Springer Ranch, Ltd. v. Jones

421 S.W.3d 273, 178 Oil & Gas Rep. 532, 2013 WL 6714072, 2013 Tex. App. LEXIS 15370
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 20, 2013
DocketNo. 04-12-00554-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 421 S.W.3d 273 (Springer Ranch, Ltd. v. Jones) 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
Springer Ranch, Ltd. v. Jones, 421 S.W.3d 273, 178 Oil & Gas Rep. 532, 2013 WL 6714072, 2013 Tex. App. LEXIS 15370 (Tex. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

OPINION

Opinion by:

LUZ ELENA D. CHAPA, Justice.

In this appeal from a declaratory judgment, we must construe a 1993 contract to determine the allocation of royalties from a horizontal well that begins on the property of the appellant, Springer Ranch, Ltd., but ends under the property of Rosalie Matthews Sullivan, one of the appellees. Our construction will also govern the allocation of royalties to future horizontal wells covered by the contract. The trial court held the contract required royalties from the horizontal well in dispute, and any future horizontal wells crossing the parties’ property lines, must be allocated based on the productive portions of the well underlying the parties’ properties. We affirm.

BACKGROUND

Origin of the Parties’ Interests

The parties to this appeal are the heirs or successors-in-interest to Alice Burk-holder, who owned 8,545 acres of land in La Salle County, Texas, and Webb County, Texas. The property is centered around Encinal, Texas. Alice executed an oil and gas lease on the entire property in 1956 that is still in force today. Upon her death, Alice’s will devised her property interest as a life estate in her husband, Joseph Burkholder. The will divided the remainder interest into three tracts and devised the tracts to the parties’ predecessors-in-interest. Joseph passed away in 1990, and the land was divided in accordance with the will. Springer Ranch, sue-[277]*277cessor-in-interest to Barbara Welhausen Springer, holds the portion of the original Burkholder tract “lying North of the Krugerville Road and West of Highway 81 [now U.S. Interstate 35].” Rosalie Matthews Sullivan, successor-in-interest to Lawrence Matthews, holds the “land lying on the East side of Highway 81 [1-35].” The “land lying South of the Krugerville Road and West of Highway 81” is held by some combination of O.F. Jones III, Margaret Matthews, Ethel Matthews Rust, and Elizabeth Matthews, as suecessors-in-interest to Anthony Matthews. Springer Ranch and Sullivan own the entire undivided interests in their tracts of land and the lease benefits from their tracts. O.F. Jones and the remaining Matthews parties have entered into a partition agreement with respect to the third tract.

In 1993, the parties to this appeal or their predecessors-in-interest executed the contract at issue in this case. The contract recites in part:

WHEREAS, a question has arisen as to the ownership of royalties payable under the [Burkholder] lease to the owners of the various tracts of land above described; and
WHEREAS, the parties wish to settle such question by means of this instrument;

The operative language of the agreement provides:

[the parties] contract and agree with each of the other parties, that all royalties payable under the above described Oil and Gas Lease from any well or wells on said 8,545.02 acre tract, shall be paid to the owner of the surface estate on which such well or wells are situated, without reference to any production unit on which such well or wells are located....

This agreement affected six vertical wells at the time it was made with two wells situated on each subdivided tract.

Present Controversy

This 1993 contract operated for almost two decades prior to the drilling of the first horizontal well under the Burkholder lease. This well, the Springer Ranch No. 2 well (“the SR2 well”), begins on Springer Ranch’s property, crosses the boundary line between Springer Ranch’s property and Rosalie Matthews Sullivan’s property, and terminates under Sullivan’s property. When Sullivan became aware of the nature of the SR2 well, she negotiated with Springer Ranch to receive a portion of the royalties from that well. After those negotiations failed, she made a demand for a portion of the royalties to the well’s operator. The operator ceased paying royalties until the dispute was resolved between Springer Ranch and Sullivan. We have reproduced the following image from the record to illustrate the situation of the SR2 well.

[278]*278[[Image here]]

With respect to the SR2 well, Springer Ranch is in the position of “Surface Owner A,” and Sullivan is in the position of “Surface Owner B.” The illustration does not purport to be to scale.

Springer Ranch then sued Sullivan and the other parties in a declaratory judgment action. It moved for summary judgment, seeking a declaration that it was entitled to receive all the royalties from the SR2 well under the 1993 contract, and that the same allocation applied to future horizontal wells covered by the contract. Its proposed construction at trial and on appeal is succinctly stated in its brief:

The words in the Royalty Agreement work in harmony to establish a very simple mechanism by which the parties’ 1992-93 controversy was settled. “All” royalties, meaning 100% without division, were to be paid to “the” owner, meaning a single exclusive owner, who owned the “the surface estate on which such well [is] situated,” meaning the visible location on the land from which hydrocarbons exited, “without reference to any production unit on which such well or wells are located,” meaning without any regard to the acreage that “can reasonably be considered to be productive of hydrocarbons.” That is what is required by the plain meaning of the words. That construction employs and harmonizes all the words used.

The defendants (collectively referred to as “the Matthews”) filed a competing motion for summary judgment, asking the trial court to allocate the royalties to the SR2 well between Springer Ranch and Sullivan based on the location of the productive portions of the well. Their argument rests on the premise that the SR2 well is “situated on” both Springer Ranch’s and Sullivan’s “surface estates” within the meaning of the 1993 contract. Thus, Springer Ranch and Sullivan are entitled to “all” the royalties from the “productive portions” of the SR2 well “situated” on their “surface estates.” As part of their summary judgment evidence, the Matthews offered the affidavit of a petroleum engineer to show how “all” the royalties from the portions of the well “situated on” the respective “surface estates” could be [279]*279determined and allocated. They also sought a declaration that the same formula be applied to future horizontal wells.

The trial court held a hearing on the parties’ motions. After the hearing, the court issued this judgment:

(i) the June 3, 1993 agreement referred to by the parties as the Royalty Agreement, concerning ownership of royalties under the October 5, 1956 oil and gas lease recorded in Volume 5, Page 151 of the Oil and Gas Records of La Salle County, Texas, is unambiguous; (ii) the Royalty Agreement requires that the royalties from the Springer Ranch No. 2 well be divided between Defendant Rosalie Sullivan and Plaintiff Springer Ranch Ltd. based on the productive portions of the well situated on their properties; (iii) Defendant Rosalie Sullivan is entitled to receive royalty of .08500689 of production from the well and Plaintiff Springer Ranch, Ltd.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
421 S.W.3d 273, 178 Oil & Gas Rep. 532, 2013 WL 6714072, 2013 Tex. App. LEXIS 15370, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/springer-ranch-ltd-v-jones-texapp-2013.