Texas Petroleum Land Management, LLC, Robert Ralph Riggs, Elizabeth Ann Riggs Lawrence, and Jeane Hancock Riggs Weller v. Dorothy Kalmbach McMillan, Kathryn McMillan Taylor, Austin Trust Company, and Nancy M. Higgs

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 17, 2022
Docket11-19-00341-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Texas Petroleum Land Management, LLC, Robert Ralph Riggs, Elizabeth Ann Riggs Lawrence, and Jeane Hancock Riggs Weller v. Dorothy Kalmbach McMillan, Kathryn McMillan Taylor, Austin Trust Company, and Nancy M. Higgs (Texas Petroleum Land Management, LLC, Robert Ralph Riggs, Elizabeth Ann Riggs Lawrence, and Jeane Hancock Riggs Weller v. Dorothy Kalmbach McMillan, Kathryn McMillan Taylor, Austin Trust Company, and Nancy M. Higgs) 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 Petroleum Land Management, LLC, Robert Ralph Riggs, Elizabeth Ann Riggs Lawrence, and Jeane Hancock Riggs Weller v. Dorothy Kalmbach McMillan, Kathryn McMillan Taylor, Austin Trust Company, and Nancy M. Higgs, (Tex. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Opinion filed February 17, 2022

In The

Eleventh Court of Appeals __________

No. 11-19-00341-CV __________ TEXAS PETROLEUM LAND MANAGEMENT, LLC, ROBERT RALPH RIGGS, ELIZABETH ANN RIGGS LAWRENCE, AND JEANE HANCOCK RIGGS WELLER, Appellants V. DOROTHY KALMBACH MCMILLAN, KATHRYN MCMILLAN TAYLOR, AUSTIN TRUST COMPANY, AND NANCY M. HIGGS, Appellees

On Appeal from the 118th District Court Howard County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. 52811

OPINION This case arises out of a title dispute to a mineral estate in Howard County, Texas. All parties moved for summary judgment, and the trial court granted the two identical motions for summary judgment filed by the defendants/Appellees: one filed by the McMillan Appellees—consisting of Dorothy Kalmbach McMillan, Kathryn McMillan Taylor, and the Austin Trust Company—and the other filed by pro se Appellee Nancy M. Higgs. In granting the McMillan Appellees’ motion, the trial court declared that Appellants’ countermotion for summary judgment was moot. Appellants challenge the rulings of the trial court in four issues. In their first and second issues, Appellants argue that the trial court erred in granting Appellees’ motions for summary judgment and declaring Appellants’ countermotion as to the McMillan Appellees moot. In their third issue, Appellants argue that the trial court erred in denying Appellants’ motion to supplement their response to the McMillan Appellees’ motion for summary judgment with an untimely offered document purporting to ratify the conveyance of the disputed property to Appellants. Finally, in their fourth issue, Appellants aver that the trial court erred in denying Appellants’ motion to reconsider the order granting the McMillan Appellees’ motion for summary judgment and declaring Appellants’ countermotion moot. We affirm. Background Facts 1928–1933 – A.M. McMillan’s purchase and devise of mineral interest In 1928, Paul C. Bundy conveyed to A.M. McMillan (McMillan) an undivided fifty-acre interest in all of the oil, gas, and other minerals in and under a 200-acre parcel of property in Howard County, Texas (the McMillan property).1 We interpret the conveyance to be a 1/4 mineral interest or fifty net mineral acres. McMillan died on August 6, 1932. McMillan appointed Republic National Bank & Trust Company (RNB) as both independent executor of his estate and as trustee of a testamentary trust containing the residue of his estate. As independent executor, RNB was authorized by the terms of the will to make payments out of the general and principal assets of the estate in order to settle any outstanding estate debts. As trustee, RNB was authorized under the terms of the will to sell trust property, including real estate,

1 The 200-acre tract was described as the North two hundred (200) acres of the East one-half (1/2) of Section 12, Block 32, T-1-N T & P Ry. Co. Survey, Howard County, Texas. 2 for purposes other than to satisfy the estate’s debts, but only with the consent of his wife, Minnie McMillan (Minnie). In his will, McMillan devised to Minnie, in fee simple, their homestead along with the household furniture and furnishings, as well as his automobiles, personal jewelry, and clothing. McMillan devised “[a]ll of the rest, residue and remainder of [his] property” to RNB, as trustee of a testamentary trust for the benefit of Minnie and for their son once he reached twenty-one years of age. With the exception of the homestead, all of McMillan’s real property became trust property immediately upon his death. 1933 – The Hinn and Curry deeds On December 27, 1933, RNB, in its capacity as independent executor, executed two mineral deeds nearly identical in form. RNB attempted to convey to Albert George Hinn (Hinn) an undivided sixteen and two-thirds acres interest in and to all of the oil, gas, and other minerals in and under the aforementioned McMillan property (the Hinn deed). That same day, RNB, again acting in its capacity as independent executor, attempted to convey to S.E. Curry (Curry) an undivided five acres interest in and to all of the oil, gas, and other minerals in and under the McMillan property (the Curry deed). The two deeds are essentially identical except for the size of the property interest conveyed. Both deeds state that the conveyance “is for the purpose of partitioning certain oil and mineral properties owned jointly by said A.M. McMillan and [Hinn][Curry], legal title to which was vested in said A.M. McMillan.” The Hinn deed was filed and recorded two months after it was made. The Curry deed, on the other hand, was filed and recorded well over six years after it was made. Appellants are the heirs and current holders of any interest Hinn acquired in the McMillan property as a result of the Hinn deed.

3 1955–1963 – The Curry Ratification and the 1963 Ratification In its original conveyance to Curry, RNB in its capacity as the estate executor purported to convey the 5-acre mineral interest. However, on January 29, 1955, RNB, now acting in its capacity as trustee, executed and filed a document acknowledging that “a question has been raised as to the authority of said executor [RNB] to make such conveyance [--that, made to Curry].” By this new document, RNB as trustee did thereby “ratify and confirm” the executor’s deed of December 27, 1933, to Curry; Minnie also signed the 1955 ratification and clarification. In that document, Minnie ratified the Curry deed “for the purpose of evidencing her consent.” The text of the document indicates that a question arose as to the executor’s authority to make such a conveyance. RNB authored and Minnie signed no similar document ratifying the Hinn deed. However, on April 9, 1963, Minnie submitted a document to a probate court in Hale County, Texas, affirming that she elected to receive benefits under McMillan’s will, rather than to assert her community property rights. In that document, Minnie also stated that she “ratifies all acts and things that have been done in the past in regard to the administration of said estate by the Executor and Trustee” (the 1963 Ratification). Unlike the Curry Ratification, there is no use of the word “consent” (alluding to the will’s requirement of Minnie’s “consent” in the sale of real property), and there is no specific reference to the Hinn conveyance or any other sale of real property. Its context appears to be acts and omissions of RNB in conjunction with Minnie’s initial election to receive benefits under the will The procedural history of this case Appellants sued Appellees to quiet title, try title, and seek a declaratory judgment that Appellants are entitled to receive royalty payments for the oil, gas, and mineral production from the McMillan property. The McMillan Appellees counterclaimed and filed a traditional and no-evidence motion for summary 4 judgment asking the trial court to grant declaratory relief and quiet title in their favor. In its response to the McMillan Appellees’ motion for summary judgment, Appellants included a countermotion for summary judgment, asserting that they are entitled to declaratory relief and royalty payments for the oil, gas, and other minerals from the property. A hearing on the McMillan Appellees’ motion for summary judgment was held on May 1, 2019. A separate hearing on Appellants’ countermotion for summary judgment was scheduled for May 30, 2019. On May 3, 2019, Appellants tried to supplement their response to the McMillan Appellees’ motion for summary judgment with the 1963 Ratification—in support of their position that Minnie ratified all actions taken by RNB in its capacities as independent executor and trustee, including the Hinn deed. The record indicates that Appellants received a copy of the 1963 Ratification on July 6, 2017, nearly two years before the hearing on the McMillan Appellees’ motion for summary judgment.

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Texas Petroleum Land Management, LLC, Robert Ralph Riggs, Elizabeth Ann Riggs Lawrence, and Jeane Hancock Riggs Weller v. Dorothy Kalmbach McMillan, Kathryn McMillan Taylor, Austin Trust Company, and Nancy M. Higgs, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-petroleum-land-management-llc-robert-ralph-riggs-elizabeth-ann-texapp-2022.