In this case, we must determine whether the common law rule against perpetuities invalidates a grantee's future interest in the grantor's reserved non-participating royalty interest. We hold that it does not, but on grounds different from those expressed by the court of appeals. However, we hold that the reservation's savings clause is ambiguous and affirm the court of appeals' remand on this issue. In addition, we hold that section 91.402 of the Texas Natural Resources Code does not preclude a lessor's common law claim for breach of contract. Finally, we affirm the court of appeals' judgment as to attorney's fees pursuant to Texas Rule of Civil Procedure 91a.
I. Background
In 1996, Lois Strieber conveyed, by warranty deed, fee simple title to a 120-acre tract of land in Dewitt County to Lorene Koopmann and her late husband. The deed included the following language:
RESERVATIONS FROM AND EXCEPTIONS TO CONVEYANCE AND WARRANTY:
1. There is EXCEPTED from this conveyance and RESERVED to the Grantor and her heirs and assigns for the term hereinafter set forth one-half (½) of the royalties from the production of oil, gas ... and all other minerals ... which reserved royalty interest is a non-participating *863interest and is reserved for the limited term of 15 years from the date of this Deed and as long thereafter as there is production in paying or commercial quantities of oil, gas, or said other minerals from said land or lands pooled therewith. If at the expiration of 15 years from the date of this Deed, oil, gas, or said other minerals are not being produced or mined from said land ... this reserved royalty interest shall be null and void and the Grantor's rights in such reserved royalty shall terminate. It is expressly understood, however, that if any oil, gas, or mineral or mining lease covering said land ... is maintained in force and effect by payment of shut-in royalties or any other similar payments made to the lessors or royalty holder in lieu of actual production while there is located on the lease or land pooled therewith a well or mine capable of producing oil, gas, or other minerals in paying or commercial quantities but shut-in for lack of market or any other reason, then ... it will be considered that production in paying or commercial quantities is being obtained from the land herein conveyed.
Thus, Strieber reserved a fifteen-year, one-half non-participating royalty interest (the NPRI), which could be extended "as long thereafter as there is production in paying or commercial quantities" under an oil and gas lease. The deed was dated December 27, 1996. Lorene Koopmann later executed a gift mineral deed conveying an undivided two-thirds of her mineral interest to her two children (together, the Koopmanns).
In 2007, Lorene Koopmann entered a three-year lease of the tract with Hawke Enterprises. The lease provided for a three-year primary term ending October 2010, and it gave Hawke the option to extend the primary term an additional two years in exchange for a $24,000 payment. Hawke later assigned the lease to Burlington Resources Oil & Gas Company, L.P.
As of August 2011, there still had been no production from the Koopmanns' land and only four months remained on the initial fifteen-year period of Strieber's reserved NPRI. Strieber conveyed to Burlington a 60% interest in her NPRI, presumably as an incentive to motivate Burlington to begin drilling.
Thereafter, Burlington identified a well site on Lackey Unit A, and on December 7, 2011, Burlington sent a letter to the Koopmanns informing them that a well was anticipated to begin producing oil and gas in the first quarter of 2012. The letter noted that the reservation's savings clause in Strieber's deed required payment of shut-in royalties in order to maintain the NPRI interests, and Burlington included "shut-in royalty payments," explaining that these payments were made "to ensure that all parties' interest, if any, in the well is maintained."
The parties do not dispute that there was no well actually producing on December *86427, 2011, but the parties offered conflicting summary judgment evidence as to whether there was a well capable of producing in paying or commercial quantities as of that date. Actual production was not accomplished on Lackey Unit A until February 2012, about two months after the end of the NPRI's initial fifteen-year term. On February 6, Burlington notified the Koopmanns that because there was a dispute over the royalty interests in Lackey Unit A, Burlington would be "suspending payments to anyone" until the matter was resolved. A few days later, the Koopmanns returned the "shut-in royalty payments" they had received from Burlington.
The Koopmanns sought declaratory judgment against Burlington and Strieber to construe the deed, claiming that they were the sole owners of the NPRI as of December 27, 2011. They also asserted non-declaratory claims against Burlington for breach of contract, unjust enrichment (money had and received), conversion, negligence, and negligence per se.
Burlington filed a motion to dismiss the non-declaratory claims under Texas Rule of Civil Procedure 91a, asserting that the Koopmanns' claims were barred by section 91.402(b) of the Texas Natural Resources Code, which provides lessees the right to suspend royalty payments when there is a title dispute. See generally TEX. R. CIV. P. 91a ; TEX. NAT. RES. CODE § 91.402(b). In the same motion, Burlington argued that the Koopmanns' negligence and negligence per se claims were barred by the common law economic-loss rule. The trial court denied this motion and awarded attorney's fees to the Koopmanns under the loser-pays provision of Rule 91a. See generally TEX. R. CIV. P. 91a.7 (providing that a court must award the "prevailing party" on the motion to dismiss all costs and reasonable and necessary attorney's fees). Burlington later filed a motion for summary judgment on the same claims asserting similar arguments. The trial court granted summary judgment and ordered that the Koopmanns take nothing as to those claims.
As to the declaratory action, the parties filed competing motions for summary judgment. The trial court granted the Koopmanns' motion, concluding: (1) on December 27, 2011, there was no well that was actually producing in paying or commercial quantities on Lackey Unit A; (2) accordingly, Burlington's and Strieber's NPRI expired at that time; and (3) the Koopmanns, as sole owners of the royalty interest, were due royalty payments under their lease with Burlington.
Both parties appealed. Burlington appealed the declaratory judgment, claiming that Strieber's reservation created a future interest in the Koopmanns that was void under the rule against perpetuities (the Rule) and that Burlington's interest was independently maintained because its activities satisfied the deed's savings clause. Burlington also asserted that the trial court's award of attorney's fees to the Koopmanns under Rule 91a was improper. The Koopmanns appealed the trial court's summary judgment on all of its non-declaratory claims, arguing that section 91.402(b) of the Natural Resources Code does not bar those claims.
The court of appeals affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded for further proceedings.
Burlington asserts four points on appeal to this Court: (1) the court of appeals erred in applying the two-grant theory and holding that the Koopmanns' future interest in the NPRI was not violated; (2) even if the Rule did not bar the Koopmanns' claims, the savings clause is not ambiguous and Burlington's activities maintained its interest in the NPRI after the initial fifteen-year period; (3) the court of appeals erred in reinstating the Koopmanns' breach-of-contract claim; and (4) the court of appeals misapplied Texas Rule of Civil Procedure 91a's loser-pays provision. We address each issue in turn.
II. Analysis
We review the trial court's summary judgment de novo. Provident Life & Accidental Ins. Co. v. Knott ,
To grant summary judgment declaring that the Koopmanns own the NPRI, the trial court had to find both that: (1) the Rule did not apply to invalidate the Koopmanns' interest in the NPRI, and (2) the reservation's savings clause did not apply to preserve Strieber's interest in the NPRI. The court of appeals agreed with the trial court's first finding, but it held that the savings clause was ambiguous and reversed and remanded for a jury to determine the proper interpretation. For the reasons stated below, we agree.
A. Strieber's Reservation and the Rule Against Perpetuities
As explained above, Strieber's deed conveyed to the Koopmanns fee-simple title to the tract, and reserved a fifteen-year, one-half NPRI, which could be extended "as long thereafter as there is production in paying or commercial quantities"
*866under an oil and gas lease. In the event there was no production after the fifteen-year term, the reservation included a savings clause. Thus, if on December 27, 2011, there was no production in paying quantities and the savings clause was not satisfied, the NPRI would transfer to the Koopmanns.
Burlington asserts that the Koopmanns' future interest in the NPRI violates the Rule and is therefore void. According to Burlington, the "as long thereafter" language Strieber used in her reservation created in the Koopmanns a springing executory interest, which is not certain to vest, if at all, within the period required by the Rule: twenty-one years after the death of some life or lives in being at the time of the conveyance. See BP Am. Prod. Co. v. Laddex, Ltd. ,
The Koopmanns characterize their future interest created by Strieber's deed as a "vested possibility of reverter," which vested at its creation for purposes of the Rule, and thus, is valid. There is a decided difference, according to the Koopmanns, between vesting in interest and vesting in possession, and if two constructions are possible, Texas courts favor the construction that saves the validity of an instrument. See Laddex ,
The Texas Constitution prohibits perpetuities: "Perpetuities ... are contrary to the genius of free government, and shall never be allowed." TEX. CONST. art. I § 26. The constitution does not define "perpetuities." The interpretative commentary states both that "perpetuity" as applied to property means an "everlasting property interest[ ]" and that "[f]or purposes of this section, a perpetuity is a restraint or restriction of the power of *867alienation beyond [the period required by the Rule], and as such would not be constitutionally allowed." TEX. CONST. art. I § 26, interp. commentary (Vernon 2007); see also Perpetuity , Black's Law Dictionary (10th ed. 2014) (including among the term's multiple definitions both "[a]n inalienable interest" and "[a]n interest that does not take effect or vest within the period prescribed by law"). To enforce this prohibition, we have adopted the common law version of the Rule to govern conveyances of real property, which provides that "no interest is valid unless it must vest, if at all, within twenty-one years after the death of some life or lives in being at the time of the conveyance."
The word "vest" in regards to the Rule refers to an immediate, fixed right of present or future enjoyment of the interest. Vest , BLACK'S LAW DICTIONARY (10th ed. 2014); see also Peveto ,
*868Under the common law Rule, with respect to the NPRI, the deed created in Strieber a fee simple subject to executory limitation and in the Koopmanns an executory interest. The Koopmanns received a future interest created in someone other than the grantor that would become possessory by the divesting of Strieber's prior freehold estate, i.e., an executory interest. See Peveto ,
When an interest violates the Rule because it is uncertain to vest, if at all, within the required time period, we have traditionally held that those provisions of the conveying instrument creating the interest are void. E.g. , Peveto ,
We have recognized the purpose of the Rule as preventing landowners from using remote contingencies to preclude alienability of land for generations. Kettler ,
We believe that defeasible term interests serve a useful social purpose, whether reserved or granted. The term interest, as compared with a perpetual interest, tends to remove title complications when the land is no longer productive of oil or gas. This simplification of title promotes alienability of land, which is one purpose served by the Rule [A]gainst Perpetuities. We believe, therefore, that the courts should simply exempt interests following granted or reserved defeasible term interests from the Rule, on the straight-forward basis that they serve social and commercial convenience and do not offend the policy of the Rule Against Perpetuities.
*870At the time it was created, the Koopmanns' interest in the NPRI shared many characteristics with a vested remainder, a future interest not subject to the Rule. See 10 POWELL ON REAL PROPERTY § 73.02[2]. Historically, future interests created in someone other than the grantor were classified as either "remainders" or "executory interests." E.g. , Nat'l Audubon Soc., Inc. v. Marshall ,
The distinction between remainders and executory interests is largely historical, see 3 POWELL ON REAL PROPERTY § 20.04[1][a], and some have advocated for abandoning the distinction altogether. See, e.g. , Jesse Dukeminier, Contingent Remainders and Executory Interests: A Requiem for the Distinction , 43 MINN. L. REV. 13, 14 (1958). The latest version of the Restatement dispenses with the historical parsing of future interests, recognizing only reversions and remainders. See RESTATEMENT (THIRD) OF PROPERTY § 25.2 cmt. e (Am. Law Inst. 2011) (noting that the principal legal consequences that historically turned on the distinction have widely been abolished); cf. El Dorado Land Co., L.P. ,
It should be pointed out that an executory interest limited on an event certain to happen is likely a much more substantial interest than one which depends upon an uncertain event. Thus ... an executory interest which is certain to vest in enjoyment at the death of a designated person is closely linked with a vested remainder. It may well be, therefore, that they should have the same legal characteristics as their related (but differently named) interests. Rules which are adopted relative to the rather tenuous interests which depend upon uncertain contingencies may be poorly conceived when applied to an interest which bears *871the same name but is in fact of greater substance.
1 THE LAW OF FUTURE INTERESTS § 223. Powell reaches a similar conclusion:
Executory interests can either operate in defeasance of a prior vested fee or can be limited to take effect on a future event uncertain of occurrence. Both types of executory interest violate the common-law rule against perpetuities, when the event on which the executory interest is limited to arise or to shift is not certain to occur within the permissible period. Executory interests limited on an event certain to occur, however, require different consideration. Thus, a grant "to A twenty-five years from date" involves no contingency except the passage of time. Such an executory interest is not usefully regarded as "subject to a condition precedent." It is, therefore, not subject to the common-law rule against perpetuities. It causes no inconvenient fettering of alienability because of the existence of actuarial techniques for valuing both the preceding and the future interest.
10 POWELL ON REAL PROPERTY § 73.02[3].
The Koopmanns' interest in the NPRI could be deemed "vested" when it was created if that term is taken to mean that the holder of the interest was at all times ascertainable and the preceding estate was certain to terminate. Executory interests have historically been subject to invalidation by the Rule when they were limited upon conditions precedent not certain occur, if ever, and followed a prior estate not certain to end. E.g. , 3 POWELL ON REAL PROPERTY § 20.05. But here, Strieber's fee simple interest in the NPRI was certain to end, either because production in paying or commercial quantities ceased, see Clifton v. Koontz ,
If instead of by reservation the Koopmanns had conveyed the NPRI interest to Strieber for fifteen years and as long thereafter as there is production in paying or commercial quantities, then the Koopmanns' interest would be classified as a possibility of reverter, which-though it is also a contingent future interest-would *872be presently vested and valid under the Rule. See Laddex ,
The court of appeals applied a legal fiction to hold that the Koopmanns' interest does not violate the Rule.
We see several problems with the two-grant theory. First, it ignores the traditional classifications of future interests-primarily, that a possibility of reverter cannot be held by anyone other than the grantor. See, e.g. , El Dorado Land Co., L.P. ,
In Peveto , we held that a similar royalty conveyance violated the Rule.
*873
For the reasons stated above, it is appropriate to hold that in this oil and gas context, where a defeasible term interest is created by reservation, leaving an executory interest that is certain to vest in an ascertainable grantee, the Rule does not invalidate the grantee's future interest. As noted above, the Texas Constitution does not define "perpetuities," and without a statute on the subject, the common law on the matter is the law of the state. Trustees of Casa View Assembly of God Church v. Williams ,
B. The Savings Clause
Because we hold in the first part of this opinion that the Rule does not invalidate any part of Strieber's reservation, we must determine who held the interest in the NPRI at the expiration of the fifteen-year period. It is undisputed that no well was actually producing on December 27, 2011, meaning that Strieber's interest in the NPRI continued beyond that date only if the savings clause was satisfied.
The savings clause contains three requirements: (1) there is a lease on the premises; (2) the lease is maintained in force and effect by payment of "shut-in royalties or any other similar payments made ... in lieu of actual production"; and (3) there is a well "capable of producing oil, gas, or other minerals in paying or commercial quantities," but which is shut in "for lack of market or any other reason." It is undisputed that Burlington held *874a lease on the tract on December 27, 2011, but the parties disagree as to whether the second or third requirements were met. The trial court, in finding that Burlington's and Strieber's NPRI expired on December 27, impliedly found that the savings-clause requirements were not satisfied. The court of appeals held that a fact issue existed concerning ownership of the NPRI because the savings-clause language regarding "other similar payments" is ambiguous as a matter of law, and it remanded the case to the trial court for a jury to decide its meaning.
We may construe a deed as a matter of law only if it is unambiguous. J. Hiram Moore, Ltd. v. Greer ,
A delay rental is a periodic payment made by an oil-and-gas lessee to postpone exploration during the primary lease term. Delay Rental , BLACK'S LAW DICTIONARY (10th ed. 2014); Amber Oil & Gas Co. v. Bratton ,
Burlington concedes that a fact issue exists as to whether the well on Lackey Unit A was capable of producing on December 27, 2011, the end of the fifteen-year period. Both Burlington and Strieber assert, however, that the $24,000 payment Burlington made to the Koopmanns to extend the primary term of its lease on the tract is "similar" to a shut-in royalty and thus meets the third savings-clause requirement. Burlington argues the payment functioned similarly to a shut-in royalty because both would keep alive an existing lease in lieu of actual production. Further, because this was a "paid-up" lease, Burlington argues the $24,000 was essentially prepayment of delay rentals for two years and that delay rentals are widely recognized to be a type of payment similar to shut-in royalties. Strieber and the Koopmanns had no way of knowing whether a future lease would provide for rentals on a delayed basis or paid up front, and thus provided a savings clause keyed to payments made by a lessee during that time.
The Koopmanns, on the other hand, argue that the bonus payments cannot be considered "similar" to shut-in royalties because the two payments are tied to different parts of an oil and gas lease. Whereas a bonus payment is made to extend the primary term of a paid-up lease, the Koopmanns assert, a shut-in royalty is a payment made as a substitute for actual production. The Koopmanns offer examples of payments "similar" to shut-in royalties other than delay rentals or extension payments, arguing that any payment made during the secondary term in lieu of production would satisfy the requirement. Finally, when Burlington made the $24,000 payment, the Koopmanns argue, drilling operations had not even begun, and there was no well in existence necessitating any payments.
As the court of appeals noted, there are both similarities and differences between shut-in royalties, delay rentals, and paid-up leases, depending on the criteria used to compare them.
C. The Texas Natural Resources Code
Burlington next challenges the court of appeals' holding that section 91.402(b) of the Natural Resources Code did not bar the Koopmanns' breach-of-contract claim, which arose from Burlington's suspension of royalty payments. See
The Koopmanns' breach-of-contract claim is based on the royalty clause in their lease with Burlington, which sets the amounts due on oil, gas, and all other minerals. The lease requires that the payments be made within sixty days after the end of the month in which production occurred-an earlier payment than required under section 91.402-and requires interest on late payments. The Koopmanns did not assert a claim regarding withheld royalty payments under section 91.404, but they did seek prejudgment interest under section 91.403. See TEX. NAT. RES. CODE § 91.403 (providing for interest on late royalty payments).
Burlington does not argue that it did not breach the lease agreement. It argues instead that section 91.402"modified the common law rules that otherwise apply to oil and gas payments under leases, contracts, or deeds." The statute covers "payees" who are "legally entitled to payment" and "payors" who "undertake to distribute oil and gas proceeds"-both of which arise by virtue of contract-and thus, Burlington argues, the statute was intended to apply when contractual and leasehold rights are at issue. See
The Koopmanns do not fully respond to Burlington's arguments. They instead merely assert that section 91.402(b) is not intended to be a shield to liability, but serves only to extinguish prejudgment interest, citing Concord Oil Co. v. Pennzoil Exp. & Prod. Co. ,
This Court has instructed that "[a]brogating common-law claims 'is disfavored and requires a clear repugnance between the common law and statutory causes of action.' " Cash Am. Int'l, Inc. v. Bennett ,
This Court has also upheld "Texas's strong public policy favoring freedom of contract." Phila. Indemnity Ins. Co. v. White ,
Natural Resources Code section 91.402 reads in pertinent part:
(a) The proceeds derived from the sale of oil or gas production from an oil or gas well ... must be paid to each payee by payor on or before 120 days after the end of the month of first sale of production from the well....
(b) Payments may be withheld without interest beyond the time limits set out in Subsection (a) of this section when there is:
(1) a dispute concerning title that would affect distribution of payments;
....
TEX. NAT. RES. CODE § 91.402(a) - (b). Section 91.404(c) reads:
(c) A payee has a cause of action for nonpayment of oil or gas proceeds or interest on those proceeds as required in Section 91.402 or 91.403 of this code in any court of competent jurisdiction in the county in which the oil or gas well is located.
Current law is totally vague as to deadlines for royalty payments. Most leases don't specify deadlines either, and there is no law specifically protecting Texas royalty owners from deliberate delay of their royalty checks. Many delays stem from legitimate questions about the validity of titles or the whereabouts of royalty owners. But some oil operators have raised title questions just to put off payments.
House Research Organization Bill Analysis, Tex. H.B. 1775, 68th Leg. R.S. (1983). We have recognized that the statute was "designed to protect the interest of royalty owners." Concord Oil Co. ,
Burlington is correct that the statute imposes specific obligations on lessors and lessees: payment deadlines, payment conditions, interest rates, and excusal for non-payment when there is a title dispute. See TEX. NAT. RES. CODE § 91.402. Thus, it is possible that this "unique set of standards and procedures," see Waffle House, Inc. ,
Section 91.404(c) provides a cause of action for a payee if the payor does not comply with the requirements set out in section 91.402, but this does not mean that the statute abrogates a common law claim for breach of contract when there is a controlling lease between the parties. See White ,
D. Burlington's Motion to Dismiss
The final issue in this case involves Burlington's motion to dismiss the Koopmanns' non-declaratory claims pursuant to Texas Rule of Civil Procedure 91a. See TEX. R. CIV. P. 91a. The trial court denied the motion to dismiss, but it later granted Burlington's motion for summary judgment on those claims. In its final judgment, the trial court awarded $26,190.00 in attorney's fees to the Koopmanns under the loser-pays provision of Rule 91a. See TEX. R. CIV. P. 91a.7. The Koopmanns challenged the summary judgment on appeal. The court of appeals affirmed as to the unjust enrichment (money had and received) and negligence claims, but as discussed above, reversed on the breach of contract claim.
Burlington now asks this Court to hold that the trial court erred in denying Burlington's motion to dismiss, even though the trial court ultimately granted Burlington summary judgment on those claims. Burlington argues that because it made the same arguments against those claims in its motion to dismiss as it did in its later, successful summary judgment motion, the trial court erred in not dismissing the claims earlier. Therefore, Burlington asserts, it was error for the trial court to grant the Koopmanns attorney's fees under Rule 91a because Burlington was the "prevailing party" as to those claims. The Koopmanns respond that Burlington's motion to dismiss was filed late as to all but the negligence claims, see TEX. R. CIV. P. 91a.3 (requiring that a motion to dismiss be filed within sixty days after the first pleading containing the challenged cause of action), and the trial court did not err in its denial because those claims were not "frivolous." Burlington disagrees, asserting that its motion was timely because the Koopmanns' first attempt at alleging these claims was unintelligible. In the alternative, Burlington asserts that the court of appeals should have "at a minimum ... reverse[d] the fee award against [Burlington] and [ ] remand[ed] the case for an allocation of fees and costs among the prevailing parties" as to the Koopmanns' negligence claims.
*880Rule 91a provides that "a party may move to dismiss a cause of action on the grounds that it has no basis in law or fact." TEX. R. CIV. P. 91a.1. It also requires that, except in actions involving the government, "the court must award the prevailing party on the motion all costs and reasonable and necessary attorney fees incurred with respect to the challenged cause of action in the trial court." TEX. R. CIV. P. 91a.7. Here, the trial court denied Burlington's Rule 91a motion but later rendered summary judgment on the Koopmanns' non-declaratory claims. Apparently, Burlington is not satisfied, because it asks us to hold that the trial court erred in denying its motion to dismiss. We decline to do so.
First, Burlington's argument that it is the "prevailing party" under Rule 91a because it later won on summary judgment as to these claims is unpersuasive. Rule 91a provides that a party who files a motion to dismiss is due attorney's fees when it prevails "on the motion"-not on a later summary judgment motion asserting there is no genuine issue as to any material fact. See TEX. R. CIV. P. 91a.7; TEX. R. CIV. P. 166a. Further, it is irrelevant that the arguments Burlington made in its motion for summary judgment were the same as those it asserted in its motion to dismiss because a motion to dismiss is decided on the plaintiff's pleadings. TEX. R. CIV. P. 91a.6 (except in determining attorney's fees, "the court may not consider evidence in ruling on the motion and must decide the motion based solely on the pleading of the cause of action, together with any pleading exhibits permitted by Rule 59"); City of Dall. v. Sanchez ,
We note that Burlington could have challenged the trial court's denial of its motion to dismiss at the time it was denied. See, e.g. , In re Essex Ins. Co. ,
III. Conclusion
For the reasons set out above, we hold that the rule against perpetuities does not invalidate the Koopmanns' future interest in the NPRI created by Strieber's deed. We affirm that part of the court of appeals' judgment but on different grounds. However, we hold that the reservation's savings clause is ambiguous and affirm the court of appeals' remand on this issue. In *881addition, we hold that section 91.402 of the Natural Resources Code does not preclude a lessor's common law claim for breach of contract, and we affirm this part of the court of appeals' judgment. Finally, we decline to hold that Burlington is the prevailing party as to its motion to dismiss, and thus, we affirm the court of appeals' judgment as to attorney's fees pursuant to Texas Rule of Civil Procedure 91a.
Justice Blacklock did not participate in the decision.
Burlington is a subsidiary of ConocoPhillips Company, the other petitioner in this case. We refer to the two together as "Burlington."
The claims against Burlington were for breach of contract, unjust enrichment (money had and received), conversion, negligence, and negligence per se. The claims against ConocoPhillips were for conversion, tortious interference with contract, negligence, negligence per se, and imputed gross negligence and malice.
Somewhat confusingly, Strieber asks us to "reform the deed and find that the Strieber NPRI was void at its inception." She goes on to argue that there is "no expiration date contingent on continued production associated with the term of the NPRI, and there is no need to apply the savings clause." We presume, based on the latter excerpt, that Strieber asserts, as does Burlington, that the Koopmanns' future interest as created by the Strieber reservation was void at its inception; otherwise, Strieber's first statement would appear to be asking us to hold that she never reserved any interest in the NPRI.
Section 112.036 of Texas's Property Code provides that the common law version of the Rule applies to non-charitable trusts. See Tex. Prop. Code § 112.036. The Legislature has not enacted laws requiring that future interests arising from conveyances of real property vest at a certain time, however, and thus that determination has remained with this Court.
See also 28 Am. Jur. 2d Estates § 35 (2011) ("While a fee simple determinable is created by the grant of the fee simple determinable to the grantee, thereby reserving the possibility of reverter to the grantor, where an attempt is made to reverse the positions of the grantor and grantee by excepting a determinable fee from the grant, the grantor is held to take a determinable fee, but the grantee takes a future interest in the nature of a springing use, rather than a possibility of reverter, which future interest may, unlike a possibility of reverter, be subject to the rule against perpetuities.").
We note that, in theory, production of an otherwise capable well could be delayed indefinitely if a producer maintains its lease under the terms of a savings clause. However, in Texas a producer makes an implied covenant to develop a lease by drilling an initial well and reasonably develop after production has been obtained, and whether this duty is satisfied will be measured under the reasonably prudent operator standard. See generally Amoco Prod. Co. v. Alexander ,
Though the court of appeals noted that the parties' respective experts reached different conclusions as to whether there was a well actually capable of producing in paying quantities on December 27, 2011, and that this evidence created a fact issue left for the jury, it did not reverse the trial court's judgment on those grounds.
The Koopmanns' negligence per se claim asserted that Burlington was negligent per se "in violating Section 91.402" by its failure to timely pay royalties. As noted above, it was dismissed, and the Koopmanns have not appealed that dismissal to this Court.
The court of appeals did not address the Koopmanns' tortious interference claim, but as the Koopmanns have not challenged this omission to this Court, we do not address it here.
The court of appeals rejected Burlington's argument for apportioning attorney's fees under Rule 91a on a claim-by-claim basis, reasoning that the Koopmanns "are still the 'prevailing party' with respect to the majority of the claims."
