Valor Oil Company v. Eisner

396 S.W.2d 235, 24 Oil & Gas Rep. 91, 1965 Tex. App. LEXIS 2582
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 10, 1965
DocketNo. 11337
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 396 S.W.2d 235 (Valor Oil Company v. Eisner) 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
Valor Oil Company v. Eisner, 396 S.W.2d 235, 24 Oil & Gas Rep. 91, 1965 Tex. App. LEXIS 2582 (Tex. Ct. App. 1965).

Opinion

PHILLIPS, Justice.

This is a suit in which the appellees, plaintiffs below, seek to cancel a certain assignment of production payment in the amount of $65,000 to appellant, Valor Oil Company, and a certain deed of trust executed by said appellant granting to appellant Republic National Bank of Dallas a lien upon the production payment.

The trial court granted judgment in favor of appellees cancelling all of the hereinafter described conveyances and appellants Valor Oil Company and Republic Na[236]*236tional Bank of Dallas have perfected their appeal to this Court.

We reverse the judgment of the trial court and render judgment that the hereinafter described production payment and deed of trust lien are valid and outstanding.

Appellees, on and prior to December 19, 1961, were the owners of the full seven-eighths (%) working interest (subject to certain overriding royalties not pertinent here) under seven oil and gas leases designated as the “Knight A Lease” through “Knight G Lease,” and the appellees have alleged that on December 19, 1961, the defendant C. T. Robertson made a proposal in writing to them wherein he would institute a waterflooding project on the properties. That in return for an assignment of a portion of the oil and gas recovered, Robertson would install the waterflood project without cost to any of the appellees. This agreement is referred to as the letter of December 19, 1961. The proposal was thereafter accepted by all of such owners. In this regard, a witness and attorney, Jack Bryant, testified that he was representing the appellee, John J. Eisner, in the Fall of 1961 and prepared the December 19, 1961 proposal. Thereafter, he continued to represent Mr. Eisner as an attorney, but about the first of April, 1962, he and Mr. Eisner agreed that if he did anything further in connection with this particular transaction, it should be charged to Mr. Robertson.

On or about the 1st day of May, 1962, Mr. Robertson requested Bryant to assist him in the preparation of the Unit Agreement in connection with these properties as he (Robertson) desired financing from the Republic National Bank of Dallas. At Mr. Robertson’s request, Bryant called Robert S. Mizell, an attorney for Republic National Bank of Dallas, and as a result of that conversation drafted the language which was subsequently incorporated as Article III of the Unit Agreement. He then prepared the Unit Agreement dated June 10, 1962, had it mimeographed on June 12th, 1962, and delivered the mimeographed copies to the interested parties.

Article III of the Unit Agreement reads as follows:

“OPERATOR’S RIGHTS
1. Each of the undersigned NON-OPERATING INTEREST OWNERS, by the execution hereof, grants, transfers and assigns to OPERATOR, subject to the reservation of interest and the provisions regarding the terminating of OPERATOR’S Interest and reversion thereof hereinafter set out, the interest of such NON-OPERATING INTEREST OWNERS in the oil and gas lease and leasehold estate described in Exhibit ‘A’, same being subject to such interests’ proportionate part of all overriding royalties now appearing of record, provided, however:
(a) There is reserved to the undersigned NON-OPERATING INTEREST OWNERS, as an overriding interest, an undivided 47.5% of all the unitized substances produced, saved and sold from the interests in such lease owned by the undersigned NON-OPERATING INTEREST OWNERS, which portion of said unitized substances shall be obtained, used and marketed by the OPERATOR without cost or expense to the NON-OPERATING INTEREST OWNERS save and except gross production and ad valorem taxes, which portion of such unitized substances the NON-OPERATING INTEREST OWNERS shall have the right to receive in kind if desired.
(b) In the event OPERATOR should cease to operate such lease for any reason the interests herein transferred to OPERATOR shall ipso facto terminate and shall immediately revert to and revest in the undersigned NON-OPERATING INTEREST OWNERS [237]*237and their heirs, successors and assigns.”

Appellees contend, in support of the trial court’s judgment, that the letter agreement of December 19, 1961 and the Unit Agreement were executory contracts that must he construed together. That the two instruments construed together comprise a simple contract under which no conveyance of title was intended and that upon a showing that the contract had not been performed by Robertson, appellees were entitled to its termination in accordance with the judgment of the trial court. That no lien attached in favor of the appellants herein. Appellees cite the following provisions of the Unit Agreement in support of this position:

“Article III, Section 4:
Operator shall, at his own cost and expense, and without any expense to any of the other parties hereto, install and operate such equipment, machinery and other items necessary to water-flood the unitized zone under the unit area in keeping with certain contracts dated December 19, 1961, between OPERATOR and NON-OPERATING INTEREST OWNERS.
OPERATOR agrees to carry out his operations on the unit area in a good and workmanlike manner and in conformity with accepted oil field practices.
In addition to the initiation of the wa-terflooding project at his sole cost and expense, OPERATOR will also operate the unit area at his sole cost and expense, and without expense to the other parties hereto.”
“Article III, Section 1(b):
In the event OPERATOR should cease to operate such lease for any reason the interests herein transferred to OPERATOR shall ipso facto terminate and shall immediately revert to and re-vest in the undersigned NON-OPERATING INTEREST OWNERS and their heirs, successors and assigns.”
“Article VIII, Section 1:
All of the terms and provisions of this agreement shall extend to and shall be binding upon and inure to the benefit of the respective heirs, devisees, legal representatives, successors and assigns, of the parties hereto, and shall constitute a covenant running with the land, lease and interests covered hereby.”
“Article VIII, Section 2:
Any transfer, assignment or conveyance of all or any part of any interest owned by any party hereto with respect to any tract shall be made expressly subject to the terms of this agreement.”

Appellants are before us on three points of error however as we sustain their first point we shall not discuss the remaining two.

Appellants’ first point of error is that of the trial court in granting judgment in favor of the appellees cancelling the production payment assigned to the appellant Valor Oil Company and the deed of trust and assignment and runs in favor of the appellant Republic National Bank of Dallas for the reason that under the unambiguous terms of the Unit Agreement, the leasehold interest of appellees in the properties, subject to the reservation of overriding royalty, was conveyed to the defendant C. T.

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385 S.W.2d 658 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1965)

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Bluebook (online)
396 S.W.2d 235, 24 Oil & Gas Rep. 91, 1965 Tex. App. LEXIS 2582, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/valor-oil-company-v-eisner-texapp-1965.