Steger v. Muenster Drilling Co., Inc.

134 S.W.3d 359, 2003 WL 22923010
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 18, 2004
Docket2-02-228-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by80 cases

This text of 134 S.W.3d 359 (Steger v. Muenster Drilling Co., 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
Steger v. Muenster Drilling Co., Inc., 134 S.W.3d 359, 2003 WL 22923010 (Tex. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

OPINION

JOHN CAYCE, Chief Justice.

I. Introduction

In this will construction case, Marjorie Maddox Steger (Mrs. Steger) and her two sons, William L. (“Bill”) Steger, Jr. and John Marshal Steger (the Steger sons), appeal the trial court’s judgment that ap-pellees 1 are the owners of the working interests in certain oil and gas leases in Montague County, Texas. Because we conclude that the trial court properly construed the will at issue with respect to Mrs. Steger’s claims and that the Steger sons’ claims are barred by res judicata, we will affirm the trial court’s judgment.

II. Background Facts and Procedural History

The facts of this case are largely undisputed. Mrs. Steger is the last surviving child of John W. (J.W.) and Carrie T. Maddox, and the Steger sons are her only children. From the 1920s until his death in 1933, J.W. Maddox and his wife, Carrie T. Maddox, owned as their community property approximately 10,646 acres of ranch lands in Montague and Clay Counties, Texas. The Maddoxes’ property included the following lands in Montague County:

• 334 acres out of the John Chambliss Survey, A-123, subject to an undivided one-half mineral interest in 50 acres of this tract held by Aaron Cohen (Tract i);
• All of the C.W. Thompson Survey, A-741, containing 480 acres, more or less, save and except 160 acres of land in the form of a square out of the northwest comer of the survey (Tract 2);
• All of the H.S. Arnold Survey, A-5, containing 320 acres, more or less, subject to an undivided one-half mineral interest in 100 acres of this tract, more or less, held by N.R. Beal (exclusive of the right to receive cash bonuses and delay rentals) (Tract 3);
• 45 acres, more or less, out of the S. Little Survey, A-417, and the W.P. Zu-ber Survey, A-887 (Tract 4).

In the mid-1920s, the North Nocona Oil Field was discovered and extensively developed. The North Nocona Oil Field has been prolific and is still producing today. Tracts 1-3 of the Maddoxes’ land are in the middle of this oil field.

*364 During his lifetime, J.W. Maddox leased all of Tracts 1-3 and other lands for oil and gas purposes. He made, as lessor, at least twenty-six oil and gas leases covering various parts of these lands, all of which contained a fixed primary term of years or months and a secondary term of as long as oil or gas is produced in paying quantities. Carrie Maddox was also a lessor on most of these leases, and she had personal knowledge of their terms and provisions.

In 1931, J.W. Maddox hired an attorney to prepare his will. By that time, approximately 175 oil or gas wells had been drilled on the Maddoxes’ lands in the North Noco-na Oil Field, including more than 150 producing wells. In 1931, the producing wells produced approximately 33,075 barrels of oil per month. The royalties J.W. and Carrie Maddox received in 1930 were between $2,460 and $4,920 per month.

When J.W. Maddox executed his will in July 1931, he was seventy-one years old, and Carrie was fifty-five. J.W. and Carrie had ten children, the youngest of whom— Marjorie (now Mrs. Steger) and Martha Lou — were sixteen and thirteen years old, respectively.

J.W. Maddox died on May 26, 1933, and his will was admitted to probate in Montague County. Carrie served as the independent executrix of J.W.’s estate. Except for cash bequests that are not relevant to this case, J.W.’s will bequeathed to Carrie — as long as she remained unmarried — a life estate in all of his estate, i.e., his one-half interest in their community property (the J.W. Maddox community interest). In the fourth and sixth paragraphs of his will, J.W. gave Carrie the following powers and authority:

• the possession, management, control, and use of the residue of J.W.’s real and personal property during her life;
• full power and authority to manage, control, and lease for all purposes the real and personal property given during her lifetime;
• full power and authority to extract therefrom all oil, gas, and other minerals during her lifetime;
• power and authority to manage and control jointly with her estate all other property; and
• power and authority to collect and have the rents and revenues arising from the entire estate during her life. 2

*365 J.W.’s will also bequeathed to each of his ten children a secondary life estate, following Carrie’s death, in specific parts of the J.W. Maddox community interest. To Martha Lou, he gave a secondary life estate in his community interest in Tracts 1-4 with a fee simple remainder interest to her bodily heirs, subject to a 3/4 royalty interest in favor of J.W.’s other nine children. If Martha Lou died without children, however, the fee simple interest passed to J.W.’s surviving children, share and share alike. Regarding Martha Lou’s life estate, in the eighth and nineteenth paragraphs of his will, J.W. gave her the following powers and authority:

• to collect rents and revenues;
• to make leases of whatever nature on the real estate;
• to extract therefrom all oil, gas, and/or other minerals over which she had control during her lifetime. 3

After J.W.’s death, Carrie, who remained unmarried, owned a life estate in the J.W. Maddox community interest in Tracts 1-4 and a fee estate in her one-half community property interest in these tracts. Also after J.W.’s death, Carrie leased various parts of Tracts 1-3 and other Maddox lands for oil and gas purposes. She made, as lessor, at least forty-two oil and gas leases, each of which — like J.W.’s leases — contained a fixed primary term of years or months and a secondary term of as long as oil or gas is produced in paying quantities. No other beneficiary under J.W.’s will joined Carrie as lessor or separately ratified these leases. However, no Maddox heir, including Mrs. Steger, ever questioned Carrie’s authority as life tenant to make oil and gas leases. Instead, Mrs. Steger and her brothers and sisters “just let it alone,” and “grabbed those checks and ran ... because it was okay.”

By 1959, Martha Lou was married to Dan Hughes, Jr. In 1959, Carrie, as lessor, made two oil and gas leases, known as the J.W. Maddox No. 2 Lease and the J.W. Maddox No. 3 Lease, to Dan. The Maddox No. 2 Lease covered 50 acres out of Tract 1, and the Maddox No. 3 Lease covered 257 acres out of Tract 1, less the 50 acres in the Maddox No. 2 Lease. Both Leases were for a primary term of one year or more and a secondary term of as long thereafter as oil or gas was produced in paying quantities. Oil has been continu *366 ously produced in paying quantities from both Leases since 1959.

Carrie Maddox died in January 1960.

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Bluebook (online)
134 S.W.3d 359, 2003 WL 22923010, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/steger-v-muenster-drilling-co-inc-texapp-2004.