Sun Operating Ltd. Partnership v. Oatman

911 S.W.2d 749, 1995 WL 92593
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 2, 1995
Docket04-93-00634-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 911 S.W.2d 749 (Sun Operating Ltd. Partnership v. Oatman) 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
Sun Operating Ltd. Partnership v. Oatman, 911 S.W.2d 749, 1995 WL 92593 (Tex. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinion

OPINION

STONE, Justice.

This is a suit to determine the respective rights of the parties regarding an undivided one-eighth mineral interest in certain property in Dimmit and Zavala Counties, Texas. Each of the parties trace their title back to Clara Whiting Floyd, deceased (“Clara”), who owned the subject one-eighth interest at the time of her death in 1935. Wayland W. Oatman (“Oatman”) claims title under a 1974 receiver’s lease granted to him on behalf of Clara’s unknown heirs. Sun Operating Limited Partnership (“Sun”) claims title under a 1970 oil, gas and mineral lease from Jennie Floyd Hayden (“Jennie”), the step-daughter of Clara.

Oatman filed, suit claiming title under the receiver’s lease, and alternatively, claiming to have acquired title by adverse possession. Oatman also sought to recover from Sun as operator of a well on the property, the net proceeds of production attributable to the subject interest, plus attorney’s fees and interest. Sun filed a counterclaim asserting title under the earlier oil and gas lease from Jennie.

Sun and Oatman both filed motions for summary judgment on the question of title to Clara’s one-eighth interest for the depths below 5,532 feet. The trial court granted Oatman’s motion and denied Sun’s motion, thereby upholding Oatman’s claim of title. Oatman had also filed suit for conversion, asking for the gross proceeds of production plus exemplary damages. Summary judgment was granted for Sun on this issue and Oatman does not appeal the trial court’s decision.

The parties stipulated as to the net proceeds attributable to the one-eighth interest and the amount, but not the recoverability, of Oatman’s attorney’s fees. The parties also stipulated that no matter who was deemed to be the holder of a valid lease, the lessors, who are Jennie’s heirs, will receive a three-sixteenths royalty from the proceeds of production for the disputed one-eighth interest, even though the receiver’s lease only provides for a one-eighth royalty.

Following a bench trial on prejudgment interest and recoverability of attorney’s fees, the trial court entered judgment declaring Oatman the owner of the one-eighth working interest and awarding Oatman the net proceeds of one-eighth of production, together with prejudgment interest, post-judgment interest at ten percent, attorney’s fees and costs. Sun presents seven points of error on appeal. We affirm in part and reverse and render in part.

FACTUAL BACKGROUND

In 1931 Jennie and Clara purchased an undivided one-fourth interest in the property in question at a partition sale. The interest that is at issue in this case is the one-eighth mineral interest that was Clara’s half of this undivided one-fourth interest.

Clara died in 1935 and left her one-eighth interest to Jennie under a will probated in Arkansas. Oatman and Sun were not aware of the will or the probate proceedings. Jennie also claimed that she was unaware that she owned Clara’s one-eighth interest upon Clara’s death, although she served as executrix of Clara’s will. For some unexplained reason, Jennie signed an affidavit prepared by Sun which said that Clara had died intestate, without any known heirs. Unfortunately, Jennie passed away before trial so this mystery remains unsolved.

In 1970 Jennie and other surface owners executed an oil, gas and mineral lease (the “Sun Lease”), leasing to Sun their interest in the land. Sun claims title to Clara’s one-eighth interest under this lease arguing that the Sun Lease conveyed all of Jennie’s interest in the land, even though no one realized that Jennie owned not only her own one-eighth interest, but also Clara’s one-eighth interest.

In 1973 Sun assigned the Sun Lease to Oatman as to all mineral rights to a depth of *753 5,582 feet, reserving a one-sixteenth overriding royalty, and retaining all rights under the lease to depths below 5,532 feet (the “Sun-Oatman Agreement”). In the instant litigation Clara’s one-eighth interest is at issue only as to these retained rights below 5,532 feet. At the time of the Sun-Oatman Agreement, Oatman and Sun were unaware that Clara had left a will. Sun provided Oatman with title opinions showing that its lease covered only seven-eighths of the property. It was Sun that suggested Oatman obtain a receiver’s lease from Clara’s unknown heirs for the remaining one-eighth interest. The summary judgment record clearly reveals that Sun did not claim ownership of Clara’s outstanding one-eighth interest.

In 1974 Oatman determined that Clara had died, but was still unaware of the will that had been probated in Arkansas devising Clara’s interest to Jennie. He believed that Clara had died intestate, and that her interest existed as an outstanding unleased one-eighth interest owned by Clara’s unknown heirs. In order to gain a lease on the subject one-eighth interest, and in accordance with Sun’s suggestion, in 1974 Oatman filed suit in Dimmit County seeking the appointment of a receiver for Clara’s unknown heirs. A receiver was appointed, and on December 16, 1974, the receiver executed an oil, gas and mineral lease to Oatman (the “Receiver’s Lease”). The Receiver’s Lease, which is the source of the interest that Oatman claims, covers Clara’s one-eighth interest. Sun was given copies of both Oatman’s application for appointment of the receiver and the Receiver’s Lease.

In 1975 Oatman drilled and completed a producing well on the subject tract. The bottom perforation of the well was within the shallow zone assigned to Oatman by Sun. Oatman paid Sun a royalty based on the seven-eighths interest in the land that both parties believed Sun owned. Sun had not made a formal claim for the royalty on the additional one-eighth interest, although later in 1991 it asked the purchaser of production from the subject property to suspend payment of royalties to Oatman deriving from the disputed interest.

In late 1976, two years after Oatman obtained the Receiver’s Lease, Jennie contacted Oatman and told him of Clara’s will. A certified copy of the will was then filed in 1977 in the Dimmit County deed records and with the court in the receivership proceeding. The court discharged the receiver, terminated the receivership proceeding, and ordered payment to Jennie of any accrued royalties under the Receiver’s Lease. The Receiver’s Lease was not terminated, however, and Oat-man continued to pay Jennie royalties under this lease. Sun was notified of this will shortly after it was filed of record.

In 1988, long after it was aware of the existence and terms of Clara’s will, Sun executed a division order indicating that it had the right to receive a one-sixteenth royalty for seven-eighths of the land under the Sun-Oatman Agreement. In other words, eleven years after learning of Clara’s will, Sun continued to conduct business based on its leasehold interest covering seven-eights of the subject property, not covering a full eight-eights. In December 1989 Sun contacted Oatman to discuss the possibility of Oatman assigning his rights to the remaining one-eighth interest to Sun so that it could drill a well below 5,532 feet. One month later Sun changed its position and asserted that it already owned the one-eighth interest in question.

In 1990 Sun drilled the first of two wells more than 5,532 feet beneath the surface. Upon learning of these wells Oatman demanded that Sun account to him for one-eighth of the net proceeds of production.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
911 S.W.2d 749, 1995 WL 92593, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sun-operating-ltd-partnership-v-oatman-texapp-1995.