Sasser v. Dantex Oil & Gas, Inc.

906 S.W.2d 599, 1995 WL 496967
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 23, 1995
Docket04-94-00095-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by67 cases

This text of 906 S.W.2d 599 (Sasser v. Dantex Oil & Gas, Inc.) 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
Sasser v. Dantex Oil & Gas, Inc., 906 S.W.2d 599, 1995 WL 496967 (Tex. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinion

DUNCAN, Justice.

We grant appellants’ motion for rehearing and substitute this opinion in place of the original.

Appellants, C. Trebes Sasser, John B. Stevenson, Jr., and James F. Hill, overriding royalty interest owners under a 1974 oil and *601 gas lease, appeal the summary judgment granted in favor of appellees — Dantex Oil & Gas, Inc., the ultimate lessee under the 1974 Lease and the initial lessee under a 1990 lease covering the same acreage; Kinlaw Oil Corp., the ultimate lessee under the 1990 Lease; and Scurlock Permian Corp., the purchaser of the oil produced under the 1990 Lease. For convenience, we will refer to all appellants as “Sasser.”

Sasser attacks the summary judgment on two specific grounds. 1 First, Sasser contends that the 1990 Lease was ineffective to release the 1974 Lease and, therefore, to extinguish his overriding royalty interest under the 1974 Lease because Dantex failed to strictly comply with the 1974 Lease’s surrender clause. In the alternative, Sasser argues that the trial court erred in concluding that Dantex did not owe him a duty of good faith and fair dealing or any other fiduciary-type duty. We reject both arguments and affirm the judgment.

FACTS

In 1974, Leo and Emma Newsom granted to Reagan Houston, Jr. an oil and gas lease for a primary term of three years and, “[sjubject to the other provisions [of the 1974 Lease], as long thereafter as oil, gas, or other mineral is produced....” One of the “other provisions" in the 1974 Lease was a unilateral surrender clause: The lessee could “at any time or times execute and deliver to [New-som] or to [Security State Bank] or place of record a release or releases of this lease as to all or any part of the above-described premises ..., and thereby be relieved of all obligations as to the released land or interest.”

Ultimately, Dantex acquired 75% of the working interest and Sasser acquired all of the overriding royalty interest in the 1974 Lease. As Sasser admits, the instruments creating his overriding royalty interest conveyed a fixed percentage of the oil and gas produced “by virtue of the terms from the particular lease” and did not purport to extend to renewals, extensions, or modifications of the 1974 Lease.

By 1990, there were only three producing vertical wells on Newsom’s property. That summer Newsom told Tom Morris, Dantex’s landman, that the 1974 Lease had expired because the production was not in paying quantities. Dantex was also concerned about this possibility and, therefore, directed Morris to ask Newsom to ratify the 1974 Lease. Newsom refused; he wanted both a larger royalty and a requirement that the lessee drill a horizontal well to increase production. Although Dantex was willing to drill a horizontal well, it estimated that the cost to do so would be more than $1 million, and it wanted the assurance of an unquestionably viable lease before it committed to the expense. Following negotiations with Newsom’s attorney, the parties entered the 1990 Lease. The 1990 Lease contained a royalty term more favorable to Newsom and expressly recognized that “a portion of the consideration to Lessor for this lease is the drilling by Lessee of a ‘horizontal’ well.... Failure to commence operations for the drilling of a ‘horizontal’ well during the primary term hereof shall cause this lease to terminate at the end of such primary term and such termination shall release Lessee from any further liability regarding such ‘horizontal’ well.”

Dantex sold the 1990 Lease to Kinlaw, which thereafter drilled several horizontal wells. In 1992 Sasser filed suit against Dan-tex, Kinlaw, and Scurlock. Sasser sought a declaratory judgment establishing that his overriding royalty interest burdened the 1990 Lease, an accounting and a money judgment for the royalties alleged to be due, and attorney’s fees. Alternatively, Sasser alleged that, by entering the 1990 Lease, Dantex wrongly attempted to eliminate or “washout” Sasser’s overriding royalty interest, thereby breaching its duty of good faith and fair dealing or other fiduciary-type duty.

Dantex moved for summary judgment as to Sasser’s declaratory judgment action and his claim for breach of a duty of good faith and fair dealing. As to Sasser’s declaratory judgment action, Dantex’s motion stated *602 that, although Sasser alleged that his overriding royalty interest under the 1974 Lease was “not extinguished when a new Oil and Gas Lease was executed in 1990,” Dantex’s summary judgment proof and applicable authorities demonstrated that “the 1974 Oil, Gas and Mineral Lease, out of which [Sas-ser’s] overriding royalty interest[ ] [was] carved, terminated, in 1990” and Sasser’s “claimed overriding royalty interest[] [was] simultaneously extinguished, as a matter of law.” Dantex supported its motion with the affidavits of Newsom, Morris, John D. Stel-zer, its Vice President-Finance, and G.R. Tippens, its Vice President-Land & Exploration. Newsom’s affidavit stated that he “understood that by agreeing to the new lease, Dantex was releasing the old, 1974, oil and gas lease....” Likewise, Morris’ affidavit stated that, during the negotiations leading up to the 1990 Lease, “it was understood that the execution of a new oil and gas lease between [Newsom] and Dantex would amount to a release by Dantex of the existing [1974] Lease.” Newsom, Stelzer, and Tip-pens further stated in their affidavits that, in their opinion, the 1974 Lease was not producing in paying quantities and had terminated at least by the end of October 1990. Dantex also argued that it was entitled to summary judgment as to Sasser’s good faith and fair dealing claim because Dantex owed no such duty to Sasser.

In response, Sasser apparently took the view that Dantex’s motion was based upon the theory that the 1974 Lease terminated only because there was not production in paying quantities. Sasser’s written response thus did not address Dantex’s theory that the 1990 Lease terminated Sasser’s overriding royalty interest — irrespective of whether there was production in paying quantities prior to its execution. Specifically, Sasser’s response alleged that “material issues of fact exist regarding whether there was production in paying quantities at the time the [1990] Lease was taken,” as well as “whether a reasonably prudent operator would have continued operations.” In support, Sasser tendered the affidavit of James F. Hill, which refuted Dantex’s proof that the 1974 Lease was not producing in paying quantities. Sas-ser also countered that Dantex owed him a duty of good faith and fair dealing, and Dan-tex breached this duty by entering the 1990 Lease. To support his response in this respect, Sasser tendered copies of Texas Railroad Commission forms, excerpts from Tip-pens’ deposition, and interrogatory answers.

The trial court granted Dantex’s motion, finding that the uncontroverted summary judgment proof established that the execution of the 1990 Lease by Dantex and New-som constituted a tacit release of the 1974 Lease, such that Sasser’s overriding royalty interest was extinguished. The trial court further found that the uncontroverted summary judgment proof established that the relationship between Dantex and Sasser was a purely business relationship, and there was no evidence of any special relationship.

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Bluebook (online)
906 S.W.2d 599, 1995 WL 496967, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sasser-v-dantex-oil-gas-inc-texapp-1995.