White Star Energy, Inc and County Royalty Acquisition Program, Inc. D/B/A Reagan County Royalty Company, Inc. v. Ridgefield Permian Minerals, LLC.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 31, 2025
Docket08-24-00063-CV
StatusPublished

This text of White Star Energy, Inc and County Royalty Acquisition Program, Inc. D/B/A Reagan County Royalty Company, Inc. v. Ridgefield Permian Minerals, LLC. (White Star Energy, Inc and County Royalty Acquisition Program, Inc. D/B/A Reagan County Royalty Company, Inc. v. Ridgefield Permian Minerals, LLC.) 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
White Star Energy, Inc and County Royalty Acquisition Program, Inc. D/B/A Reagan County Royalty Company, Inc. v. Ridgefield Permian Minerals, LLC., (Tex. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS EIGHTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS EL PASO, TEXAS ————————————

No. 08-24-00063-CV ————————————

White Star Energy, Inc. and County Royalty Acquisition Program, Inc. d/b/a Reagan County Royalty Company, Inc., Appellants

v.

Ridgefield Permian Minerals, LLC, Appellee

On Appeal from the 112th District Court Reagan County, Texas Trial Court No. CV02505

OPINION This permissive appeal stems from one of a series of cases involving mass tax foreclosure

suits filed in West Texas in 1999. Among the hundreds of mineral interests foreclosed in the

underlying tax suit were certain interests owned by Anne Mounts Bradford. Appellants White Star

Energy, Inc. and County Royalty Acquisition Program, Inc. d/b/a Reagan County Royalty

Company, Inc. (collectively, White Star) purchased some or all of these interests at a tax sale on July 6, 1999.1 In 2021, Appellee Ridgefield Permian Minerals, LLC purchased Bradford’s

remaining interests, if any. Ridgefield then sued White Star, bringing trespass-to-try-title and

quiet-title claims, among others.

Both sides moved for summary judgment. The trial court granted Ridgefield’s motion,

denied White Star’s motion, and, damages not yet having been addressed by the parties, permitted

White Star to file this permissive interlocutory appeal.2 We vacate the trial court’s summary

judgment and remand the case for further proceedings.

I. BACKGROUND In 1982, Bradford acquired mineral interests in Section 46, Block 36, Township 5 South,

T&P RR Co. Survey, Reagan County, Texas. Specifically, she acquired an undivided one-third

mineral interest in the East Half (Tract A) of the property and an undivided one-twenty-fourth

mineral interest in the West Half (Tract B). By 1999, like many mineral interest owners in the area,

Bradford was allegedly delinquent in paying her property taxes.

What followed next somewhat resembles what occurred in Reeves County as described in

Mitchell v. MAP Resources, Inc., 649 S.W.3d 180, 184–86 (Tex. 2022). In short, like the taxing

authorities there, the Reagan County taxing authorities here filed a tax foreclosure suit against

numerous mineral interest owners, effected service solely by posting, and obtained a default

judgment against all defendants. And like the Mitchell heirs, who asserted that at the time of the

1 White Star asserts that all of Bradford’s interests in the property at issue were conveyed at the tax sale; Ridgefield asserts that only some, if any, of her interests were conveyed. As explained below in n.3 of this opinion, the scope of interests that may have been conveyed is not before us. 2 As explained below, the appeal came to this Court on the following controlling questions: (1) Does [Ridgefield] have standing to assert the tax foreclosure judgment is void for lack of due process? and (2) Do any of the limitations and other clauses in the Tax Code [§§] 34.08(a), 34.08(c), or 33.54 apply to [Ridgefield’s] claims?

2 tax judgment, deed records on file contained an address for Elizabeth Mitchell, here Ridgefield

asserts that the 1998 and 1999 Reagan County Mineral Tax Rolls contained an address for

Bradford. See id. at 184. Following the tax judgment, White Star purchased Bradford’s foreclosed

mineral interests at a tax sale and recorded its sheriff’s deed in August 1999.

More than two decades later, in October 2021, Ridgefield purchased Bradford’s remaining

mineral interests, if any, in the subject property, then filed this suit against White Star, bringing

trespass-to-try-title, quiet-title, declaratory-judgment, unjust-enrichment, and money-had-and-

received claims. Ridgefield’s claims are all rooted in its contention that it holds superior title

because the tax suit judgment against Bradford is void. More specifically, Ridgefield contends

Bradford’s due-process rights were violated in the tax suit because service by posting was

improper, thus the resulting default judgment was void and nothing was transferred in the sale of

her mineral interests to White Star.

Both sides moved for summary judgment. Ridgefield filed a traditional motion, arguing

that (1) the tax judgment against Bradford was void because her due-process rights were violated

by improper service of the tax suit, thus no interest was conveyed to White Star; and (2) no Tax

Code requirements apply to its claims, as the tax judgment was void. Among the exhibits attached

to Ridgefield’s motion were purported copies of 1998 and 1999 Reagan County Mineral Tax Roll

records reflecting a street address for Bradford.

In turn, White Star filed a traditional and no-evidence motion, arguing that (1) Ridgefield

lacks standing to assert that Bradford’s right to due process was violated; and (2) Ridgefield’s suit

is barred under several provisions of the Tax Code, including the one-year statute of limitations

under § 33.54(a). White Star also filed objections to Ridgefield’s summary judgment evidence,

including an objection that the purported tax roll pages submitted were unauthenticated. The record

3 reflects no ruling on these objections but includes a motion requesting a ruling and a written

objection to the trial court’s refusal to rule.

The trial court initially granted Ridgefield’s motion for summary judgment without stating

any grounds. After White Star filed a motion for permissive appeal and both sides submitted related

memoranda and additional briefing, the trial court signed an amended interlocutory summary

judgment granting Ridgefield’s motion for summary judgment, denying White Star’s motion,

giving its reasons for doing so, and permitting White Star to pursue an interlocutory appeal. The

amended judgment did not address damages, which the parties had not yet briefed.

As to the basis for the trial court’s rulings, the amended judgment included (1) findings

that the 1999 tax suit judgment “was and is void as to [Bradford] . . . because the court in that suit

failed to obtain personal jurisdiction[,]” “the Sheriff’s Deed did not convey any of [Bradford’s]

interests,” and “none of the provisions of the Texas Tax Code providing a bar or condition

precedent to suit apply . . . nor does standing present any bar to [Ridgefield’s] claims”; and (2)

conclusions that “[White Star’s] claims to superior title running through the Sheriff’s Deed fail[,]”

and “[Ridgefield] established its claim to title through [Bradford] as the common source of title

and prevailed on its trespass to try title claim and quiet title claims.”

Further, the amended judgment granted White Star permission to pursue an interlocutory

appeal based on the following controlling questions of law:

(1) Does [Ridgefield] have standing to assert the tax foreclosure judgment is void for lack of due process? and

(2) Do any of the limitations and other clauses in the Tax Code [§§] 34.08(a), 34.08(c), or 33.54 apply to [Ridgefield’s] claims?

In addition, the amended judgment found that an “immediate appeal . . . will materially

advance the ultimate termination of the litigation because if these controlling issues of law are

4 resolved in [White Star’s] favor, [Ridgefield] will be barred from litigating [its] claims”; and “if

these controlling issues of law are resolved in [Ridgefield’s] favor, there will be no procedural or

jurisdictional bars preventing [Ridgefield’s] claims.”

After the amended judgment was entered, White Star filed a petition for permissive appeal,

which we granted.

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White Star Energy, Inc and County Royalty Acquisition Program, Inc. D/B/A Reagan County Royalty Company, Inc. v. Ridgefield Permian Minerals, LLC., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-star-energy-inc-and-county-royalty-acquisition-program-inc-dba-texapp-2025.