Young v. Rudd

226 S.W.2d 469, 1950 Tex. App. LEXIS 1852
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 5, 1950
Docket6481
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 226 S.W.2d 469 (Young v. Rudd) 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
Young v. Rudd, 226 S.W.2d 469, 1950 Tex. App. LEXIS 1852 (Tex. Ct. App. 1950).

Opinion

LINCOLN, Justice.

This appeal involves primarily a construction of the instrument hereafter copied. The parties will be designated as in the trial court. On September 12, 1924, John W. Furrh and his wife executed and delivered to R. W. Norton an oil and gas lease on their lands, 245 acres of Joel Lipscomb Survey in Harrison County, Texas. Norton assigned the gas rights under the lease to State Line Oil and Gas Company on December 1, 1924. Both the lease and assignment were forthwith placed of record in Harrison County. There was some development and production on Furrh’s land under the Norton lease but Furrh became dissatisfied because there was not further development. He insisted upon offset wells being drilled to prevent the gas under his land from being drained off by wells that were producing on adjacent lands. Having been unsuccessful in his efforts, on February 4, 1926, the following instrument was drawn up between Furrh, Bergson and Young:

“Know All Men By These Presents: That I, John W. Furrh, have entered into the following contract with Bert Bergson and William F. Young; the said Bergson and Young are to act for me as my agents and representatives in dealing with the Arkansas Natural Gas Co. and the State Line Oil and Gas Co. and any other persons interested in the leases on my land on the Joel Lipscomb Survey in Harrison County, Texas, near the town of Waskom. Said land being all of the land I own in said survey and being under lease at present to the' Arkansas Natural Gas Company and to the State Line Oil and Gas Company, which last company acquired their lease rights from one Norton to whom I, the said John W. Furrh, leased said lands. The said Bergson and Young are to act for me as my agents and representatives in endeavoring to obtain additional development on all of said land on said Lipscomb Survey and in consideration of their services, they are to have and are hereby given and granted ten per cent of all future payments of rentals or royalties, or bonuses on any and all future development on any of said land, including any and all offsets money that may be paid thereon.

t'fi * * * * *
“(Signed) John W. Furrh.”
“We accept the foregoing contract:
“This the 4th day of February, A.D. 1926.
“(Signed) William F. Young
“Bert Bergson.”

The foregoing contract was acknowledged by all the parties whose names were signed to it and was filed for record in the office of the county clerk of Harrison County on June 26, 1927, and was recorded in the deed records of said county.

Bergson and Young immediately entered into negotiations with the State Line Oil & Gas Company, and with the Arkansas Natural Gas Company. What interest the Arkansas company had in .the lease and its *471 production is not shown. As a result of these negotiations, the State Line Company and the • Arkansas Company paid bonuses to Furrh in -lieu of offset wells, and also agreed to certain additional development on the land for the production of oil and gas. Bergson and Young received 10% of the bonuses and of Furrh’s portion of the royalties.

On or about October 3, 1927,' Furrh, Bergson and Young executed and delivered a transfer order to Magnolia Gas Company which stated that a 1/160 interest each in wells number one and up on 80 acres of the land involved had been sold to and was owned by Bergson and Young. The instrument directs that the Magnolia Gas Company will “show their interest on your books in keeping herewith” and states that ■the interests are correctly stated in the transfer, and the parties acknowledge themselves bound by the terms and provisions “of the original contract.”

On March 26, 1929', J. W. Furrh and his children, his wife having died in the meantime, leased the land to C. H. Lyons, and on the same date a like oil and gas lease was executed in favor of Lyons by Bergson and Young, who negotiated the entire transaction with Lyons. Gas wells were ■drilled and commercial production secured under that lease.

Various division orders were executed, in all of which Bergson and Young each are shown to be the owners of 5% of the ⅛ royalty interest in said gas production. It was stipulated and the court found, that Bergson and Young began receiving 5% each of all the 'royalty from all the production on the lands described in plaintiffs’ petition, from 1927, until Bergson’s death, and thereafter Young and Bergson’s wife continued to receive such percentages 'of royalty until the wells ceased production in 1947. The court found that the 10% of royalties paid to Bergson and Young and Mrs. Bergson was paid to them by the lessees or those holding under them and not by Furrh. It' was stipulated that the division orders were executed by all the necessary parties to make them effective and that they pertained to the land in controversy. . . ;

The First National Bank of Marshall, Texas, acquired the land by foreclosure on July 26, 1933, and conveyed it to W. L. Rudd by warranty deed of November 29, 1933, which' deeds were placed of record immediately following their dates. The deed from the First National Bank to Rudd expresses that it -is made and accepted “subject to all outstanding oil, gas and mineral leases and the. transfers and assignments thereof and thereunder, and any transfers of royalties in whole or in part that may have heretofore been made, in anywise covering and including the aboyé described land.”

W. L. Rudd and his wife executed an oil, and gas lease on said land to J. F. Wright on January 3, 1945, and on March 23, 1945, a similar oil and gas lease was executed on said land to J. F. Wright by Young and Mrs. Bergson. These leases were transferred and assigned to Bert Fields, and drilling has resulted in production of gas and distillate in paying quantities.. The leases to Wright and the assignments from Wright to Fields were duly placed of record in Harrison County.

By warranty deed of April 10, 1946, W. L. Rudd and wife conveyed the 245 acres of land to the defendants John Barry Rudd, W. L. Rudd, Jr., and Margaret Rudd Youngblood, children of W. L. Rudd. The suit was against them, their wives and husbands, and W. L. Rudd and his wife,-grantors in the deed last mentioned, were also made defendants. The present owners of ■the land, appellees, rejected the asserted claim of appellants under the above copied instrument to any interest in the Bert Fields production, and this suit resulted.

It is not necessary to mention in detail the findings and conclusions of the court, nor to consider the requests of plaintiffs for additional findings and the action of the court thereon. There is no substantial dispute in the evidence. We deem it sufficient to show the following conclusions of the trial court:

(1) That the contract of February 4, 1926, was an agency contract only for the purpose of employing Bergson and Young to act as Furrh’s agent in dealing with the Arkansas company and the State Line com *472

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Bluebook (online)
226 S.W.2d 469, 1950 Tex. App. LEXIS 1852, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/young-v-rudd-texapp-1950.