
    John L. McMAHON, Jr., et al., Petitioners, v. John J. CHRISTMANN et al., Respondents.
    No. A-5696.
    Supreme Court of Texas.
    May 29, 1957.
    Rehearing Denied July 10, 1957.
    
      James E. Prothro, Wichita Falls, Turpin, ICerr & Smith, Emil C. Rassman & Irby Dyer, Midland, for petitioners.
    Crenshaw, Dupree & Milam, Paul New, Lubbock, for respondents.
   CALVERT, Justice.

This case involves the construction of an ■oil, gas and mineral lease and the establishment of the rights of the parties thereunder.

The petitioners, as lessors, executed and delivered to the respondents, as lessees, an ■oil, gas and mineral lease on and to premises described as follows: “All that certain tract of land situated in the County of Yoakum, State of Texas, described as follows, to-wit: The Northwest one-fourth and the West one-half of the Northeast one-fourth of Section 21, Block K, Public School Land in Yoakum County, Texas, and containing 240 acres more or less.” The lease was on a Producers 88 Special printed form, contained a covenant of general warranty and provided in usual and customary language for reservation to the lessors of a one--eighth royalty. The lease contained as a part of its printed provisions a proportionate reduction clause in the following language:

“If said lessor owns a less interest in the above described land than the entire undivided and fee simple estate therein, then the royalties and rentals herein provided for shall be paid the lessor only in the proportion which lessor’s interest bears to the whole and undivided fee.”

.Attached in the body of the printed lease ■contract was a typewritten clause or “rider” reading as follows:

“The lessors herein reserve unto themselves their heirs and assigns, without reduction, as an overriding royalty, a net Vs2nd of %ths of all oil or gas produced and saved from the above described premises, free of cost or expense to the credit of the lessors into the storage tank or tanks or into the pipeline to which the well or wells on said land may be connected.”

At the time of the execution of the lease petitioners did not own the whole of the mineral fee estate in the 240 acres of land. They owned only an undivided ⅛⅛ interest therein. Their undivided J/£th interest is the arithmetical equivalent of a %6ths interest.

Petitioners do not question but that the proportionate reduction clause in the lease operates to reduce the normal royalty to which they are entitled from ⅛⅛ of production to ⅛⅛ of ⅛⅛, or ⅛8&, of production. They contend, however, that the proportionate reduction clause has no application to the ⅜2nd overriding royalty reserved by them. Respondents contend, on the other hand, that the proportionate' reduction clause applies not only to the normal royalty reserved but to the reserved %snd overriding royalty as well. If petitioners are correct in their construction of the lease it provides for a normal royalty of ¼8⅛ of production and an overriding royalty of ½2nd of production, or a total royalty of %6ths of production. If respondents’ interpretation of the lease is correct it provides for a normal royalty of ¼8⅛ of production and an overriding royalty of ⅛⅛ of %2nd, or JÍ92nd of production, a total royalty of %92nds. We will first address ourselves to this point of difference.

As is often true in litigation involving the interpretation and construction of written instruments both parties insist that the instrument is “plain and unambiguous” and admits of no reasonable meaning other than that for which they contend.

Petitioners, as plaintiffs, having taken the position that the lease. was plain and unambiguous, were not permitted on the trial to introduce extrinsic evidence of all of the acts and conduct of the parties leading up to the preparation and execution of the lease. They were permitted to prove that the lease was prepared by respondents, that the typewritten rider providing for the %2nd overriding royalty was prepared by and attached to the lease by petitioners, and that as a part of the consideration for executing the lease petitioners were paid a cash bonus of $15 per acre on an ownership of 40 acres. At the close of petitioners’ evidence the trial judge instructed the jury to return a verdict for respondents, and thereafter he rendered judgment for the parties in keeping with respondents’ interpretation of the lease. The Court of Civil Appeals affirmed. 285 S.W.2d 818.

In interpreting the lease it is the duty of the court to seek the intention of the parties. 31-A Tex.Jur. 179, Oil and Gas, Sec. 109. The intention of the parties, as that intention is expressed in the lease, is to be ascertained by a consideration of all of the provisions of the lease, 31-A Tex. Jur. 181, Oil and Gas, Sec. 110, and by harmonizing, if possible, those provisions which appear to be in conflict. Woods v. Sims, Tex., 273 S.W.2d 617. If after established rules of interpretation have been applied there still appears to be a conflict or an ambiguity in the provisions of the lease so that it is susceptible of two reasonable meanings, then, and only then, is the court authorized to receive extrinsic evidence to resolve the conflict or ambiguity. Universal C. I. T. Credit Corp. v. Daniel, 150 Tex. 513, 243 S.W.2d 154; Lewis v. East Texas Finance Co., 136 Tex. 149, 146 S.W.2d 977.

If the clause providing for the %2iid overriding royalty did not provide that the reserved royalty was “without reduction” the problem of construing the lease would present no great difficulty. The overriding royalty is, withal, “royalty”, State National Bank of Corpus Christi v. Morgan, 135 Tex. 509, 143 S.W.2d 757, and Griffith v. Taylor, Tex., 291 S.W.2d 673, and in the absence of the words “without reduction” the proportionate reduction clause would require its reduction to a %92nd of production. However, the parties have put the words “without reduction” in the clause and we have no right to take them out unless the established rules of construction noted above dictate that action.

On the face of the lease the proportionate reduction clause and the overriding royalty clause present an obvious conflict. The first would require a proportionate reduction of the %2nd overriding royalty and the second would prohibit its reduction. One of the rules of construction for resolving conflicts requires that typewritten matter in a contract be given effect over printed matter. J. K. Hughes Oil Co. v. Mayflower Inv. Co., Tex.Civ.App., 193 S.W.2d 971, 973, writ refused; Richardson v. Richardson, Tex.Civ.App., 270 S.W.2d 307, 311, writ refused. And see Annotation, 37 A.L.R. 820, et seq. That rule is peculiarly applicable here. When it is applied the proportionate reduction clause and the overriding royalty clause are harmonized and the language of each is given meaning. The language of the proportionate reduction clause is given effect as requiring a reduction of the normal royalty reserved in the lease, but it is not given an effect which would render the words “without reduction” in the overriding royalty clause meaningless. To refuse to so limit the effect of the proportionate reduction clause would necessarily result in a holding that the ambiguity in the lease cannot be resolved by rules of construction, a result which both parties disavow. This construction of the lease gives the petitioners a greater royalty than the usual ⅛⅛ of the mineral fee owned by them, but parties may validly contract for a greater royalty than ⅛⅛ 0f the lessor’s mineral ownership. Benge v. Scharbauer, 152 Tex. 447, 259 S.W.2d 166; Gibson v. Turner, Tex., 294 S.W.2d 781; King v. First Nat. Bank of Wichita Falls, 144 Tex. 583, 192 S.W.2d 260, 163 A.L.R. 1128. We agree that in so far as the quantum of the royalty reserved in the lease is concerned the lease is unambiguous and we hold that the quantum reserved is a %sth interest.

The necessity for construction of the lease is not yet exhausted. The respondents insist here, as they did in their motion for an instructed verdict, that in the final analysis the question in the case is governed by the rule of estoppel laid down in Duhig v. Peavy-Moore Lbr. Co., 135 Tex. 503, 144 S.W.2d 878. In that case a grantor in a deed purported to convey fee simple title to certain land by a deed containing a covenant of general warranty. In the deed the grantor reserved and retained an undivided one-half (½) interest in and to all of the minerals in and under the land. One-half of the minerals in the land had theretofore been severed and on the date of the deed was outstanding in a third person. In that fact situation it was held that the covenant of warranty extended to the surface of the land and to one-half of the minerals therein, that there was an automatic breach of the warranty and that equity would estop the grantor and those claiming under him from asserting against the grantee and those claiming under it the title to the one-half of the minerals reserved and retained. The effect of the holding was to take from the grantor the one-half of the minerals retained by him, without reference to or regard for the intention of the parties, and give the same to the grantee in order to fulfill the covenant of general warranty.

We have examined the record on file in this court in the Duhig case. The rule announced was a novel one in the fact situation before the court. Its adoption was urged by the defendant in error (respondent) and by able amicus curiae. Its adoption was opposed by the plaintiff in error (petitioner) and by able amicus curiae. It is evident from the face of the court’s opinion in the case (144 S.W.2d 879-880) that able judges also differed on the wisdom of the adoption of the rule. None of the parties filing briefs cited any case in which the rule had been approved or applied. In support of its adoption of the rule this court cited the following cases: Robinson v. Douthit, 64 Tex. 101, Baldwin v. Root, 90 Tex. 546, 40 S.W. 3; Jacobs v. Robinson, 113 Tex. 231, 254 S.W. 309; Caswell v. Llano Oil Company, 120 Tex. 139, 36 S.W.2d 208; Moore v. Crawford, 130 U.S. 122, 9 S.Ct. 447, 449, 32 L.Ed. 878; Smith v. Williams, 44 Mich. 240, 6 N.W. 662. None of the cases cited support the rule, except by analogy. Each of the cases cited '"involve an application of the well established rule of estoppel against the assertion by a grantor of an after-acquired title in contradiction of his covenant of warranty. In addition to citing the cases above noted the court quoted the opening sentence from 19 Am.Jur. 614, sec. 16, the language of which gives seeming support to the rule adopted, but no case is cited by the writer of the text and an examination of the remainder of the section and of the cases cited in the footnotes shows that the writer was dealing with the effect of the rule as applied to an after-acquired title.

What has been said with reference to the history of the adoption of the rule of the Duhig case is not said in disparagement of the ultimate decision of the court to adopt and apply it. It is said, rather, in justification of our refusal to extend it to and apply it in the construction of oil, gas and mineral leases.

According to Shepard’s Southwestern Reporter Citations the Duhig case has been cited in some twenty-five cases subsequently decided. A reading of the cases in which it has been cited shows that whereas it has been cited in many cases involving the construction of deeds — in most of which it was cited on other points — and that the rule of estoppel has been applied in five of such cases, it has been cited in only two cases involving the construction of a mineral lease. It was cited in the opinion of the Court of Civil Appeals in this case and in the opinion of this court in Gibson v. Turner, Tex., 294 S.W.2d 781. The rule was not given controlling effect in Gibson v. Turner.

The rule having become an established one in the construction of deeds we have no occasion, in this case or at this late hour, to question its validity when it is so used. We have followed the rule in the construction of a deed as recently as 1953. Benge v. Scharbauer, 152 Tex. 447, 259 S.W.2d 166. But there is sound reason for declining to extend it to and apply it in the construction of oil, gas and mineral leases. We know as a matter of common knowledge and experience that deeds are usually prepared by the grantor or by a scrivener of his choice under his direction. He rarely prepares and executes a deed which purports to convey and which warrants title to an interest in property greater than he owns. If through carelessness or otherwise he executes a deed which purports to convey and which warrants title to an interest in property greater than he owns there is some moral justification for taking from him as much of the interest which he does own as is necessary to make good his warranty. We also know as a matter of common knowledge and experience that mineral leases are usually prepared, or standard forms completed, by the lessee. Even though a lessee knows a lessor owns less than the full fee title to the premises on which a lease is sought he often, if not usually, prepares and insists upon a lease which purports to convey the entire fee in order to make certain that no fractional interest is left outstanding in the lessor. He is protected against the possibility of being forced to pay royalty on a greater interest than that actually owned by the lessor by the inclusion of a standard proportionate reduction clause in the lease. That clause protects the lessee but it does not operate to reduce the estate which the lessor purports to convey. Klein v. Humble Oil & Refining Co., 126 Tex. 450, 86 S.W.2d 1077-1079. In many such cases, illustrated by the instant case, in which the lessor actually owns only an undivided interest in the minerals in the land described in the lease and in which there is a reservation of royalty, the lessee, by resort to the Duhig rule and even though owning through leases the entire %ths working interest in the-remainder of the minerals, could take, without paying therefor, the whole of the interest of the lessor in the minerals, including that reserved as royalty, and could, as well, recover damages from the lessor for breach of warranty. It is unthinkable and contrary to all modern human experience in the oil and gas industry to suppose that one owning an interest in the mineral fee would' lease that interest for development of the mineral estate with no intention of receiving any of the returns from production of the minerals.

In Benge v. Scharbauer, 152 Tex. 447, 259 S.W.2d 166, 169, we declined to extend the Duhig rule to transfer to a grantee any part of a %ths royalty provided for in a deed while at the same time giving effect to the rule to transfer to the grantee a part of a %ths interest in the mineral fee also reserved in the deed. We now decline to extend the rule to oil, gas and mineral leases. The rule is an arbitrary one at best and it should not be applied to work an automatic transfer of rights and interests reserved to a lessor, a transfer which would all too often frustrate rather than effectuate the intention of the parties. In the interpretation and construction of oil, gas and mineral leases we will seek to give effect to the true intention of the parties, following in that endeavor established rules used to interpret and construe contracts and other bilateral written instruments. If that method of construction leads to a breach of warranty it is then soon enough to enforce the fulfillment of the warranty by estoppel or to award damages for a breach thereof.

It is stipulated in the record that respondents had full knowledge that petitioners owned only a [4th interest in the minerals in and under the 240 acres of land. We may accept as true the statement in petitioners’ brief that respondents themselves then owned %ths of the remaining p4ths,_ or 7%6ths, of the minerals. Rule 419, Tex. Rules of Civil Procedure. Petitioners reserved a %oth interest, as we have held, and their warranty therefore purportedly extended to the remaining 9⅞6⅛3. It thus appears that if the Duhig rule were applied in the construction of the lease the respondents who own in their own right 7%eths of the minerals could, as a matter ■of law, take by estoppel the entire ⅛⅛ or x%6ths owned by petitioners, including the %6ths reserved by them, and would then have a cause of action against petitioners for damages for breach of warranty of title to the remaining %oths interest.

As we have heretofore demonstrated, when we seek to apply the lease to its subject matter we encounter serious difficulties. The lease purports to warrant title to so much of the mineral estate in the 240 acres of land as is not reserved to petitioners. It thus purports to warrant title to a 9⅛6⅛ interest therein. The purpose and operative effect of the covenant is not to guarantee that the lessor has good title to the premises but to guarantee the lessee in his title thereto. 14 Am.Jur. 521, Covenants, Conditions and Restrictions, Sec. 51; McClelland v. Moore, 48 Tex. 355, 363; Langford v. Newsom, Tex.Com.App., 220 S.W. 544; Gibson v. Turner, Tex., 294 S.W.2d 781, 787. As to the 7%8th interest owned- by respondents, therefore, the warranty, for all practical purposes, is satisfied. Rancho Bonito Land & Live Stock Co. v. North, 92 Tex. 72, 45 S.W. 994; Gibson v. Turner, Tex., 294 S.W.2d 781, 788. Title to an additional ^oths passed to respondents under petitioners’ lease and as to that interest the warranty is satisfied. There remains outstanding in third persons, however, an interest of 1%6ths to which the warranty purports to extend and to which respondents’ title has failed. The purported warranty of respondents’ title to this x%6ths interest and the purported reservation to petitioners of a %eths interest cannot both stand unimpaired.

If the warranty is enforced to the extent of its full purport the reservation will be destroyed. If the purported reservation is preserved the warranty will be breached pro tanto. This creates a latent ambiguity requiring that we repair once again to the intention of the parties for its resolution.

What did the parties intend? No doubt they intended that the covenant of warranty should have some operative effect or they would not have included it in the lease. No doubt they also intended that petitioners as lessors should have title to and enjoy the fruits of the reserved royalty. The parties were bargaining with respect to an interest of an undivided x%6ths and not with respect to the whole of the minerals in the 240 acres of land. Respondents knew that petitioners owned only a x%6th interest. They knew, moreover, as did petitioners, that they themselves and third persons owned all interest in the minerals over and above the x%6th interest. Respondents paid a cash bonus on a 1(⅜6⅛ interest; they paid no bonus on a greater interest. There was no occasion for respondents to exact from petitioners or for petitioners to furnish a warranty of title to any interest greater than the x%6th interest which they undertook to convey. It is evident that the parties intended the covenant of warranty to extend only to the ^eth interest in the minerals title to which passed to respondents under the lease, and we so hold on this record as a matter of law. So holding preserves the reserved royalty and preserves the warranty for its intended purpose. There has been no breach of the warranty as we have interpreted it and the warranty cannot, therefore, be used by respondents as a vehicle for obtaining or for cutting down the royalty reserved to petitioners in the lease.

In their answer in the trial court respondents, as defendants, pleaded alternatively that the words “without reduction” were included in the overriding royalty clause as a result of a mutual mistake of the parties, and by cross-action they sought a reformation of the lease to eliminate the words. Inasmuch as the trial court instructed a verdict for respondents at the close of petitioners’ evidence the cross-action was never reached for trial and no evidence was offered thereon. They are entitled to a trial of their suit for reformation. The cause must therefore be remanded. Rule 503, Texas Rules of Civil Procedure; Southwestern Drug Corp. v. McKesson & Robbins, 141 Tex. 284, 172 S.W.2d 485, 487, 155 A.L.R. 1056.

The judgments of the Court of Civil Appeal's and the trial court are reversed and the cause is remanded to the trial court for trial of respondents’ cross-action.

SMITH, Justice

(concurring).

I am of the opinion that this case should be reversed by this Court and judgment here rendered for the petitioners. I do not agree with the holding by the majority that the Duhig case has any bearing or application to the present case. The Duhig case is not controlling, therefore, it is unnecessary to a decision here to hold, as the majority does, that it declines to extend and apply the Duhig doctrine in the construction of oil, gas, and mineral leases. I cannot find any sound support for the theory advanced by the majority that the Duhig rule applies in the construction of a deed, but not in the construction of oil, gas, and mineral leases. Granting that the Duhig rule was not given controlling effect in Gibson v. Turner, Tex., 294 S.W.2d 781, 786, yet, in that case the majority discussed at great length the Duhig case. The respondents, in fact, relied upon the Duhig rule to support their position in the Gibson v. Turner case, supra. This Court refused to follow the Duhig rule in that case. In the Gibson v. Turner case, this Court stated: “Respondents’ contention amounts to one that a royalty cannot be larger than ]4th of the interest owned by the lessors”. In our case the respondents contend and the Court of Civil Appeals has held that the lessors could not reserve unto themselves an overriding royalty interest greater than the mineral interest which they owned at the time of their execution of the reservation, and that the royalty as reserved must be carved from the mineral estate as owned by the lessors. I think the view of the respondents in our case is in error. The majority opinion seems to say, in effect, that if the rule in the Duhig case is applied in the construction of an oil, gas, and mineral lease, then it would reach a different conclusion and hold with the respondents. With this I cannot agree. The petitioners are entitled to have their rights determined by the principles of law as applicable to the record. I would apply the Duhig rule just as readily in this case which involves the construction of an oil, gas, and mineral lease as in a case where a deed is involved, provided the record supported such application. The rule announced in the Duhig case is sound as applied to the facts in that case. I agree with the majority here that the rule announced has become well established, but I do not agree that this Court can abridge the effect of that rule by refusing its application in the construction of an oil, gas, and mineral lease. A deed conveys an interest in land. An oil, gas, and mineral lease amounts to a determinable fee. We have involved in our case “an overriding royalty”. An oil payment has been held to be an interest in land. An oil payment and overriding royalty are virtually the same. See Knight v. Chicago Corporation, Tex.Civ.App., 183 S.W.2d 666, 670, affirmed in 144 Tex. 98, 188 S.W.2d 564, where it was said: “The oil payment is similar to the overriding royalty, except that the interest of the assignee ceases upon his receiving a certain amount of money or value of oil or gas produced from a certain percentage of the working interest.”

In an Article entitled “Oil Payments”, 20 Texas Law Review, p. 841, I find good support for the holding in the Chicago Corporation case, supra. In that Article it is said:

“On principle there seems to he little justification for making any distinction between the nature of the property interest created by an oil payment and an overriding royalty, and there can be no doubt in Texas, but that an overriding royalty, whether payable in money or by delivery of oil, is an interest in land. The only difference is that the overriding royalty continues throughout the entire life of the lease whereas the oil payment terminates when the sum provided for has been realized by the payee. This difference does not appear to justify any distinction in the nature of the property interests created so long as they endure.”

Again, in an Article entitled “Problems Presented by Joint Ownership of Oil, Gas and Other Minerals”, 32 Texas Law Review, p. 697, it is said:

“An overriding royalty differs from an oil payment only in that it is of unlimited duration, and most, if not all, that has been said about oil payments will apply with equal force to overriding royalty. * * * The obvious similarity between these two types of interest should result in the adoption of similar rules of law with respect to both within any particular jurisdiction.”

I think it can be said with equal logic that the similarity between the three types of property interests, i.e. (1) a deed conveying a fee interest in land, (2) a deed conveying royalty, (3) a contractual reservation in an oil, gas, and mineral lease which amounts to a conveyance of either an oil payment or an overriding royalty, would call for the adoption of similar rules of law for the construction of the respective instruments in determining the interest conveyed or reserved by contract.

The question in our case is: What principles of law shall be followed and applied to the facts in determining who should receive and in what amount, the overriding royalty ?

It is stipulated that petitioners only owned an undivided ⅛ fee simple mineral interest in the 240 acres covered by the lease. The other ⅝ leasehold interest is owned by respondents. It was stipulated that respondents knew, at the time they undertook to acquire the lease and at the time they paid for it, that petitioners only owned an undivided ⅛ interest. The lessors (petitioners) only attempted to reserve %6 combined ordinary and overriding royalty out of their admitted 1%6 mineral interest in the leased premises, leaving an tyva interest for lessees. This is exactly what lessees bargained and paid for. This suit does not involve the ordinary 1/⅛⅛ royalty. It involves only the determination of the amount of overriding royalty, and the ownership thereof. However, there are three fractions involved in the lease:

“There are three fractions involved in the lease: (1) the ⅛ mineral interest admittedly owned by petitioners; (2) the % ordinary royalty, and (3) the ⅜2 overriding royalty. The lowest common denominator of all three fractions is 96. Converting petitioners’ ⅛ interest to the lowest common denominator, they owned of the minerals under the land described in the lease. Applying the same common denominator, the ordinary ⅛ royalty equals %e, since ⅛ of ⅛ equals ¼8, or converted to the common denominator, %<s. By the same process, the ⅜2 overriding royalty is converted to ⅜6 of the production. Petitioners therefore received under the terms of the lease %e (%8 plus %a equals %e) in the form of combined ordinary and overriding royalty, and respondents therefore received the remaining Wae (%6 subtracted from 1%e leaves ^e) as a net working interest.”

Thus it is seen that this is not a case in which petitioners have reserved royalty not owned by them or royalty in excess of their mineral interest in the leased premises. The lease reserves as overriding' royalty ⅜2 of ⅜ of all oil or gas produced from the land described in the lease, without reduction for any reason. The reservation reads:

“The lessors herein reserve unto themselves, their heirs and assigns, without reduction, as an overriding royalty, a net ⅛2 of ⅜ of all oil and gas produced and saved from the above described premises, free of cost or expense to the credit of the lessors into the storage tank or tanks or into the pipe line to which the well or wells on said land may be connected.
“Fuel oil for operating the premises shall be deducted before computing the overriding royalty herein provided.
“In this connection it is understood and agreed that the overriding royalty reserve by lessors herein is only payable if or when oil or gas is produced, saved and marketed, and that the rights of the lessors herein to receive same shall not create an obligation as to development or operation upon the lessee, his heirs or assigns, express or implied, except as provided for under the terms of this lease.
“Lessors shall pay their portion of all ad valorem taxes.”

The reservation is a contractual provision just as the reservation provision in the case of Benge v. Scharbauer, 152 Tex. 447, 259 S.W.2d 166, 169, was held to be by this Court. In that case the reservation was as follows:

“Saving, excepting and reserving to the grantors herein, however, an undivided three-eighths (⅜) of all the oil, gas and other minerals, in, to and under said above described lands, but the grantee and his assigns shall have the sole power to execute all future oil, gas and other mineral leases without the joinder of the grantors herein, but said leases shall provide for the payment of three-eighths (⅜) of all the bonuses, rentals and royalties to the grantors.”

We held in the Benge case that—

“The fractional part of the bonuses, rentals and royalties that one is to receive under a mineral lease usually or normally is the same as his fractional mineral interest, but we cannot say that it must always be the same. The parties owning the mineral interests may make it different if they intend to do so, and plainly and in a formal way express that intention. Here that intention is expressed by clear language in the deed that leases executed by the grantee under the power given shall provide for the payment of ¡Hiths of all bonuses, rentals and royalties to the grantors. The provision is not an agreement that the parties to the deed shall participate in the bonuses, rentals and royalties in proportion to their ownership of mineral interests. It is rather a contractual provision that the grantors shall receive a specified part of the bonuses, rentals and royalties.”

The case of Pollock v. McAlester Fuel Company, 215 Ark. 842, 223 S.W.2d 813, 815, fairly well points up my contention that an agreement clear and unambiguous on its face will be enforced by the courts according to its terms. In that case the Court said in part: “Reservations, if made, may be worded as the parties please. If they provide that the grantor shall have a named fraction of the oil produced on all the described land, that is one thing; if they provide that he shall have a fraction of what is produced from the interest conveyed by the particular lease, it is another thing. The courts will enforce either agreement.”

We followed this principle of law in both the Benge v. Scharbauer, supra, and the Gibson v. Turner, cases. We made no distinction in applying the law to the facts in each case. One involved a reservation in a deed, the other involved the construction of a reservation in an oil, gas, and mineral lease.

In the Gibson v. Turner case we followed the rule announced in the case of R. Lacy, Inc. v. Jarrett, Tex.Civ.App., 1948, 214 S.W.2d 692, er. ref. The same should be done in this case. The Lacy case involved an oil payment, but the principle of law announced is equally applicable to an overriding royalty. The lease in that case and in the present case were both prepared on virtually the same lease form. Both provide for an ordinary ⅛ on oil and gas, and both contain covenants of warranty and other standard provisions. The oil payment was reserved by a typewritten provision which read in part as follows: “Lessor hereby reserves a production payment of $15,000 out of ⅛ of ⅞ of the oil, if, as and only when produced, saved and marketed from said land under this lease.” It was stipulated that the lessor only owned a ¾2 undivided interest, and lessee contended that the production payment was therefore limited to ⅛ of ⅞ of ¾2 of the oil. The Court rejected this theory just as this Court did in Gibson v. Turner, supra, and on this question held:

“The reservation clause in the instant case does not limit the production payment out of the interest ‘herein conveyed’ or the land conveyed, but merely limits the $15,000 payment from oil to that which may be produced ‘from the land under the lease then made’, not under some other lease. The lease here involved describes the three lots.”

Under the holding in R. Lacy, Inc., v. Jarrett, supra, a holding approved by this Court in Gibson v. Turner, supra, we should hold that the lease in our case in plain and unambiguous terms expressed a clear intention of the parties to reserve an overriding royalty of ½2 of the production from 240 acres, and not merely ⅛ thereof.

In the Gibson v. Turner case, supra, we held that case was controlled also by the reasoning and judgment in the case of King v. First National Bank of Wichita Falls, 144 Tex. 583, 192 S.W.2d 260, 163 A.L.R. 1128. The rule in that case is applicable here. In that case grantee King contended that since only a one-half interest was conveyed in the land, the grantor, Duncan, reserved only one-eighth of one-half of the usual ⅛⅛ royalty in the entire 240 acres. The Court held against this contention, and we said in Gibson v. Turner that the Court held in the King case that by “ ‘minerals that may be produced from the hereinabove described land’ was meant the total production from the whole of said land rather than from the grantor’s one-half interest therein.” [294 S.W.2d 784.] Then this Court made its holding in the Gibson case, as follows: “Such holding requires our holding in this case that the reservation of production ‘from said land’ in our lease [Gibson-Turner] covers }4th of 4%oths, or total production from Survey No. 14 in its entirety, and not from the %oths owned by the grantors in the lease.” In our case, the rule in Gibson v. Turner, supra, and the several cases cited therein, should be applied, and when that has been done we have a plain, clear and unambiguous contractual provision whereby the respondents did covenant and agree that petitioner would receive Y¿2nd of %ths of all oil produced from the 240 acres, without reduction, as an overriding royalty. This contractual provision is binding upon respondents. It is a covenant running with the land. There was no breach of warranty. The Duhig doctrine does not in any manner nullify the contractual covenant in the lease providing for this overriding royalty.

Under my view of the record in this case the contract was sufficient without the use of the words “without reduction”. Therefore, I do not believe this case should be remanded to enable respondents to try the issue of mutual mistake as to the inclusion of the words “without reduction”. The record shows that respondents originally-prepared the lease and overriding royalty rider. The instrument was rejected by petitioners. They rejected and tore off respondents’ overriding royalty rider with its reduction clause and substituted therefor the one involved. Respondents acting upon advice of attorneys accepted the substitute provision which contained the words “without reduction”. Respondents recorded the lease and have drilled eight producing oil wells on the land, and have sold the oil for over $700,000 to Stanolind Oil Purchasing Company and Shell Oil Company, stakeholder defendants below.

The record before us convinces me that the words “without reduction” in the contract are not controlling, and a finding that such words were inserted in the lease by mutual mistake would not entitle respondents to a judgment. In _ any event, the instructed verdict was proper. There was no evidence of probative force introduced in support of the alternative plea that the words “without reduction” were included in the overriding clause as a result of a mutual mistake of the parties. All of the evidence is to the contrary.

My conclusion is that the judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals should be reversed and rendered. 
      
      . Respondents do not actually seek to achieve such an unjust or harsh result by invoking the Duhig rule; they seek only to use the rule defensively to effect a reduction in the %2nd overriding royalty provided for in the lease. In their brief in this court respondents state: “Respondents have no desire to take away from Petitioners the interest which they really contracted for, and which Respondents really agreed for them to reserve.”
     