State Nat. Bank of Corpus Christi v. Morgan

123 S.W.2d 1036
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 12, 1938
DocketNo. 4966.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 123 S.W.2d 1036 (State Nat. Bank of Corpus Christi v. Morgan) 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
State Nat. Bank of Corpus Christi v. Morgan, 123 S.W.2d 1036 (Tex. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

STOKES, Justice.

On the 1st day of November, 1933, appellant, State National Bank of Corpus Christi, conveyed to Jas. G. Fisher 234.55 acres of land located in Nueces County. By special stipulation in the deed the Bank reserved an undivided one-half interest in all of the royalty in oil and other minerals in and under, and that might be produced and mined from the tract of land conveyed. It was provided in such reservation clause, however, that the grantor did not reserve nor retain any right of participating in the making of future oil and gas leases nor of participating in the bonus or bonuses which may be received from any future lease, nor of participating in any rental that may be paid for the privilege of deferring the commencement of a well under any lease then or thereafter executed. It provided further that any lease or contract that may be made for the development of the land should provide for a royalty of not less than one-eighth of any oil or gas that may be produced.

On the same day, Fisher conveyed the land to appellee, Rand Morgan, and in his deed it was provided that the conveyance was subject to the reservation to appellant Bank of an undivided one-half interest in and to all royalty in oil and other minerals in and under, and that may be produced and mined from the land conveyed as fully set out in the deed from appellant Bank to the grantor of the same date.

On the 6th of April, 1936, appellee, Morgan, joined by his wife, executed to Roland S. Bond an oil and gas lease on a portion of the land, and on the 18th of April, 1936, he executed to Fleetwood Oil Company and J. H. Coker two oil and gas leases on other portions of the land which he had purchased from Fisher under the deed above mentioned.

The oil and gas leases contained the following provision: “5th: In addition to all other reservations of royalties herein made and provided for the benefit of lessors, there is reserved to lessors, their heirs and assigns, the title to an undivided one-eighth of seven-eighths (1/8 of 7/8) equal part of all oil, gas and/or other minerals in, under, and that may be produced and saved from said land, as, if, and when so produced and saved, but not otherwise, until lessors shall have received free of cost of production, marketing- or handling, the sum of Forty Eight Thousand Dollars ($48,000.00), whereupon this reservation shall terminate and the title to said one-eighth of seven-eighths (1/8 of 7/8) undivided interest in said oil, gas, and/or other minerals shall thereupon vest in lessee, his heirs, and assigns.”

A royalty of one-eighth of any oil that should be produced from the land was reserved to the lessor under the preceding fourth clause of the leases and, pursuant to the provisions of the leases, wells were drilled on each of the three tracts covered by them in which oil was discovered and produced in large quantities. The production from all three of the wells was sold to The Texas Company who paid one-half of the one-eighth reserved in the fourth clause as royalty to appellant Bank and the other one-half to appellee, Morgan, and it paid to the owners of the lease seven-eighths of the remaining portion of the production, but a controversy having arisen between the Bank and appellee, Morgan, concerning the status and ownership of the remaining portion, viz., one-eighth of the seven-eighths working interest reserved in the fifth clause, The Texas Company impounded and declined to pay the proceeds of that portion of the production to either of them and such refusal resulted in the filing of this suit by appellee. The leases were identical in all respects material to this controversy. The issues made by the pleadings involve the provisions of the fifth clause of the leases which is quoted above, appellee contending the one-eighth of the seven-eighths working interest which was retained in that clause constituted what is commonly termed “bonus” and appellant Bank contending it constituted “royalty” and that, by virtue of the reservation in the Bank’s deed to Fisher of an undivided one-half interest in and to’ all of the royalty in oil that may be produced from the land, it is entitled to one-half of the proceeds of the sale to The Texas Company of the ofie-eighth of the seven-eighths working interest reserved in the fifth clause by appellee, Morgan, and also to one-half of any oil, or its proceeds, that may afterwards be produced or sold of that portion.

At the time of the trial the proceeds from the sale of the one-eighth of the seven-eighths working interest amounted *1038 to the sum of $8,723.21, which The Texas Company admitted it owed and which it sought to pay into the registry o'f the court to be disposed of in accordance with the finding and decree of the court upon the trial.

The case was submitted to the court without the intervention of a jury and judgment was rendered on the 25th of October, 1937, to the effect that appellee, Morgan, was the sole owner of the one-eighth of the seven-eighths working interest which was reserved in the fifth clause of the leases, decreeing to him the impounded fund held by The Texas Company and denying to appellant Bank any relief.

From the' judgment entered by the court the Bank has prosecuted this appeal and presents the case here upon eleven propositions which, we think, may be reduced to two general contentions, first, that the court erred in finding, in effect, as a matter of law, that the quoted fifth clause in the Teases was a provision, not for royalty, but for bonus to be paid as consideration for the execution of the leases and, second, that the clause mentioned was an operative and contractual part of the leases, clearly and without ambiguity providing for royalty and parol evidence was, therefore, not admissible and could not be resorted to for the purpose of contradicting it or ascertaining its meaning or effectuating its interpretation.

Under the first contention appellant asserts that the accepted definition of the word “royalty” as given by the present unabridged edition of Webster’s dictionary is: “ * * * a share of the product or profit (as of a mine, forest, etc.) reserved by the owner for permitting another to use his property.”

It asserts further in this connection that the word “bonus” is defined as: “The cash consideration in addition to royalties for a lease or transfer of oil lands.”

The conclusion is drawn, therefore, that the fifth clause of the leases which provides that: “In addition to all other reservations of royalties herein made and provided for the benefit of the lessors, there is reserved to lessors, their- heirs and assigns, the title to an undivided one-eighth of seven-eighths (1/8 of 7/8) equal part of all oil * * * until lessors shall have received * * * Forty Eight Thousand Dollars ($48,000.00)”, necessarily constitutes royalty under the accepted definition above mentioned because it is a share of the product or profit reserved by the lessor for permitting the lessee to use his property. It contends that the one-eighth of the seven-eighths of the production reserved in the fifth clause by appellee in the leases until that portion amounted, to the sum of $48,-000, being royalty and not bonus nor any other element of the leasing transaction, appellant Bank, under its reservation in the deed which it executed to Fisher, is entitled to one-half of the proceeds from that portion of the oil in addition to one-half of the one-eighth reserved as royalty in the fourth clause of the leases.

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Related

State Nat'l Bk. of Corpus Christi v. Morgan
143 S.W.2d 757 (Texas Supreme Court, 1940)

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123 S.W.2d 1036, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-nat-bank-of-corpus-christi-v-morgan-texapp-1938.