Shield v. Shield

286 S.W.2d 252, 1955 Tex. App. LEXIS 2339
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 7, 1955
Docket5102
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 286 S.W.2d 252 (Shield v. Shield) 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
Shield v. Shield, 286 S.W.2d 252, 1955 Tex. App. LEXIS 2339 (Tex. Ct. App. 1955).

Opinion

HAMILTON, Chief Justice.

This is an appeal from a judgment rendered below for plaintiffs, who sued for judicial determination of their ownership of minerals under four sections of land in Glasscock and Reagan Counties, Texas, and for an accounting to plaintiffs by the defendants below, who were co-tenants with plaintiffs, and who were alleged to have executed oil and gas leases covering the plaintiffs’ mineral interest. The court below decreed that certain mineral interests covered by oil and gas leases executed by defendants, belonged to plaintiffs below, and decreed that a proportional share of bonus payments and rentals received by defendants belonged to plaintiffs and gave judgment to plaintiffs for such amount.

It appears that a dispute between appellant Elgean Shield and plaintiffs’ predecessor in title as to ownership of the minerals under the land in question began a number of years ago. A short history of the ownership of the minerals in question will be helpful: Prior to February 20, 1936, Leon L. Shield, who was the father of the plaintiffs, Donald L. Shield and Mrs. Bob Montgomery, together with his brother, I. O. Shield, his brother Elgean Shield, his sister Camille Shield Wallace, Shield Brown, and a corporation known as Texas Standard Oil & Royalties, Inc., owned certain undivided mineral interests in lands located in Coleman, Brown, Glasscock, Reagan and Montague Counties in the State of Texas. Said corporation, together with the persons just named, jointly owned the oil, gas and other minerals in and under the following described lands, among other lands situated in Reagan and Glasscock Counties, Texas: Surveys 25 and 36, Block 35, Glasscock County, and Surveys 37 and 38, Block 35, Glasscock and Reagan Counties, Texas. By instrument of date February 20, 1936, the said joint owners, including Texas Standard Oil & Royalties, Inc., partitioned the mineral interests jointly owned in the above described lands, as well as other lands in those counties. Under such partition agreement Leon L. Shield received the surface and one-half the minerals of said Section 38, Block 35, the west 230 acres of Section 37, and the south 205 acres Qf said Section 36, and Texas Standard Oil & Royalties, Inc., received one-half of the oil, gas and other minerals in said lands. Elgean Shield received the surface and one-half of the minerals in Section 25, Block 35, and the north 435 acres of Section 36, Block 35, and Texas Standard Oil & Royalties, Inc., received the other one-half of all the oil, gas and other minerals in and under said lands.

As can be seen from this deed, Texas Standard Oil & Royalties, Inc., owned one-half of the minerals in said Sections 25, 36, 37 and 38 in Block 35, and it is these minerals which are the subject matter of this litigation. Appellants and appellees all trace their title to the minerals owned by the Texas Standard Oil & Royalties, Inc. The surface of said lands and the other undi *255 vided one-half of the minerals in these sections were subsequently conveyed to Edwin J. Glass, and were so owned at the time of this litigation and were not and are not in dispute in this case. Mrs. Emma C. Shield was the widow of Leon L. Shield, who died May 26, 1937, and acquired his stock interest in Texas Standard Oil & Royalties, Inc. under his will. Appellees herein derive their title through Emma C. Shield.

On January 17, 1939, Texas Standard Oil & Royalties, Inc., was dissolved by action of all parties owning stock in. said corporation. There was a dispute as to the ownership of 598 shares of stock. Mrs. Emma Shield claimed the 598 shares of stock which Elgean Shield also claimed by virtue of a certificate purported to have been issued to him. In 1943 Mrs. Emma Shield brought suit for partition of the mineral interests owned by the Texas Standard Oil & Royalties, Inc., predicating her claim to certain mineral interests upon the ownership of such 598 shares.

The issue of the validity of the certificate to said 598 shares standing in the name of Elgean Shield was tried to a jury with a finding to the effect that such certificate was forged, and final judgment was entered on October 30, 1943, in the district court of Coleman County, Texas, determining the proportionate ownership of Emma C. Shield and Elgean Shield in the mineral interests owned by Texas Standard Oil & Royalties, Inc., and partitioned certain described parcels thereof in kind.

The partition judgment and decree was predicated upon Texas Standard Oil & Royalties, Inc., owning a %sth interest in minerals under said Sections 25, 36, 37 and 38, whereas, as shown above, the corporation at the time of its dissolution and at the time of trial actually owned an undivided one-half interest in these minerals. The partition judgment, after setting out the particular interest of each party, used language which is hereinafter referred to as the “catch-all clause”, to-wit:

“It being further made to appear to the Court that there may be other oil and gas mineral properties located in Texas which Texas Standard Oil & Royalties, Inc., owned at the time of the dissolution of said corporation, which other properties are not described in and directly involved in the partition herein decreed, it is therefore further ordered, adjudged and decreed, in keeping with the preliminary decree and judgment herein that all oil, gas and mineral properties and all other assets whatsoever of Texas Standard Oil & Royalties, Inc., owned by said corporation at the time of its dissolution and which are not described in this decree of partition be and the same are hereby owned jointly, as follows, to-wit:
“An undivided 79%oooth interest therein by the plaintiff Emma C. Shield, individually and as independent executrix of the will of the estate of Leon L. Shield, deceased, and by her attorneys, J. B. Dibrell, Jr., and C. L. South in the proportion of ½ of such undivided interest by said plaintiff, ¼ of such undivided interest by J. B. Dibrell, Jr., and ¼ °f such undivided interest by C. L. South, 20%ooo undivided interest therein by the defendant Elgean Shield, and 10/iooo undivided interest by the defendant Geo. J. Schrup.”

There was introduced in evidence in the instant case below, a deed bearing date November 25, 1938, executed by Texas Standard Oil & Royalties, Inc., by Elgean Shield, President, to Elgean Shield, individually, purporting to convey to him all the minerals in controversy in this case formerly owned by the Texas Standard Oil & Royalties, Inc., including mineral interests under 215.16 acres of land in Montague County. This deed was shown not to have been recorded until January 1947. There was no showing that such deed was authorized by the Board of Directors, but on the contrary, a showing was made that neither the directors nor the stockholders authorized such conveyance. The genuineness and effectiveness of this deed was an issue in 1947, in case No. 10,276 in the District Court of Montague County, Texas, *256 97th Judicial District, from which the court adjudged and determined that the purported deed passed no title to Elgean Shield. Elgean Shield prosecuted an appeal to the Court of Civil Appeals for the Second Supreme Judicial District of Texas, at Fort Worth, which court affirmed the district court’s adjudication, Shield v. Donald, Tex.Civ.App., 253 S.W.2d 710

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Bluebook (online)
286 S.W.2d 252, 1955 Tex. App. LEXIS 2339, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shield-v-shield-texapp-1955.