Superior Oil Co. v. Dabney

204 S.W.2d 681, 1947 Tex. App. LEXIS 747
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 24, 1947
DocketNo. 11903
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 204 S.W.2d 681 (Superior Oil Co. v. Dabney) 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
Superior Oil Co. v. Dabney, 204 S.W.2d 681, 1947 Tex. App. LEXIS 747 (Tex. Ct. App. 1947).

Opinion

GRAVES, Justice.

This appeal is from a judgment of the 113th District Court of Harris County (Hon. Ben F. Wilson, Judge presiding), sitting without a jury, decreeing — pursuant to this State’s Declaratory Judgments Act, Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St. Article 2524— 1 — in material substance as follows:

“I. That the written agreement of the appellees (otherwise termed the Hutcheson heirs) with the appellant, The Superior Oil Company, on December 30, 1941, which has never been recorded, is a valid, subsisting agreement, binding and obligating the appellant to drill a well in search of oil, or gas, upon the James Ross Survey in Montgomery County, Texas, and the conditions set out in said agreement precedent [682]*682to the enforcement of said obligation by the appellees have been complied with.
“II. The drilling obligation of said agreement has never been complied with by appellant, nor superseded, modified, altered, discharged, or waived, in any respect, and appellant, though obligated to drill as agreed, has wholly failed to do so, and has been, and is, in default.
“III. The appellant is not entitled by tender of a release and surrender of the oil, gas, and mineral lease between appellees, or their predecessors in title, and The Superior Oil Company, on the 20th day of December, 1941, recorded in Volume 226, pages 135-141, Deed Records of Montgomery County, Texas, to be discharged and relieved of said drilling obligation, as expressed in said agreement. The release and surrender heretofore tendered by appellant to appellees as to all but eighteen (18) acres of the land leased, and refused and rejected by appellees, is insufficient and inadequate, and without effect to discharge any obligation of appellant, under said lease and agreement.”

Other than as so recited in its judgment, the trial court was neither requested to nor did it file any accompanying findings of fact, or conclusions of law; its recited findings, therefore, as well as any further ones that may judicially be deemed to have been necessary to support the judgment, must, on the appeal, be regarded as the established facts of the cause.

The court added a fifth (V) provision to its decree, relating to any right to further relief, based on such quoted declaration of an obligation to drill, as vouchsafed under Section 8, of the cited statute; but since neither side invoked that subsidiary procedure, the addition became functus officio.

Inveighing here against the judgment so adverse to it below, appellant presents, in substance, these ten points of error:

“The court erred in holding:
“(1) That the lease contract — written in two instruments, one recorded, one not recorded, executed contemporaneously by appellant and appellees, on December 20, 1941 — with respect to the oil, gas, and minerals in the James Ross Survey, are not to be construed together as constituting the single complete contract between the parties.
“(2) That the release executed and delivered by appellant to appellees — under the release and surrender clause in the recorded instrument — was wholly ineffectual to, and did not discharge and relieve appellant of the drilling and all other obligations as to the acreage surrendered.
“(3) That the lease contract with respect to drilling on the Ross Survey was not modified and changed by the subsequently-executed Pooling and Unit Operating Agreements, which did not require drilling on the Ross, or any other survey.
“(4) That the inclusion of 18 acres of the Ross Survey in the participating area, under the Pooling and Unit Operating Agreements, did not satisfy the drilling obligation on the Ross Survey claimed by appellees.
“(5) That appellant is obligated to drill a well for appellees on the James Ross. Survey, neither the drilling of the well nor the cost of such drilling being the relief, or measure of damages, to which appellees would be entitled in case of breach.
“(6) That appellant was obligated to drill a well on the Ross Survey, when the conclusive evidence shows that the Ross is only a part of the large pooled area held as one lease, on which, prior to this suit, production from wells satisfied all initial drilling-requirements; there being no pleading, or proof, that additional drilling under any covenant for development will be profitable to appellant and appellees.
“(7) The court erred in refusing to admit in evidence facts offered by appellant, which show that prior to appellees’ lease to appellant, and at all times since, the south 93-acre part of the James Ross Survey, nearest to production, was adversely claimed by South Texas Development Company and actually fenced and used by its tenant, so that possession and good title to said survey were not delivered by appel-lees to appellant, —from which it follows that appellant was not obligated to drill in the face of such adverse possession and claim.
“(8) The court erred in refusing to admit in evidence facts showing that the tract [683]*683of 93 acres off of the south side of the said Ross Survey was, and is, involved in litigation that appellees themselves brought against South Texas Development Company and Stanolind Oil and Gas Company, to which litigation this defendant in 1945 was made a party-defendant by cross-action filed by Stanolind Oil and Gas Company, — from which it follows that appellant was not obligated to drill.
“(9) The court erred in refusing to require that all persons who executed the Pooling and Unit Operating Agreements be made parties to this cause.
“(10) The court erred in refusing to transfer this cause to the District Court of Montgomery County, Texas, in which county the James Ross Survey in controversy is situated.”

None of these contentions, it is determined, should be sustained; indeed, most of them seem to this court to be tangential, as affects the one controlling question of law the trial court determined: That there did exist and subsist, as of the date this suit was filed by the appellees against the appellant, that is, November 29 of 1946, and until the judgment herein on March 10, 1947, an obligation upon appellant’s part to drill a well for the appellees, under the terms of the written contract declared-upon by the latter, in form and substance as authorized by our “Uniform Declaratory Judgments Act,” Vernon’s Civil Statutes, Title 46A, Art. 2524 — 1.

That result was arrived at by the court’s construction of the contracts between the parties, as the final legal effect thereof, after taking into consideration appellant’s stated objections thereto, and the acts done by both sides from the date thereof in 1941 until the filing of this suit in 1946; it is true, as the decree shows, that the court went further and expressly negatived the effectiveness, against the contractual relationships, of appellant’s major objections and defenses thereto, and in so doing, found against it on the matters of fact and other conditions precedent to the enforcement of the obligation it found upon it to so drill.

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Bluebook (online)
204 S.W.2d 681, 1947 Tex. App. LEXIS 747, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/superior-oil-co-v-dabney-texapp-1947.