supported by legally- or factually-sufficient evidence. We affirm the judgment of the trial court as challenged on appeal.

I. BACKGROUND

Denbury Onshore, LLC is the operator of the West Hastings oil and gas unit, which is located in Brazoria County, Texas. The West Hastings oil and gas unit includes the Avitts B Lease, of which lots 36 and 43 are part, and which governs the royalty interests at issue in the underlying lawsuit.

Denbury Onshore filed an interpleader action in 2016 to resolve the disputed royalty interest claimed by the Smiths and deposited the proceeds attributable to this lease royalty, then $83,063.24, in the court’s registry. The Smiths, defendants in the interpleader action, filed a cross-claim against the appellee defendants, and/or their predecessors in interest, seeking a declaratory judgment that the Smiths were entitled to all of the disputed lease royalty and all of the proceeds in the court’s registry. The appellees argued in response that the Smiths were not entitled to any part of the disputed royalty interest.

rules for construction as a mineral deed. Id. at 464.

3 The property in dispute

W.H. Avitts purchased lot 43 in 1928 with no mineral reservation.3 In 1932, he and his wife, Annie, conveyed an undivided half interest in lot 43 to their son, Henry, although title was not to pass until after the death of both W.H. and Annie. In 1936, W.H. and Annie conveyed an undivided 1/4 royalty interest in lot 43 to Henry as his sole and separate property although Henry was married at the time.

W.H. and Henry purchased lot 36 in 1929 with no mineral reservation. At the time Henry acquired his interest in lot 36, he was unmarried and owned title to the property as his separate property.

The Avitts B Lease

In 1934, W.H. and Annie, and Henry and his wife, Ophelia, entered into an oil and gas lease to allow for production on lots 36 and 43.4 The lease provided for a 1/8 royalty to be paid on oil and gas produced and saved from the land. Subsequently, W.H., Annie, Henry and Ophelia sold 1/4 of the 1/8 royalty interest in lots 43 and 36 to Standard Oil Company and another 1/4 of the 1/8 royalty interest in lots 43 and 36 to Gillett Hill.

The wills of W.H. and Annie

In 1944, W.H. died testate. In his will, he devised the surface interest in all his real property to Henry subject to a life estate for Annie. Although the prior conveyances of W.H.’s and Annie’s royalty interest in lots 36 and 43 are not reconcilable with W.H.’s and Annie’s probate disposition of that interest, we only

3 W.H.’s wife, Annie, is not mentioned in this deed. Later conveyances affecting lot 43 are in the name of both W.H. and Annie. For purposes of our analysis, we presume it was a community-property interest as this is not a disputed issue in the case.

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Ronald D. Smith and Kimberly Smith v. Kingdom Investments Limited Carl/White Trust Anita Collins Paul O'Farrell Gladys A. Stone Edna A. Avitts Priscilla Wells Johnny M. Glosson Ellen Avitts Management Trust Connie B. Brown Floyd N. Brown, Jr. Ona Mae Worden Stanley and Eloise Brown Revocable Trust Carmie J. Brown Living Trust Charles Richard Avitts Katherine Avitts Gipson Margaret L. Clark And Thomas E. Avitts, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ronald-d-smith-and-kimberly-smith-v-kingdom-investments-limited-texapp-2022.