W.L. Lindemann Operating Company, Inc. v. Joyce Strange, Individually and as Trustee for the Joyce Strange Marital Trust

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 29, 2008
Docket02-06-00433-CV
StatusPublished

This text of W.L. Lindemann Operating Company, Inc. v. Joyce Strange, Individually and as Trustee for the Joyce Strange Marital Trust (W.L. Lindemann Operating Company, Inc. v. Joyce Strange, Individually and as Trustee for the Joyce Strange Marital Trust) 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
W.L. Lindemann Operating Company, Inc. v. Joyce Strange, Individually and as Trustee for the Joyce Strange Marital Trust, (Tex. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS SECOND DISTRICT OF TEXAS FORT WORTH

NO. 2-06-433-CV

W.L. LINDEMANN OPERATING APPELLANT COMPANY, INC.

V.

JOYCE STRANGE, INDIVIDUALLY AND AS TRUSTEE FOR THE JOYCE STRANGE MARITAL TRUST APPELLEE

------------

FROM THE 97TH DISTRICT COURT OF ARCHER COUNTY

OPINION

This is an appeal from a jury verdict in favor of appellee Joyce Strange,

individually and as Trustee for the Joyce Strange Marital Trust, in a case

involving production from an oil lease in Archer County, Texas. In five issues,

appellant W.L. Lindemann Operating Company, Inc. contends generally that the

evidence is legally and factually insufficient to support the jury’s findings on willful commingling, fraud, and damages. We affirm in part and reverse and

render in part.

Background Facts

Appellee was married to Doug Strange for over twenty years. Strange

developed and operated oil leases; appellee worked for him as a bookkeeper.

Strange did business through Brock & Strange Oil Company, a partnership

between him and Joe Wayne Brock. Beginning in the 1960s, Brock & Strange

developed leases and drilled oil wells with W.L. “Rusty” Lindemann. Although

their businesses were separate, according to appellee, her “husband would drill

a well and Rusty would take an interest” in it.

Rusty and Strange verbally agreed that Rusty would drill and operate a

well in Archer County on one of Strange’s leases known as the D.D. Strange.

Strange gave Rusty a fifty percent working interest in the lease.1 Rusty drilled

the first of two wells on the D.D. Strange in 1991; Strange passed away in

1992. Upon Strange’s death, appellee acquired his working interest and a

1 … He also gave a 1/16th working interest to Brock. Appellee’s counsel clarified with appellee that when the parties referred to a “working interest,” “that means you pay part of the expenses and you get part of the proceeds.” And when they referred to a royalty interest, “that means you own the minerals under the land and you’ve leased those minerals and you get a part of the proceeds but you don’t have to pay the day-to-day working expenses like insurance and overhead and electricity and fuel and repair parts.”

2 royalty interest in the wells, individually and as a beneficiary of the Joyce

Strange Marital Trust, through inheritance from her husband’s estate. Appellee

also took over his interest in Brock & Strange. Rusty continued to operate the

D.D. Strange, through appellant,2 after appellee acquired these interests.

After Rusty drilled the first well on the D.D. Strange, he also began to

develop and operate the Powell lease located to the north of the D.D. Strange.

Rusty and his family members own 7/8ths of the working interests in the

Powell.3 Around the same time, Rusty’s son Doug Lindemann began to develop

the Hoff lease, located to the east of the D.D. Strange. Rusty’s sons William,

Robert, and other family members own all the working interests in the Hoff. To

the south of the Hoff is the O’Keefe “B” lease, which Rusty also operated and

in which he owned an approximately one-half working interest. 4 Brock &

Strange also owns interests in the O’Keefe.

Appellee testified that she did not have any contact with Rusty about the

D.D. Strange wells between 1991 and 2000. Brock, who acted as

2 … Rusty testified at trial that he formed appellant in 1994 and that appellant took over operations of his leases. 3 … Appellee and Brock each own a 1/16th working interest in the Powell. 4 … Rusty also operated the Kinsey lease west of the D.D. Strange and the Mullis lease north of the Powell. A map showing the location of the various leases is appended to this opinion as Attachment “A”.

3 superintendent on the Brock & Strange leases, informed her about matters

related to the D.D. Strange. According to appellee, Brock “takes care of all the

leases. He goes out and checks them and makes sure they’re all pumping

properly and just takes care of all the field superintendent work.” Conoco

purchased production on the D.D. Strange while it was producing.

In 2000, appellee and Brock became concerned about the D.D. Strange

because, according to appellee, “[i]t quit producing oil.” Appellee said she

found out about this because she stopped “getting an oil run[5 ] out from the oil

companies.” Brock checked both wells on the D.D. Strange; 6 they looked as

if they had been shut in for some time. 7 Brock and appellee talked about the

5 … Appellee explained that “no oil was being run out from under [her] lease.” 6 … Brock testified that he checked the O’Keefe first and that the irregularities he found there made him suspicious about the D.D. Strange. For instance, he found new tong dyes (equipment used on the oil wells) in one of the O’Keefe well casingheads that should not have been there. In addition, the O’Keefe was producing oil, but Brock & Strange had not been getting any money from production. When he confronted Rusty about this, Rusty told him the oil had been “misplaced” and that it had been run on a different lease Rusty owned; Rusty paid Brock & Strange for the “misplaced” oil. Brock & Strange took over operating the O’Keefe in the latter part of 2001. 7 … There is conflicting evidence as to whether the wells were “shut in,” that is, not producing in paying quantities, or whether they were simply pumped only long enough to produce the minimum amount of paying quantity per month. Nevertheless, it is clear that production from the D.D. Strange decreased significantly between 1998 and the early part of 2001.

4 problem and then went to the lease together to investigate. When Brock and

appellee opened one of the valves on the well, according to appellee, “oil just

gushed out . . . like gangbusters.” Additionally, the screw that held the lever

properly on the saltwater separator, 8 or saltwater knock-out,9 was not there.

Appellee then contacted counsel to “get [her] lease back.” Appellee’s

attorney was able to negotiate a deal with W illowbend Investments—a

company owned by Lee Murchison and Rusty’s son William, to whom Rusty

had transferred his interest in the D.D. Strange effective March 1, 2001.

Willowbend let Brock & Strange take over operation of the D.D. Strange, and

Willowbend transferred at least some of its interest in the D.D. Strange to

appellee. 10

Before Brock & Strange took over the lease, it was producing “about

nothing.” After they took over operation of the lease, according to appellee,

“Brock went down and flipped a switch[,] and it started gushing like it should

have to begin with.” Additionally, about a month later, Brock acidized the well,

8 … A separator is a device that separates the oil and water pumped from a well. 9 … These terms are used interchangeably in the record. 10 … Appellee testified that she purchased Murchison’s interest but then assigned him half of what he had conveyed to her. It is unclear who owned all the working interests in the D.D. Strange, and in what amount, after the transfer.

5 and “production has been going up ever since.” The evidence at trial confirmed

that production on the D.D. Strange increased significantly after Brock &

Strange took over operating the lease.

Appellee filed suit against appellant in 2001, claiming, in appellee’s

words, that Rusty and appellant “shut down [her] lease[,] . . . pumped all the

leases around [her,] and just took the oil out from under [her] lease.” A jury

trial began October 11, 2005, upon appellee’s fourth amended petition, in

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W.L. Lindemann Operating Company, Inc. v. Joyce Strange, Individually and as Trustee for the Joyce Strange Marital Trust, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wl-lindemann-operating-company-inc-v-joyce-strange-texapp-2008.