Texas Pacific Coal & Oil Co. v. Fox

228 S.W. 1021, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 816
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 5, 1921
DocketNo. 9429.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 228 S.W. 1021 (Texas Pacific Coal & Oil Co. v. Fox) 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
Texas Pacific Coal & Oil Co. v. Fox, 228 S.W. 1021, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 816 (Tex. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

DUNKLIN, J.

On the 31st day of March, 1917, Mrs. Nancy C. Fox executed to the Texas & Pacific Coal Company, the predecessor of the Texas Pacific Coal & Oil Company, an oil and gas lease on a tract of 376 acres of land, in which the six plaintiffs in this suit, who are her children, owned an undivided interest of 174 acres, and she owned the remaining undivided interest in the tract. After the execution of the lease, plaintiffs conveyed to their mother their undivided interests, and the deed thereto was duly recorded. Subsequently, the mother reeonveyed to plaintiffs, by separate deeds, the respective undivided interests theretofore conveyed to her by them. Prior to the execution of one of those reconveyances, viz., the one to plaintiff J. H. Fox, Mrs. Nancy C. Fox had 'ex *1022 ecuted to the Texas Pacific Coal & Oil Company an instrument expressly confirming and ratifying the lease theretofore given by her, as to the entire tract of 376 acres.

Plaintiffs instituted this suit against the Texas Pacific Coal & Oil Company, in the statutory form of trespass to try title, to recover the undivided interest of 174 acres in the 376-acre tract, and upon the trial they relied solely on the deeds of reconveyance from their mother mentioned above.

The defendant answered by general demurrer, general denial, and a plea of “not guilty.”

Plaintiffs recovered the undivided interest of 174 acres sued for, which, by the judgment, was apportioned among them in shares of 29 acres to each; the legal effect of the judgment being a cancellation of the lease as to that 174-acre interest. The defendant has appealed.

The principal question presented for our decision is whether or not the title acquired by Mrs. Nancy C. Pox from plaintiffs to the undivided interest of 174 acres, after she had executed the lease, inured to the benefit of the lessee, and operated as an estoppel against plaintiffs to claim adversely to the lessee through the deeds of reconveyance from their mother of the same interest.

We have reached the conclusion that that issue should be determined in favor of the lessee, appellant herein.

The lease in question was executed also by G. H. Pox, minor son of Mrs. Nancy O. Pox, but he is not a party to the suit, nor in any manner interested in the controversy, since other land covered by the lease and owned by him has been released from the operation of the lease, upon his disaffirmance of the contract, after reaching the age of his majority.

In the lease Mrs. Pox and her son were designated first parties, and the grantee second party. Poliowing such designation, the lease contained this stipulation, among others, to wit:

“The first parties, in consideration of one hundred twenty-six and 50/ioo dollars to them paid, the receipt of which is hereby acknowledged, and the covenants hereinafter contained on the part of second party, do by these presents let and lease to second party for a period of 7 years from the date hereof, the following described premises *'situated in the county of Eastland and state of Texas, to wit: 705 acres of land out of league No. 2, McLennan county school land abstract No. 369, less 200 acres of land heretofore sold off being the J. G. Pox homestead place containing 505 acres more or less, hereby granting to second party full and exclusive authority to enter upon said premises and to dig, drill, operate for and procure natural gas or petroleum, together with the right of taking upon said premises and removing therefrom at pleasure any machinery, tools, lumber, pipe, casing and other things necessary in said work, and to construct on said premises and remove therefrom at pleasure pumping plants, tracks, tanks, pipe lines and other things necessary in the operation of the lease. * *. *”

Poll owing that stipulation .was a provision binding the lessee to pay to the lessors a rental of $1 per acre per year less the amount of any royalties paid to them for oil or gas found on the land by the lessee, the payment of said rentals to begin one year from the date of the lease and to be made for one year in advance. The lessee further agreed to pay to the lessors one-eighth of all the oil produced from the land as a royalty and also 10 per cent, of the amount realized from the salé of any gas from the land. The lease contained this further stipulation:

“It is further agreed between the parties hereto that in case natural gas or petroleum are discovered on said premises that this lease shall continue in full force and effect so long as any of these are produced in paying quantities, but in the event of second party failing to pay the first parties in advance on ten days’ notice in writing by first party to second party, as above provided, the ground rent due under the terms and provisions hereof, that this lease shall be null and void and the first and second parties shall be released from all liabilities herein mentioned.”

The record shows that the stipulated rentals were paid by the lessee more than 10 days in advance of their due dates for the year beginning March 31, 1918, and also for the year beginning March 31, 1919. And no contention was made by any one upon the trial of the case of any failure on the part of the lessee to pay the rentals stipulated, and this suit was instituted June 24, 1919, during the last-mentioned year for which the rentals were paid.

[1] According to the rule of decisions in this state, a title acquired by the vendor of land after he has conveyed a defective title, but with a covenant of warranty of title, passes, eo instant!, to his prior vendee. This is upon theory of estoppel, which applies to the vendor and his privies in estate and forbids them to assert an after-acquired title as against the vendee and his assignees, to whom the title has been warranted to be valid. Baldwin v. Root, 90 Tex. 546, 40 S. W. 3.

[2] Estoppel applies also, and to the same extent, in the absence of an express warranty of title, if the terms of the conveyance imply a claim of ownership of the fee-simple title by the grantor and the .assertion of his right thereunder to the conveyance. Lindsay v. Freeman, 83 Tex. 259, 18 S. W. 727. The opinion in that case quotes with approval excerpts from the opinions in Van Rensselaer v. Kearney, 11 How. 325, 13 L. Ed. 703, and Hannon v. Christopher, 34 N. J. Eq. 465, both of which announce the rule, substantially, as above stated. And the quotation from the case last cited includes this statement:

*1023 “The estoppel does not depend upon the obligation of the covenant of warranty, although the books sometimes loosely say so; it depends on good faith, right, conscience, fair dealing, and sound justice.”

To the same effect are the following authorities: Zarate v. Villareal, 155 S. W. 328; Breen v. Morehead, 126 S. W. 650; Lowry v. Carter, 102 S. W. 930; Scates v. Fohn, 59 S. W. 837; 8 R. C. L. pp. 680, 1058, 1059, and numerous decisions cited in note to Stephenson v. Patton (86 Kan. 379, 121 Pac. 498) shown in Ann. Cas. 1913C, 369, 370.

[3] In Maxwell v. Urban, 22 Tex. Civ. App. 565, 55 S. W. 1124, the following was said: .

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Bluebook (online)
228 S.W. 1021, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 816, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-pacific-coal-oil-co-v-fox-texapp-1921.