Van Deventer v. Gulf Production Co.

41 S.W.2d 1029, 1931 Tex. App. LEXIS 1409
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 6, 1931
DocketNo. 1715.
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 41 S.W.2d 1029 (Van Deventer v. Gulf Production Co.) 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
Van Deventer v. Gulf Production Co., 41 S.W.2d 1029, 1931 Tex. App. LEXIS 1409 (Tex. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinions

WALKER, J.

. When John W. Clayton died, he left to his heirs a tract of 300 acres of land in the David Minchey League in Liberty county. One of the heirs sold by specific metes and bounds 75 acres out of the southwest corner of this tract, identified in the record in this case as the Antoine tract. Later ánother tract of SO acres was sold off the northwest corner of the 300-acre tract, lying immediately north of the Antoine tract. These two tracts consumed all the western end of the 300-acre tract except a small strip of land lying between the south boundary line of the Antoine tract and the south boundary line of the 300-acre tract, 46 feet wide at its eastern end and extending west about 3,000 feet to a* point. The sale of the two tracts just named left 145 acres of the original tract which, on the 19th day of January, 1920, was owned by appellants, Mrs. Martha Van De-venter and her two children, L. Q. Van De-venter and her daughter Mrs. Nona-Mahavier, in*the following proportions, to wit: Mrs. Van Deventer owned an undivided two-thirds interest and each of the children an undivided one-sixth interest. On that date Mrs. Van Deventer and her daughter, Mrs. Mahavier, joined by her husband, 'executed a mineral lease, conveying the entire 145 acres to ap-pellee, Gulf Production Company. This lease did not purport to convey only the undivided interest of Mrs. Van Deventer and her daughter, but all the interest, as if they were the sole owners of the land. However, appellee knew of the interest of L. Q. Van Deventer at the time it took the lease and tried unsuccessfully, both before and after its execution, to secure a lease from him, offering him at one time $17,000 bonus for a lease on his interest. The consideration paid to Mrs. Van Deventer and her daughter for this lease was a bonus of $1,400 cash and semi annual payments of $700 each as delay rental. This delay rental was paid to Mrs. Martha Van Deventer and Mrs. Mahavier on the following dates, that is to say, a payment of $700 was made to them on each of the following dates: January 15th and July 15th of the years 1921, 1922, 1923, and 1924. In the letters transmitting this money .to Mrs. Van Deventer and Mrs. Mahavier, the statement was made that the payment was received by them as “being full payment for delay in drilling for the period and under the terms of said lease mentioned above.” On March 18, 1922, after appellee had paid three of the extension payments above described, all of the appellants, for a valuable consideration paid them, to wit, $100, executed an option contract to Mrs. Nonie O’Brien giving her the right to purchase 72½ acres of the land covered by the above-described lease. On April 12, 1922, in recognition of this option, all three appellants executed to Higgins Oil & Fuel Company a warranty deed to 25 acres of the land covered by the option. In Texas Company v. Van Deventer (Tex. Civ. App.) 290 S. W. 500, is reported a map or plat of the John W. Clayton 300-acre tract, showing its subdivisions as above described, with the small strip of land lying between the south line of the Antoine tract and the south line of the 300-acre tract. As will be explained later in this opinion, that case involved certain phases of this litigation.

This suit was filed on April 20, 1925, by appellants L. Q. Van Deventer and his sister, Mrs. Nena Mahavier, and her husband, against their mother, Mrs. Martha Van De-venter, one of the appellants herein, and Gulf Production Company, the appellee, as a partition suit. The plaintiffs in their petition alleged that they owned an undivided interest of 02.069 acres in the remaining 120 acres after the sale to Higgins Oil & Fuel Company. The balance of the 120 acres, to wit, 57.931 acres, was conceded to their mother with the allegation that appellee had a mineral lease thereon. By an amended answer appellee, Gulf Production Company, answered this petition by general demurrer and special exceptions and by claiming a lease on all the land with pleas of estoppel and ratification *1031 against L. Q. Van Deventer. Also, appellee made Higgins Oil & Fuel Company and the Texas Company parties to this suit on allegations that they were asserting adverse claims to a part of the land in controversy. On-October 10, 1925, on motion of the plaintiffs in the partition suit, the trial court ordered ,a severance in the case, leaving the controversy between the Van Deventers and Gulf Production Company in the original suit and docketing' a new suit with these appellants and appellee Gulf Production Company and Higgins Oil & Fuel Company as plaintiffs and with the Texas Company as sole defendant. The purpose of that suit was to locate the eastern boundary line of the Texas Company tract of 80 acres above referred to and shown on the map reported in Texas Co. v. Van Deventer, supra. On the trial of that case judgment was entered in favor of the plaintiffs therein against the Texas Company. The Texas Company duly prosecuted its appeal to this court. Our opinion affirming that judgment is reported, Texas Co. v. Van Deventer, supra. On January 21, 1926, the first amended original petition was filed herein naming as plaintiffs L. Q. Van Deventer, his sister, Mrs. Nena Mahavier and her husband, and Mrs. Martha Van Deventer, and naming as sole defendant Gulf Production Company. By this petition, for the first time, appellants brought into the case the narrow strip of land between the south line of the Antoine tract and the south line of the 300-acre tract. In our subsequent discussion this strip will be designated merely as “the wedge.” On September 17, 1920, plaintiffs filed their third amended original petition, upon which the case went to trial. The following issues were made by this petition: (a) Trespass to try title, (b) Mrs. Mahavier pleaded that the lease as to her was void because the officer taking her acknowledgment to the lease failed to ask her the statutory questions and failed to comply with the statute in taking her acknowledgment. On this allegation she pleaded a willful trespass by appellee, resulting in the destruction of the rental value of her land as oil property. As an alternative plea she joined with her mother (e) in allegations that Gulf Production Company had failed to comply with the obligation of its lease by properly developing the land and by failing to drill the necessary offset wells called for by the lease. Under these allegations they stated specifically the amount claimed by them for the alleged breach of the lease, (d) They also claimed exemplary damages. L. Q. Van Deventer pleaded that the Gulf Production Company willfully trespassed upon his land; that at the time of the trespass the land had a high bonus rental value as well as the usual royalty value; and that in making the trespass Gulf Production Company destroyed his property as oil property and caused him the loss of its rental value. He also claimed exemplary damages. The petition was specific-in itemizing the several items of damage, claimed by each plaintiff.

On October 17, 1927, appellee, Gulf Production Company, filed its second amended original answer upon which the case was tried. By 'this answer it pleaded general and special demurrers and by special plea claimed a lease on all. the land under the above-described lease. Further it pleaded estoppel and ratification against both Mrs. Mahavier and D. Q-. Van Deventer. The facts of the ratification will be given in connection with the discussion of that issue.

The following additional facts are necessary to an understanding of the issues submitted to the jury: On January 15, 1925, Gulf Production Company began drilling the Marl ha Van Deventer Well No.

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Bluebook (online)
41 S.W.2d 1029, 1931 Tex. App. LEXIS 1409, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/van-deventer-v-gulf-production-co-texapp-1931.