The Texas Pacific Coal and Oil Company v. Honolulu Oil Corporation

241 F.2d 920, 6 Oil & Gas Rep. 1384, 1957 U.S. App. LEXIS 4848
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedMarch 1, 1957
Docket16217_1
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 241 F.2d 920 (The Texas Pacific Coal and Oil Company v. Honolulu Oil Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Texas Pacific Coal and Oil Company v. Honolulu Oil Corporation, 241 F.2d 920, 6 Oil & Gas Rep. 1384, 1957 U.S. App. LEXIS 4848 (5th Cir. 1957).

Opinion

HUTCHESON, Chief Judge.

Filed by the appellee, the suit was for a judgment, removing as a cloud, upon plaintiff’s title to a mineral leasehold estate held by it, the assertion of and claims of defendant to an overriding royalties in production from said estate, estopping defendant from making such *921 assertions and claims, and establishing and confirming plaintiff’s mineral leasehold estate as against the defendant.

Tried to the court without a jury, there were findings and conclusions, contained in a written opinion, 1 and a judgment in favor of plaintiff, and defendant has appealed.

Here, in a thorough going and well presented brief and argument, the appellant confidently urges upon us that the judgment was wrong and must be reversed, while appellee, with an equal show of confidence and in a brief and argument fully canvassing the points made for and against the judgment, insists that the judgment was right and should be affirmed on the grounds and for the reasons given by the district judge.

We agree that this is so. While there is a great deal of contention and discussion about the matter, the case is quite simple in its facts, and we think equally simple in the law controlling it. Since the district judge has carefully and fully stated the material facts 2 and as carefully stated and declared the law, this opinion, in addition to declaring our approval of his decision, will be confined to stating briefly the essential facts and the basic legal principles which control the decision.

The defendant, lessee in an oil and gas lease, shortly before the lease expired executed with one W. R. Bowden a farm-out letter agreement which stated, “It is understood that this letter covers our entire agreement”, and provided in paragraph (7):

“When you have fully complied with all of the provisions herein contained and aforesaid well has been completed as a dry hole or a producing well, we will deliver to you valid recordable assignments of the leases, but it is understood and agreed that Texas Pacific Coal and Oil Company will except from said assignment and reserve unto itself and its assigns as a free overriding royalty Vie of % of all of the oil, gas and other minerals produced and saved from the land covered by such assignment, * * * ”

Bowden assigned his rights under the farm-out letter to plaintiff, and, with only eight days remaining before the lease had expired, plaintiff entered upon the lease and, in full compliance with its contract, drilled a test well which was plugged and abandoned on November 20, 1946, and the lease, having expired by its terms, was later released by plaintiff to the original owners. Cf. Keese v. Continental Pipe Line Co., 5 Cir., 235 F.2d 386.

On November 20, however, plaintiff, desiring, for the purpose of establishing a record to support income tax deductions, to obtain the formal assignment, the execution of which had been provided for in the farm-out letter agreement, by letter requested such assignment, and the assignment was prepared and executed by defendant. Instead, however, and this is the origin and the meat of this controversy, of precisely following the farm-out agreement, the assignment, after providing:

“Nevertheless, there is not conveyed hereby but there is expressly excepted herefrom and reserved to said Texas Pacific Coal and Oil Company, its successors and assigns, as a free overriding royalty, [one-sixteenth of eight-eights (Vie of % of all oil, gas and other minerals produced and saved from the premises herein assigned; * *] * * * »

further provided:

“It is further stipulated and agreed that the overriding royalties herein reserved shall be delivered to said Texas Pacific Coal and Oil *922 Company, its successors or assigns, or paid for as above provided upon all oil, gas and other minerals produced and saved from the premises herein assigned, in the manner and amounts above set out, whether same is produced under and by virtue of the above described lease or under and by virtue of any extension or renewal thereof or under and by virtue of any other lease or contract whatsoever whether heretofore or hereafter made by and between the assignee herein, his heirs or assigns, and the true owners of said lands. (Emphasis supplied.)

The meaning and effect to be given to the emphasized words forms the basis of this lawsuit. For, some three years later, plaintiff, having in drilling on property near this property discovered oil, went to the Ellingtons, the lessors in the original lease to defendant, and obtained a new lease, and, after plaintiff had discovered oil thereunder, the defendant made the claim to an interest in the new lease, which gave this suit rise.

The district judge rejected appellee’s position “that the farm-out letter and the defendant’s assignment, when properly construed in the light of all the attending circumstances, do not reflect any outright conflict in respect to the defendant’s reservation of an overriding royalty”, and held that there was a conflict and that the conflict must be resolved by giving effect to the farm-out agreement. In support, he declared [141 F.Supp. 327]:

“The courts have generally held that a party, upon full performance of his obligations under an initial contract, then has a vested right to return performance by the other party under the same contract, and his right to such mutual performance cannot be qualified or burdened by additional requirements, in the name of merger, under some later gratuitous promise or assent in the guise of a contract.
* * * The cases hold that, where one contracting party, by performance, has matured his right to demand performance from the other party, any other onerous promise or assent made by the first party, with no inducement except that the other party perform what he is already bound to do, is without consideration and not binding in law. Some of the many cases and texts in point are * * * Jones v. Risley, 91 Tex. 1, 32 S.W. 1027; Carrothers v. Stanolind O. & G. Co., D. C., 134 F.Supp. 191; Wiedeman v. Howell [Tex.Civ.App., 276 S.W. 2d 380]; Witherspoon v. Green, Tex.Civ.App., 274 S.W. 170; Kahn v. Ilitzky, Tex.Civ.App., 107 S.W.2d 1015; Barreda v. Craig, Tex.Com.App., 222 S.W. 177; Panhandle Refining Co. v. Bennett, Tex.Civ.App., 13 S.W.2d 923; Bonzer v. Garrett, Tex.Civ.App., 162 S.W. 934; Szanto v. Pagel, Tex.Civ.App., 47 S.W.2d 632; Corbin on Contracts, Section 175, page 568; and Williston on Contracts, Section 130, page 443.”

Opposing to these views the principle stated in Greene v. White, 137 Tex. 361, at page 375, 153 S.W.2d 575, at page 583, 136 A.L.R. 626 and applied in Adams v.

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Bluebook (online)
241 F.2d 920, 6 Oil & Gas Rep. 1384, 1957 U.S. App. LEXIS 4848, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-texas-pacific-coal-and-oil-company-v-honolulu-oil-corporation-ca5-1957.