Tarrant County Water Control and Improvement District Number One v. P.D. Fullwood, Individually and D/B/A P.D. Fullwood Operating Company

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 20, 1996
Docket10-95-00053-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Tarrant County Water Control and Improvement District Number One v. P.D. Fullwood, Individually and D/B/A P.D. Fullwood Operating Company (Tarrant County Water Control and Improvement District Number One v. P.D. Fullwood, Individually and D/B/A P.D. Fullwood Operating Company) 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
Tarrant County Water Control and Improvement District Number One v. P.D. Fullwood, Individually and D/B/A P.D. Fullwood Operating Company, (Tex. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

Tarrant Co Water Control v. Fullwood


IN THE

TENTH COURT OF APPEALS


No. 10-95-053-CV


     TARRANT COUNTY WATER CONTROL AND

     IMPROVEMENT DISTRICT NUMBER ONE,

                                                                                              Appellant

     v.


     P.D. FULLWOOD, INDIVIDUALLY AND

     D/B/A P.D. FULLWOOD OPERATING

     COMPANY, ET AL.,

                                                                                              Appellees


From the 13th District Court

Navarro County, Texas

Trial Court # 103-89


O P I N I O N


      This is the second appeal to come before us involving this dispute. In the first, we held that the court had erred in granting the Tarrant County Water Control and Improvement District Number One (the District) a take-nothing summary judgment on P.D. Fullwood, et al.'s (Fullwood) claim that the District had inversely condemned the mineral estate underlying a portion of the Richland-Chambers Reservoir in Navarro County and remanded the cause for trial. P.D. Fullwood v. Tarrant County Water Control and Improvement District Number One, No. 10-92-020-CV (Tex. App.—Waco, November 18, 1992, writ denied) (not designated for publication) (Fullwood I). On remand, the trial court ruled, after a bench trial, that the District had inversely condemned Fullwood's mineral estate. Damages were tried to a jury, which determined that the damages to the estate were $1,947,065. The court added $60,000, the amount of a judgment awarded to Fullwood before the first appeal as damages for condemnation of his royalty interest in a lease covering the same property, and rendered a final judgment in the amount of $2,007,065.

      The District appeals from this judgment, raising eleven points of error. Its first six points argue that the court erred in finding that it had inversely condemned the minerals. We will reject these contentions primarily because they are based on a misreading of Fullwood I. The five remaining points attack the court's failure to award the District title to the minerals, the amount of the judgment, and various evidentiary rulings by the court. We will affirm the judgment to the extent it is consistent with the court's factual finding that the estate was damaged, but we will sustain one of the District's complaints under the "one satisfaction" rule and reform the judgment to delete the double recovery. Fullwood raises one cross-point, complaining that the court conducted a bench trial on the inverse condemnation issue, which we will not reach.

BACKGROUND

Land, Water and Oil

      The mineral estate at issue lies under two tracts of land, totaling 316.3 acres, and is part of the South Kerens (Woodbine) Field. Fullwood acquired the surface of the 316.3 acres from his parents in August 1954. At that time, the mineral estate was subject to a 1943 mineral lease executed by his parents. Fullwood inherited the reversionary interest under the lease upon his mother's death in 1970. At the same time, she devised him a one-third interest in the one-eighth royalty under the 1943 lease.

      In 1979, the District began acquiring the surface estate of some 45,000 acres of land for the construction of the Richland-Chambers reservoir, a fresh-water reservoir servicing Fort Worth, Corsicana, and the surrounding area. Fullwood conveyed the surface of the 316.3 acres to the District in 1981 as the result of a negotiated sale in lieu of condemnation. The deed expressly recognized the purpose of the acquisition and reserved the minerals to Fullwood, subject to the District's right to construct, maintain, and operate the reservoir.

      At the time of the sale of the surface to the District, Exxon Corporation and Olson Brothers, Inc., the successors-in-interest of the lessees under the 1943 lease, maintained ten oil wells on the land, four of which were in production. Initially, the District indicated that it did not intend to condemn the working interests of these lessees. However, through condemnation in 1986, the District acquired Exxon's and Olson Brothers' leasehold interests. Although the District continued to operate the condemned working interest through its agent Pool Company and to pay the royalties due under the 1943 lease during the fall of 1986, by April 1987 it had plugged all of the wells on the 316.3 acres.

      The District continued to prepare the lake-bed for inundation. It cleaned up all of the well sites located within the bed area, removed or buried pipelines, and removed electrical wires and poles. In July 1987 the dam was closed and inundation began.

      Because the 1943 mineral lease terminated sixty days after production stopped, Fullwood acquired ownership of the full mineral estate in May or June 1987. He began to make plans for the production of the minerals. In May 1988 he applied for and was granted permits by the Railroad Commission to re-enter four wells located on the property. In July, he began reentry operations on a well referred to as the Fullwood 1-X well. On July 29, 1989, he executed a new mineral lease with La Pesca Production, Inc. covering the full 316.3 acres. Within days La Pesca entered into a joint development agreement with Haupt, Inc., assigning Haupt one-half of the lease interest. During the reentry operations on the 1-X well, Fullwood encountered "junk," i.e., non-drillable material such as steel or iron, in the well bore. This material delayed completion of the well and increased his operating expenses. After completing the reentry operations on this well, Fullwood obtained permission from the Railroad Commission to create a 20-acre unit to support the 1-X well's production. In anticipation of inundation for the Reservoir, Fullwood elevated the 1-X wellhead on a platform which would be above the water level.

      In early May 1989, the Reservoir reached its normal pool elevation, and all of the well sites on the 316.3 acres were covered by water.

The Lawsuit and The First Appeal

      Fullwood, La Pesca and Haupt filed suit against the District in March 1989, alleging, among other things, that the District had inversely condemned the mineral estate underlying the 316.3 acres, and violated its duty as the lessee under the 1943 lease to act as a reasonably prudent operator during the period it held the working interest.

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Tarrant County Water Control and Improvement District Number One v. P.D. Fullwood, Individually and D/B/A P.D. Fullwood Operating Company, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tarrant-county-water-control-and-improvement-distr-texapp-1996.