
    TIDE WATER ASSOCIATED OIL COMPANY, Appellant, v. Fay Hunter HOGG et al., Appellees.
    No. 5158.
    Court of Civil Appeals of Texas. El Paso.
    June 27, 1956.
    Rehearing Denied Oct. 10, 1956.
    
      Stubbeman, McRae & Sealy and W. B. Browder, Jr., Midland, for appellant.
    Henry Russell, Pecos, Samuels, Brown, Herman & Scott, Fort Worth, Thomas L. White, Monahans, James E. Hara, Hawley . C. Kerr, Tulsa, Okl., John R. Lee, Kermit, Gerald, Fitz-Gerald, Midland, for appellees.
   FRASER,‘Justice.

George W. Hogg and wife, Lula Hogg, in an instrument dated November IS, 1924, ■leased.some 9,433 acres of land to.J, W.Grant- for the purpose of operating,and ■mining for oil, gas, and other minerals. ■The appellees,, who were plaintiffs b.elow, acquired the rights of , George and Lula Hogg by conveyances, and the defendant, Tide Water Associated Oil Company, were assignees of the original lessee, J. W. Grant.

. The. appellees, will;hereinafter ,be. referred to as plaintiffs, and,-appellant, .Tide pla-ter Associated Oil Company, as defendant.

.Plaintiffs bfbught' suit in' trial ^'cbuft asking cancellation of le'ase arid option contained therein, and asking- for "judgment quieting their title ás against the said tóase arid option, and the claims of" defendant Tide Water' Oil Company, and- in the alternative prayed that any judgment decreeing title in defendant should hold that Tide Water’s title to seven-eighths of the ’minerals was subject to'the performance • of the obligations of the lease and agreement.

Defendant Tide Water admitted it was claiming title to-seven-eighths .of .the minerals, and after pleading limitation, ratification anil estoppel, filed its cross-action.

-■- Various parcels of the. original acreage were assigned and transferred by the original lessee, Grant, and as one of the assignees defendant Tide Water then became entitled to the terms and provisions of the lease.

The lease executed between George and Lula Hogg and Grant was on a lease form entitled “Producer’s 88 Special — Texas-Form”. The following are the applicable and important provisions of said lease insofar as this particular controversy is concerned :

“That the said lessor, for and in consideration of Ten and no/100 Dollars cash in hand paid, receipt of which is hereby acknowledged, and of the covenants and agreements hereinafter contained on the part of lessee to be paid, kept and performed, have granted, demised, leased and let and by these presents dpes grant, lease and let unto the said lessee for the sole,- and- only purpose of mining and operating for oil and gas, pptash and other minerals any of-laying pipe line' and of building tanks, powers-, ■ stations and structures thereon to produce, save, take care of said'products, all that certain tract of land situated in the County of Winkler, State of Texas, described as follows, to-wit:” ......
(Here follows description of the various parcels covered by the lease)
“It is, further provided and a part of the consideration herein that if Lessee- or assigns has paid the yearly an,nual rental as provided herein for the ¡period of 20 successive .years, then in that event Lessee or assigns is to become the owner in fee of. seven-eighths of all minerals on and under said land including-potash, and lessor or assigns will execute the proper legal conveyance .to the same without any further .consideration on the part of Lessee.
“and containing 9433 acres, more or ■less. '
“It is agreed that this lease shall re- - main in force for a term of 20 years -from this date, and as long thereafter ■as* oil or gas, or'potash or other mineral or either of them is produced from said land by the lessee.
“If no well be commenced on said land or the sinking of a shaft on or before the 5th day of January, 1926, this lease shall terminate as to both parties, unless the lessee on or before that date shall pay or tender to the lessor, or to the lessor’s credit in the First National Bank at. Midland, Texas, or its successors, * * * the ■ sum. of Nine Hundred Forty-three and 30/100 or ten cents rental per acre Dollars, which shall operate as rental and cover the privilege of deferring the commencement of a well or the sinking of a shaft for twelve. (12) months from said date. In like manner and upon like payments or tenders the commencement of a well may be further deferred foi* like periods of the same number of months successively. And it is understood and agreed that the consideration first recited herein, the down payment, covers not only the privilege granted • to the date when said first rental is payable as aforesaid, but also the lessee’s option of extending that, period as aforesaid, and any and all other rights conferred.
“If the estate of either party hereto is assigned — and the privilege of, assigning in whole or.in part is expressly, allowed — the covenants, hereof shall extend to. their heirs, executors, administrators, successors, or. assigns, * * and it is hereby agreed that in the event this lease shall .be assigned as to a part or a.s to parts of the above described lands, and the assignee or assignees of such part or parts shall fail or make default in the payment of the proportionate part of the rental due from him or them, such default, shall not operate to defeat or' affect this lease, insofar as it covers a part or parts of said lands upon which the said lessee or any assigns thereof shall make due payment of said rental.”

' The trial' court held for the plaintiff, and defendant has appealed. Appellant of course alleges error in the action • of the court in awarding judgment to plaintiff and denying . defendant judgment on its cross-action. These matters are covered in the first five points.

There was no dispute ás to’ facts, and the entire case turns on the interpretation of the terms, of the lease entered into between the Hoggs and Grant. It will be noted from the provisions of the lease here-inabove set forth that each party had the right to assign in whole, or in part the estate held under the said lease. Appellant urges that because it has paid as provided in said lease the rental therein provided,, for twenty successive yeárs, that it .is therefore entitled to-be granted or conveyed the seven-eighths of the minerals, as provided in the paragraph following the description of the land. Appellee, however, contends that this provision has not been met because all of the rentals on the entire tract included in the original lease have not been paid— in other words, holders of some of the other portions who w.ere. assignees from Grant; failed.or defaulted in their rental payments —and appellee contends that .the lease intended.that before lessees or any-of them could .claim the right to compel lessor to convey the seven-eighths of the minerals, the .rental-.of the entire 9,433, acres should have been paid.. We do not think this interpretation by appellee is justified, as this lease expressly provided that either party could assign part or. all of. his estate, and the last; provision herein copied clearly states that the covenants on said lease shall extend to the assigns, 'executors, administrators and successors of .the parties to the lease, and further should the assignee or assignees of such part or parts fail or make default in- the rental payment, such default shall not operate to defeat or affect this lease insofar as it covers part or parts of the lands of- assignees who -have duly made their required payments. . On 'the basis of thése provisions alnd" viewing the contract as a' Whole we ’think the intent of the parties is clear that he who kept up the obligations of the lease would be entitled to -the full benefits of the lease with, regard to his particular part or. parts of the land covered.. . ....

Appellee further maintains that because the lease provided that its primary-term should be twenty years unless minerals were produced before the expiration-, of that, time, that the primary term of the. lease lapsed on November 15, 1944, It is admitted that there was no production prior to 'that time. - Appellee therefore urges that because the primary term of the lease had lapsed, appellant was not entitled to exercise its option to pay twenty successive yearly rental payments, and urges this position further by calling attention to the fact that there was no payment due on. the lease, until January 5, 1926, some thirteen or fourteen months after the execution ,date, and that therefore it would be or would have been impossible under the lease to have qualified under the optional provision, so as to require appellee to convey. It -has been pointed out that the lease terminated in twenty years unless minerals were produced, and that there was no way to continue the lease in the absence of production, and that because the first rental payment was not due for more than a year from the inception date of the contract it would therefore not be possible to make twenty successive yearly payments under the lease. It might appear as though a dilemma were suggested by the lease, because production would stop payment of the rentals, and if no production the lease only required rental payment for the last nineteen years of its life, s'o that therefore there was no way that lessees could under the terms of the lease legally pay for twenty successive years, thereby exercising its option and earning the right to have seven-eighths of the minerals conveyed.

However, considering the instrument in its entirety, it is clear that the parties agreed that lessee or an assignee of lessee had'-the-clear .right .under the option expressly granted to make twenty successive payments, as provided in the paragraph granting the option; The paragraph which deals with the rental payments .permits payment or tender “on or before” January 5, 1926, and later on says “in like manner and upon like payments or tenders”. We therefore believe-that this paragraph, read in connection with the paragraph providing that if lessee or assigns has paid the yearly annual rental “as provided herein”, for a period of twenty successive years, created a covenant running with the land, as well as the option, which would not be affected or destroyed by the termination of the primary term of the lease.'

We think this lease- expressly granted an option to appellant, and in promising to convey i-f the option were taken up, created thereby a covenant running with the land, so therefore, absent any production on' the land leased by Tide Water, then Tide Water had the right to take advantage of the said option and covenant, and according to the stipulated facts here exercised such right by paying twenty successive yearly rental payments. The lease clearly stipulated that the assignee who complied with its provisions was- entitled to the benefits of all the terms of the lease and the covenants contained therein. There was no production on Tide Water land, and we do not think the completion of. a well by Texas Company on its land has any effect on this controversy, nor do we think the expiration of the primary term of the lease was intended to or did cancel and destroy the option expressly granted to purchase seven-eighths of the minerals by paying the provided rentals for twenty successive years.

We therefore hold that Tide Water, appellant-defendant, as the assignee of Grant, had fully complied with the terms of the original lease, and that lessor therefore became obligated as provided in the lease, to execute the proper legal conveyance of seven-eighths of all the minerals, including potash, on the land covered by the Tide Water assignment of the original lease, subject to the terms of the lease obligating lessee to develop the premises which is recited as the sole and only purpose of the lease.

We therefore sustain appellant’s first five points, in accordance with the matters stated above. Appellant’s other points are overruled.

The judgment of.the trial court is reversed, and ' judgment here rendered decreeing and establishing title in appellant to seven-eighths of all minerals and potash on or under the lands covered by that much of the original lease as assigned to and held by defendant, Tide Water Associated Oil Company, subject to the applicable terms of the lease involved.

On Motions for Rehearing.

HAMILTON, Chief Justice.

Appellant and appellees filed motions for rehearing, and in addition asked for a clarification of our opinion as to the status of ownership of lessor and assigns, and lessee and assigns, in and to the lands involved. We overrule all motions for rehearing, but will endeavor to clarify our opinion somewhat.

In order to determine the interest held by lessee and assigns and the interest held by lessor and assigns, it can best be done by reviewing the lease contract and determining therefrom just what was conveyed by lessors to lessees in said conveyance, and on the other hand what was the consideration, the agreements and covenants agreed to be paid, kept and performed by lessees. -' ' ' ■

There- is no dispute as to what the lease : contraict conveyed without considering- the ■typewritten rider, which ■ has been spoken of-By the parties and- even by-us in our ■ -opinion as an option clause* but which probably" would'be better spoken of as .a con'•tingency clause. -Without such clause the ! contract simply conveyed to lessee a deter"minable- fee in % of the minerals thus de- - terminable because the lease provided that the grant was to be for a term of only twenty years, or as long thereafter as production of minerals was obtained, and this twenty year term was further limited by the provision that it would terminate in the absence of production unless drilling operations were carried on or rentals were paid.

The contingency clause which we have construed as being a part' of'the lease contract provides in effect that in the event the lease is kept a live by the payment of rentals, as distinguished from being kept alive by drilling operations or production of oil, then the ⅞ mineral interest becomes vested in the- lessee in fee.: This-means a title forever, - as distinguished;: from one that is limited in.duration — in-other words, lessee first had a determinable fee in the ⅞ of the minerals which ripened into a fee title to ⅞ of the mineral upon the happening of the contingency as provided in said rider.

In consideration for the conveyance of this estate it is recited in the lease contract that in addition to $10 cash on hand paid the lessee agreed to do certain other things, one of which was to

“deliver to the credit of lessor free of cost and in the pipeline to which they may connect their well, an equal ⅛ part of all oil produced and saved from the leased premises, also ⅛ of the net proceeds of the potash or other minerals at -the mine”.

Everything else that lessee agreed to do or became obligated to do under the regular lease he is still bound by, even though lessee is the owner in fee of Vs of the minerals. We think that the provision

“and lessor or - assigns will execute legal conveyance to the same without any -further -consideration on the part of lessee”

■ is of no import in construing said contingency clause, because the covenants and agreements - providecl to be performed by ■lessee is .the.primary consideration for the grant, and such' is not ih any sense “further consideration”.

The relationship of lessor and lessee is exactly the same as though there had never been- ’ any limitation ■ put upon the original grant ■which- made, his ■ title a determinable fee until the happening of the said contingency. Since lessee’s interest must bear the. entire cost of operations, it is called what is commonly known as an operating interest, and lessor’s interest is what is commonly known as.a royalty interest.

If any questions posed by either the appellant or the appellees in their motions for rehearing are not answered herein, the answer can be found by referring to the terms of the lease contract itself.  