Synnachia McQueen v. James A. Collins

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 31, 1991
Docket10-90-00189-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Synnachia McQueen v. James A. Collins (Synnachia McQueen v. James A. Collins) 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
Synnachia McQueen v. James A. Collins, (Tex. Ct. App. 1991).

Opinion

McQueen v. Collins et al

NO. 10-90-189-CV


IN THE

COURT OF APPEALS

FOR THE

TENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

AT WACO


* * * * * * * * * * * * *


          SYNNACHIA McQUEEN,

                                                                                            Appellant

          v.


          JAMES A. COLLINS, ET AL,

                                                                                            Appellees



From 52nd Judicial District Court

Coryell County, Texas

Trial Court #25,137



MEMORANDUM OPINION


* * * * * * *

          This is an appeal from an order of dismissal signed on July 23, 1990. Notice of appeal and an affidavit of inability to pay costs were filed on August 13. The transcript does not include a motion for new trial, thus the record was due in this court on September 21. See Tex. R. App. P. 54(a). The transcript was received but not filed in this court on October 25. Appellant filed a motion for out-of-time appeal on November 6.

          Appellant's motion for out-of-time appeal is denied because it was not filed within fifteen days of the due date of the transcript. See Tex. R. App. P. 54(c). The appeal is dismissed for failure to comply with the Rules of Appellate Procedure. See Tex. R. App. P. 60(a)(2); 54(a).  

                                                                                 PER CURIAM


Before Chief Justice Thomas and Justice Vance

       (Justice Cummings not participating)

Dismissed

Opinion delivered and filed January 31, 1991

Do not publish

0;                                           Appellee


From the 87th District Court

Limestone County, Texas

Trial Court # 24,744B

O P I N I O N

      Mark Loyd is the sole shareholder of M.L. Resources, Inc. In May 1996, Loyd went to see then-95-year-old Myrtle Miller at the retirement home in which she resided. Miller had agreed to sell Loyd a part of her mineral interests in some property, but he brought with him a deed which conveyed all of her mineral interests to him. She signed the deed, selling to Loyd for $600 a royalty-income stream then yielding $3,000 a year. In this suit, the trial court declared that she was entitled to a judgment reforming the deed so that it conveyed less than her entire mineral estate. Loyd appeals, asking us to reverse the judgment, arguing (1) the deed could never be subject to reformation because it was drafted before Miller agreed to sell her interests, and (2) the evidence is insufficient to support the court’s judgment. Rejecting both of his contentions, we affirm the judgment.

Background

      Miller owned a .007374 fractional interest of the “Miller Gas Unit” located in Limestone County. The mineral estate in the Unit had been divided horizontally into two parts: the “shallow horizon rights,” covering minerals up to 7,500 feet below the surface and the “deep horizon rights,” covering minerals found 7,500 feet and further below the surface.

      In the early part of 1994, Loyd was the operator of the Miller Gas Unit. In October, he attempted to purchase Miller’s shallow horizon royalty rights by mailing her a bank draft and a deed conveying those rights to him. At that time, Miller told Loyd that she was not interested in selling her rights.

      In 1996, Loyd again contacted Miller in an attempt to purchase her mineral rights. As before, he initiated the offer to buy her property by sending her a deed and a check. This time, though, the deed was not limited to her shallow horizon rights, but had the effect of conveying her entire mineral estate to him. In a follow up phone call, Miller rejected his offer, but agreed to sell him some rights for $600, although exactly what rights she agreed to sell was disputed at trial. According to Miller, she told Loyd on the phone that she would sell him only her shallow horizon rights. Loyd went to see Miller, bringing with him a deed which conveyed all of her mineral rights to him. Although Miller tried to read the deed, she could not find either her glasses or the magnifying glass that she used to help her read. Nevertheless, she signed the deed, and Loyd paid her $600.

      After Mitchell Energy Company, the Miller Unit’s operator in 1996, stopped sending Miller royalty payments some two months later, Miller attempted to contact Loyd to have the deed corrected. Loyd refused to speak with her about it, and she filed this suit seeking to have the deed reformed by the court to show that she conveyed only her shallow horizon rights. After a bench trial, the court found that Miller’s vision was limited, she had relied on the representations by Loyd as to what the deed she signed conveyed, she believed that Loyd was seeking to purchase the shallow horizon rights, she mistakenly believed that she had conveyed only those rights to Loyd by the deed, and that her mistake was accompanied by fraud or other inequitable conduct by Loyd in his representations to Miller regarding the deed. Based on these findings, the court ordered the deed reformed to convey only the shallow horizon rights and awarded Miller $7,500 in attorney’s fees.

Can a “preprinted” deed ever be reformed?

      In his first issue, Loyd claims that the trial court erred because the “deed was drafted before any negotiation between Miller and Loyd and it was signed without alteration[,]” and so could never be reformed to convey only the shallow horizon mineral rights. He relies on Cherokee Water Co. v. Forderhouse, 741 S.W.2d 377, 380-81 (Tex. 1987) (Cherokee Water II). In Cherokee Water II, the plaintiffs signed a preprinted deed and later sought to reform the deed to delete a right of first refusal to “purchase the oil, gas and other minerals” in the property. Id. at 378. According to the Supreme Court, “any discussion, much less agreement, concerning [the right of first refusal] occurred after the deed was signed.” Id. at 380. Thus, in Cherokee Water II there was no agreement other than that expressed by the language of the deed, and that language unambiguously conferred the right of first refusal of all minerals on Cherokee Water Company. Id. at 381 (“All that we have in this case is a form deed which contained the total agreement between the parties.”); see also Cherokee Water Co. v. Forderhouse, 641 S.W.2d 522, 525 (Tex. 1982) (Cherokee Water I

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