Lead Opinion
OPINION
Opinion by
In this аppeal, we must construe a 1950 warranty deed to determine the nature and size of the royalty interest retained by the grantors. The trial court rendered summary judgment in favor of the Pro-chaskas, who are the appellees and heirs of the grantors, and ruled they own a “floating” one-half royalty interest. The Reg-munds, who are the appellants and heirs of the grantees, contend the trial court misconstrued the warranty deed and ask us to reverse and render judgment that the Pro-chaskas are entitled to a “fixed” one-sixteenth royalty interest. We affirm.
Background
The Warranty Deed
In 1950, George and Elsie Ann Prochas-ka conveyed a tract of land in Karnes County, Texas, to John and Frances Reg-mund. The granting clause conveyed “all that certain tract or parcel of land.” But the Prochaskas reserved
SAVE AND EXCEPT, however, there is reserved unto George Prochaska, his heirs and assigns, one-half (1/2) of the one-eighth (1/8) royalty to be provided in any and all leases for oil, gas and other minerals now upon or hereafter given on said land, or any part thereof, same being equal to one-sixteenth (l/16th) of all oil, gas and other minerals of any nature, free and clear of all costs of production, except taxes;
* * *2
AND PROVIDED this reservation is burdened with paying the two outstanding mineral royalty reservations, each of One-Fourth (1/4) of one-eighth (1/8) royalty, one of which reservations is described in the deed from John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Company to E.S. Joslin, now of record in Vol. 141, page 161, Deed Records of Karnes County, Texas, and the other reservation is described in the deed from E.S. Joslin, et ux to A.W. Powell, Jr., et al now of record in Vol. 165, page 80 of the Deed Records of Karnes County, Texas; And this reservation shall only be effective tothe extent that one or both of said outstanding reservations become terminated.
It being the intent of the parties hereto that John W. Regmund and wife, Frances E. Regmund, as of the effective date hereof, shall be vested with and entitled to one-half (1/2) of the usual one-eighth (1/8) royalty in and to all oil, gas and other minerals in on and/or under the property herein conveyed, and the reservation herein above recited in favor of the grantor herein, shall relate to and cover only the one-half (1/2) of one-eighth (1/8) royalty interest previously reserved in favor of John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Company and Ennis Joslin, if, as and when said interest in favor of said parties terminate.
The “save and except” clause excludes a royalty interest from passing under the deed. The “provided” clause identifies previously reserved “mineral royalty” interests, with which the Prochaskas’ royalty interest is “burdened.” The deeds creating those interests were offered as summary judgment evidence. The “intent” clause clarifies the relationship between the Prochaskas’ reserved interest, the Regmunds’ received interest, and the previously reserved interests identified in the “provided” clause.
The Present Controversy
The original mineral leases providing a one-eighth landowner’s royalty in effect at the time of the 1950 conveyance have expired. The Regmunds have executed new leases that provide a one-fifth landowner’s royalty, and they filed the underlying lawsuit seeking a declaratory judgment that the Prochaskas reserved a “fixed” one-sixteenth royalty interest from the 1950 deed. According to the Regmunds, the Prochaskas’ allegedly fixed royalty interest limits them to receiving one-sixteenth of production, regardless of the landowner’s royalty set by the newly executed mineral leases. The fixed one-sixteenth royalty would be deducted from the Regmunds’ one-fifth landowner’s royalty. Under the Regmunds’ interpretation, the Prochaskas would receive one-sixteenth of production and the Regmunds would keep the remaining eleven-eightieths of production from the landowner’s royalty (1/5 - 1/16 = 11/80).
The Prochaskas counterclaimed for declaratory relief, contending they were entitled to a “floating” one-half royalty interest. Under their interpretation, they should receive one-half of whatever royalty the Regmunds have secured on the conveyed lands, now and in the future. Accordingly, the Prochaskas contend they should currently receive one-tenth of production, which is one-half of the landowner’s royalty, and the Regmunds would take the remaining one-tenth of production (1/5 x 1/2 = 1/10).
The trial court held a hearing on the parties’ competing motions for summary judgment. The court rendered judgment for the Prochaskas, construing the deed to reserve a floating one-half royalty interest in the current, and any future, mineral leases.
Standard of Review
We review a trial court’s ruling on motions for summary judgment de novo. Valence Operating Co. v. Dorsett,
Rules of Construction
The parties contend the deed is unambiguous, although they offer competing constructions of the reserved royalty interest. The construction of an unambiguous deed is a question of law for the court to decide de novo. Luckel v. White,
We harmonize all parts of the deed, understanding that the parties to an instrument intend every clause to have some effect and in some measure to evidence their agreement. Luckel,
Reservations and Exceptions
“[A] warranty deed will pass all of the estate owned by the grantor at the time of the conveyance unless there are reservations or exceptions which reduce the estate conveyed.” Cockrell,
Mineral Estates & Royalty Interests
Mineral Estates & Leases Generally
Landowners generally own the right to exploit the minerals under their land, or “the mineral estate.” See Coastal Oil & Gas Corp. v. Garza Energy Trust,
The owner of a present or future interest in the mineral estate may convey or reserve his mineral interest. Id. The grantor does not need to part with all the attributes of the mineral estate; “individual [attributes] can be held back, or reserved in the grantor.” French,
Royalty Interests
A royalty interest is defined under well-established oil and gas law as the right to receive a share of gross production of the minerals produced under a mineral lease, free of the costs of production. Delta Drilling Co. v. Simmons,
A mineral-interest owner may create, by conveyance, reservation, or exception, a royalty interest out of either the total production achieved under a lease or from the landowner’s royalty. See id. at 463-64. Generally, such a diminished royalty interest is termed a “nonparticipating” royalty interest because the holder only has the right to a share of production. Hamilton v. Morris Res., Ltd.,
In the 1920s and 1930s, the landowner’s royalty became stаndardized at one-eighth of production. Concord Oil,
How Is the Nature аnd Size of a Royalty Interest Determined?
There are two kinds of nonparticipating royalty interests. See Luckel,
Each of the two types of nonparticipating royalty interests may be created by a variety of language. Compare 2 Williams AND Meyers, Oil & Gas Law § 327.1, at 81-82 (six examples of language creating fixed royalty interests), with id. § 327.2, at 83-84 (six examples of language creating floating royalty interests). Problems of construction arise when deeds create royalty interests described as “a fraction of one-eighth royalty” or “a fraction of the usual one-eighth royalty.” Depending on the context of the description, Texas courts have construed the same language in different deeds in different ways. Compare Pickens v. Hope,
When a deed contains a reservation of “a fraction of one-eighth,” “a fraction of one-eighth royalty,” “a fraction of the one-eighth royalty,” or “a fraction of the usual one-eighth royalty,” a party may argue that “one-eighth” should be understood as a stand-in for the landowner’s royalty and therefore convey or reserve unto them a floating royalty interest. E.g., Hudspeth v. Berry, No. 2-09-225-CV,
Discussion
The “save and except” clause
The “save and except” clause of the 1950 deed describes the Prochaskas’ reserved royalty interest in two different ways. The first phrase reserves “one-half
The parties’ major dispute is over what kind of royalty interest is described by the first phrase of the “save and except” clause. The Regmunds argue that the language “one-half (1/2) of the one-eighth (1/8) royalty” should be construed as reserving a fixed royalty interest. The Pro-chaskas counter that a floating interest was created because they reserved one-half of “the one-eighth (1/8) royalty to be provided in any and all leases ... now upon or hereafter given on said land.”
We agree with the Prochaskas that “one-eighth royalty” must be read with the surrounding descriptive language. “One-eighth royalty” is modified by “the ... to be provided in any and all leases for oil, gas and other minerals now upon or hereafter given on said land, or any part thereof.” The use of the word “the” denotes that “the one-eighth royalty” is a distinct or particular royalty. See 2 Shorter Oxford English Dictionary 3228, at 2 (6th ed. 2007) (defining “the” as “[djesignating one or more persons or things particularized by ... a phrfase] introduced by a preposition or inflinitive] ... ”); Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary 1221, at 2 b(l) (10th ed. 1999) (“The” is “used as a function word before a noun to limit its application to that specified by a succeeding element in the sentence.”). The succeeding phrase, “to be provided in any and all leases for oil, gas and other minerals now upon or hereafter given on said land, or any part thereof,” further distinguishes and particularizes “the one-eighth royalty.” See 2 Shorter Oxford English Dictionary 3228, At 2; Merriam-Webster’S Collegiate Dictionary 1221, at 2 b(l).
Setting aside “one-eighth” for a moment, we note that the reservation of “one-half of the royalty to be provided in any and all leases” reserves a floating royalty. The objective intent of that language would be to reserve a portion of the landowner’s royalty — i.e., the royalty provided in leases, not an absolute fraction of production. See Luckel,
Of course, we may not simply disregard the modifier “one-eighth.” We decline, however, to construe “one-eighth” in the description of the landowner’s royalty as a limitation of the Prochaskas’ interest to a fixed royalty. See id. (holding reservation of “an undivided one-eighth (1/8) of the usual one-eighth (1/8) royalties provided for in any future oil, gas and/or mineral leases” described a floating one-eighth royalty); Sundance Minerals,
The Regmunds urge this court to isolate the language “one-half (1/2) of the one-eighth (1/8) royalty” from the rest of the phrase and thereby to construe the Pro-chaskas’ reservation as a fixed 1/16 royalty interest, directing us to cases construing variations of a “fraction of one-eighth royalty” as fixed interests. See Hudspeth,
But context matters. The language of those deeds is not the language of the deed before us, and the Regmunds’ construction asks us to ignore the full context of the reservation described as “one half (1/2) of the one-eighth (1/8) royalty to be provided in any and all leases for oil, gas and other minerals now upon or hereafter given” (emphasis added). As we have explained, that language objectively expresses the parties’ intent to reserve one-half of the royalty to be provided in current and fu
Having determined that the first phrase of the “save and except” clause describes a floating royalty interest, we must attempt to harmonize it with the second, describing the reserved interest as “same being equal to one-sixteenth (l/16th) of all oil, gas and other minerals of any nature, free and clear of all costs of production, except taxes.” This language, standing alone, would reserve a fixed royalty interest. See Watkins,
The “intent” clause
The final clause, or the “intent” clause, confirms that the parties were proceeding under the assumption that the
Instead, the context of the “intent” clause and the preceding “provided” clause shows that the Regmunds were immediately entitled to their royalty interest, as opposed to the Prochaskas’ interest, which would not be effective until prior “outstanding mineral royalty” interests terminated. The “provided” clause describes “this reservation” — the Prochaskas’ royalty interest — as “burdened with paying the two outstanding mineral royalty reservations.” The phrase “mineral royalty reservation” is not a legal term of art, although the reservations are described as being “each of One-fourth of one-eighth (1/8) royalty.” The clause goes on to say “this reservation” — the Prochaskas’ royalty interest — is only “effective to the extent that one or both of said outstanding reservations become terminated.” In a similar vein, the “intent” clause states that “the reservation herein above recited in favor of the grantor herein” — the Prochaskas’ royalty interest — “shall relate to and cover only the one-half (1/2) of one-eighth (1/8) royalty interest previously reserved in favor of John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Company and Ennis Joslin, if, as and when said interest in favor of said parties terminate.” Given thаt the Prochaskas’ reservation is ineffective until the prior reservations terminate, we conclude the parties intended the Prochaskas’ royalty interest to be a future interest, not a present or immediately effective one. See Bagby,
The “provided” clause
The language in the “provided” clause describing the outstanding mineral royalty reservations is potentially inconsistent with the construction that the Pro-chaskas reserved a floating royalty interest. The “provided” clause describes the “outstanding mineral royalty reservations” as “each of One-fourth of one-eighth (1/8) royalty” and the “intent clause” describes them as “the one-half (1/2) of one-eighth (1/8) royalty interest previously reserved.” If by “outstanding mineral royalty reservations” the parties meant “royalty interests,” these would be fixed royalty interests, and it would be difficult to conclude the Prochaskas’ reservation of those interests could transform them into floating interests.
However, the Prochaska-Regmund deed specifically refers to and identifies the deeds creating the interests with which the
The prior deeds clarify that each “outstanding mineral royalty reservation” contains a determinable one-quarter floating royalty interest. The earlier deeds state that the grantors reserved “an undivided one-fourth (1/4) interest in and to all minerals of every character and kind.” The deeds then stripped those mineral interests of the rights to receive bonuses and delay rentals, and the grantors were not required to join in or ratify mineral leases
Other arguments
The Regmunds argue that the absence of certain provisions in the deed precludes us from construing it as reserving a floating royalty interest. They assert that the absence of a “share and share alike” phrase in the deed precludes construing it as reserving a floating royalty interest, claiming that such language was a “factor in [this] court’s judgment” in Hausser. We do not find any analysis or discussion of the phrase “share and share alike” in that opinion. The Regmunds also point to the absence of a minimum royalty provision. Notwithstanding our recognition that such a provision is probative of a floating royalty interest, see Hausser,
As a final matter, the Reg-munds oppose any construction of the deed that would hold that the Prochaskas reserved or excepted the possibilities of reverter to the floating royalty interests contained within the outstanding reservations.
The appellants in Monroe held property as tenants-in-common with the appellees’ predecessor-in-interest. Id. During the period of the tenancy, the appellants conveyed a determinable royalty interest to their son, and prior to the expiration of that interest, the appellants and appellees partitioned their land. Id. In the “subject to” clause listing existing mineral interests, the partition deed listed the son’s interest as a “l/64th non-participating for a term of 10 years from August 29, 1953, and as long thereafter as oil, gas or other minerals are produced therefrom with reversion to [appellants] equally upon the expiration of said term.” Id. It did not otherwise mention the interest. Id. The court refused to imply that the “subject to” clause created a reservation. Id. It held that half of the outstanding possibility of reverter passed to the appellees under the partition deed because the mere mention of the outstanding future interest in the “subject to” clause did not indicate by clear language the intent to exclude any part of that interest from passing under the deed. Id. at 133-34.
The 1950 deed bears no resemblance to the partition deed in Monroe. The deed’s reservation begins “SAVE AND EXCEPT, however, there is reserved unto George Prochaska, his heirs and assigns .... ” There is no question that the parties to the deed intended to exclude a one-half floating royalty interest from passing under the deed. Cf. Bagby,
The parties to the deed then provided a detailed description of the excluded interest, and we have construed that deed in accordance with Texas law to determine the nature of that interest. Our construction of the deed is sufficient to show there is no merit to the contention that the Prochaskas’ interest, if it was an exception, was not identified to a reasonable certainty. Compare Angelí,
Conclusion
We ascertain only one reasonable construction of the deed’s language and hold that the royalty interest reserved by the deed was a floating one-half royalty interest. In 1950, the Prochaskas conveyed the entirety of their present interest to the Regmunds, but they excluded the possibilities of reverter to two floating one-quarter royalty interests contained in outstanding reservations from passing under the deed, and reserved those interests to themselves. Upon the termination of those pri- or interests, the Prochaskas’ future interests became present possessory interests. Therefore, the Prochaskas are entitled to one-tenth of production under the current lease and to one-half of whatever landowner’s royalty may be negotiated under fu
Notes
. For ease of reference, we will refer to the Prochaskas' royalty interest as a “reservation,” although the parties differ on whether the interest was "reserved” or "excepted.” Our discussion will explain why the difference is immaterial to the resolution of this case.
. The omitted clause limits the nature of reservation to a nonparticipating royalty interest and does not aid our determination of the nature or size of the royalty reserved.
. The other four are the right to develop the mineral estate; the right to lease the mineral estate; the right to receive bonus payments; and the right to receive delay rentals. French,
. We use the more recent terms “fixed” (in place of "fractional”) and "floating” (in place of "fraction of”) when discussing the two kinds of royalty interests because they vividly describe the differing natures of the two types of royalty interests.
. The Regmunds argue that according to Hudspeth no harmonization is required because there are no conflicting fractions, and they urge us to resolve any apparent contradictions or inconsistencies in the deed by applying two secondary canons of construction: the canon construing the conveyance of the greatest estate possible and the canоn construing ambiguities against the grantor. First, to the extent that Hudspeth may suggest harmonization is only required where there are conflicting fractions, we disagree and decline to follow that reasoning. Second, we question whether the cited canons can fruitfully be applied to deciding whether a royalty interest is fixed or floating. The former is absolute, but the latter is contingent on the amount of the landowner's royalty. Regardless, we must first attempt to harmonize the four comers of the deed, and we can do so without these canons. See Luckel,
. We note the Court in Luckel criticized the court of appeals for relying on the estate-misconception theory to arbitrarily choose which provisions of the deed before it should be given effect.
. We do not consider this court’s decision in Hausser v. Cuellar to foreclose our consideration of the incorporated deeds.
We distinguish our analysis from the one Hausser disapproved. The prior deed relied on by the Neel court does not appear to have been referenced in the deed actually being construed, whereas the reservation before us does refer to and identify the deeds creating the prior interests. See Cockrell,
. It is in this context that the parties dispute whether the deed created an "exception” or "reservation.” We are unconvinced this cаse "call[s] for a discussion of the refined and subtle distinctions between a reservation and an exception in a deed, which terms are frequently used interchangeably and indiscriminately.” King,
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
Admittedly, without reference to the John Hancock/Joslin and Joslin/Powell deeds, the majority could not reach the conclusion that the 1950 deed reserved to Prochaska a floating one-half royalty interest as opposed to a fixed one-sixteenth royalty interest. Because Texas law mandates the 1950 deed be harmonized by reference only to the language within the four corners of the document, I must respectfully dissent.
Proper Interpretation of an Unambiguous Deed
I believe the majority misapplies the law pertaining to proper deed construction, resulting in an incorrect construction of the unambiguous 1950 deed.
The majority reaches its conclusion because it is based, from the outset, on an incorrect premise, i.e., that a court is permitted to look outside the four corners of an unambiguous deed to interpret the parties’ intent. The majority believes a court may look at documents outside the deed in question in order to interpret it if the other documents upon which the court relies are referenced in the deed. Majority Op. at 665. The majority includes a string cite of cases in support of this proposition. However, these cases do not apply to this case. In essence, the majority has created an exception to the long-recognized “four corners rule.” See Luckel v. White,
According to the Texas Supreme Court:
The primary duty of a court when construing [an unambiguous] deed is to ascertain the intent of the parties from all of the language in the deed by a fundamental rule of construction known as the “four corners” rule. Luckel,819 S.W.2d at 461 ; see also French v. Chevron U.S.A. Inc.,896 S.W.2d 795 , 796 (Tex.1995); Hausser,345 S.W.3d at 467 ; Garza v. Prolithic Energy Co., L.P.,195 S.W.3d 137 , 141 (Tex.App.-San Antonio 2006, pet. denied). The four corners rule is a “canon of construction” and means a court must look at the instrument in question to ascertain the intent of the parties. French,896 S.W.2d at 797 (citing Luckel,819 S.W.2d at 461 ) (emphasis added).
The majority correctly cites the four corners rule as stated in Luckel, but then essentially abrogates the rule, or creates an exception to it, by relying on doсuments other than the deed to interpret the parties’ intent. To support its decision to rely on documents outside the four corners of the 1950 deed, the majority relies on several cases, which in my opinion are inapplicable to the interpretation of an unambiguous deed because they either do not stand
The majority begins with Cockrell v. Tex. Gulf Sulphur Co.,
There are several indicators in the opinion that strongly suggest the court believed it was dealing with an ambiguous deed. First, the court relied upon the canon that “a deed can pass no greater estate than that owned by the defendant.” Id. at 676. As recognized in Stewman Ranch, Inc. v. Double M. Ranch, Ltd., such canons “do not apply when the deed is unambiguous.”
I agree that where the deed in question is ambiguous, reference to other canons of construction, including the canon that permits reference to extrinsic documents, is not precluded. However, the majority determined the 1950 deed was unambiguous, and it was therefore limited to consideration of the language in the deed itself, see Luckel,
Moreover, and importantly, the Cockrell court’s holding was very specific, stating that the phrase “subject to ” in a mineral deed serves to incorporate the “subject to” documents. Cockrell,
In the 1950 deed, the phrase “subject to” does not appear. In fact, the deed language merely states Prochaska’s reservation is “burdened with paying” certain mineral royalty reservations which are found in the John Hancock/Joslin and Jos-lin/Powell deeds. To suggest, as does the majority, that this language is comparable to the “subject to” language relied upon in Cockrell and its progeny misconstrues the bases for those holdings. Burdening an interest with a payment requirement, which is all the 1950 deed does with regard to the extrinsic deeds, is wholly different from making the entire deed “subject to” and thereby incorporating the extrinsic documents. Thus, Cockrell does not sup
The majority also relies upon a 1991 case from this court, Petty v. Winn Exploration Co., Inc.,
The other cases relied upon by the majority are also inapposite. The majority cites Johnson v. Fox for the proposition that courts are permitted to construe an instrument containing a reservation with other instruments to which the reservation refers.
The majority relies on the cases cited above, glossing over the absence of the “subject to” language in the deed at issue, simply stating, “... by specifically referencing and identifying the prior deeds, [the 1950 deed] incorporates their description of those interests into itself, like the “subject to” clause in Cockrell and the reservation in Johnson.” Majority Op. at 663. Referencing and identifying a dоcument is a far cry from incorporating it. The case law cited by the majority specifically relied on the “subject to” language in deciding it could look at the extrinsic documents — there is nothing to suggest these courts would have looked outside the four corners of the documents being interpreted but for that very specific phrase. However, without this interpretation of the case law, the majority is unable to support its decision to look outside the four corners of the 1950 deed.
The final two cases relied upon by the majority for the proposition that it is permissible to look beyond the four corners of the 1950 deed to determine the parties’ intentions are Scheller v. Groesbeck,
The phrase “chain of title” refers to documents showing successive ownership history of the property, and includes the successive conveyances commencing with the patent from the government ... down to and including the cоnveyance to the present holder.” Hahn v. Love,
Based on the foregoing, I do not believe the majority has cited any germane authority that would support its decision to consider the John Hancock/Joslin and Jos-lin/Powell deeds in determining the parties’ intent with regard to the Prochaska reservation. Additionally, the majority has rejected recent authority from this court, attempting, but failing, to distinguish it. See Hausser,
In Hausser, a majority of this court, sitting en banc, specifically held: “[W]e construe a deed and harmonize and give effect to all its provisions by ascertaining the parties’ intent from the four corners of the document.”
First, Neel does not state whether the prior deed was referenced in the deed at issue; the opinion is silent on this matter. Thus, it is a leap for the majority to simply conclude the prior deed was not referenced in the subsequent deed. Second, and most importantly, nowhere in Hausser did we state our disapproval of Neel was based on the fact that the deed at issue failed to reference or somehow incorporate the pri- or deed. Rather, our disapproval was based on the fact that the Neel court looked beyond the four corners, not on its reasons for doing so. There is absolutely no suggestion in Hausser that if the prior deed in Neel had been referenced in the deed at issue, we would have found Neel controlling.
Applying the Proper Rules of Construction to the Unambiguous 1950 Deed
As noted above, the majority’s analysis contains an important misapplication of the law. The result is the creation of an exception to the long-standing four corners rule and, relevant to the case before us, an incorrect interpretation of the 1950 deed. If the majority cannot refer to the prior deeds, the majority admittedly cannot reach the conclusion that the interest in question is a floating one-half royalty interest as opposed to a fixed one-sixteenth royalty interest.
When interpreting an unambiguous deed, “[t]he primary duty of a court is to ascertain the intent of the parties from all of the language in the deed by a fundamental rule of construction known as the ‘four corners’ rule.” Luckel,
As noted above, all parties agree, as does the majority, that the 1950 deed is unambiguous. Applying the applicable four corners rule, I would hold the reserved royalty interest in favor of Prochas-ka is, contrary to the majority’s conclusion, a fixed one-sixteenth royalty interest.
The royalty reservation language is mentioned in the following three clauses in the 1950 deed: “save and except” clause; “and provided” clause; and “intent” clause. The save and except clause states:
SAVE AND EXCEPT, however, there is reserved unto George Prochaska, his heirs and assigns, one-half (1/2) of the one-eighth (1/8) royalty to be provided in any and all leases and for oil, gas and other minerals now upоn or hereafter given on said land, or any part thereof, same being equal to one-sixteenth (V 16th) of all oil, gas and other minerals of any nature, free and clear of all costs of production except taxes;
* * *
The “and provided” clause states:
AND PROVIDED this reservation is burdened with paying the two outstanding mineral royalty reservations each of one-fourth (1/4) of one-eighth (1/8) royalty, one of which reservations is described in the deed from John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Company to E.S. Joslin, now of record in Vol. 141, page 161, Deed Records of Karnes County, Texas, and the other reservation is described in the deed from E.S. Joslin, et ux to A.W. Powell, Jr., et al. now of record in Vol. 165, page 80 of the Deed Records of Karnes County, Texas; andthis reservation shall only be effective to the extent that one or both of said outstanding reservations become terminated.
Finally, the “intent” clause states:
It being the intent of the parties hereto that John W. Regmund and wife, Frances M. Regmund, as of the effective date hereof, shall be vested with and entitled to one-half (1/2) of one-eighth (1/8) royalty in and to all oil, gas and other minerals in on and/or under the property herein conveyed, and the reservation herein above recited in favor of the grantor herein, shall relate to and cover only the one-half (1/2) of one-eighth (1/8) royalty interest previously reserved in favоr of John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Company and Ennis Joslin, if as and when said interest in favor of said parties terminate.
These clauses can be summarized as follows: (1) the “save and except” clause reserves to Prochaska, as of the date of the deed, a royalty interest of one-half (1/2) of one-eighth (l/8th), that is, a one-sixteenth (l/16th) interest, in all oil, gas, and other minerals on the property in question;
Reading these clauses together, and harmonizing them as we must, it is clear the parties intended to convey to the Reg-munds an unburdened one-half (1/2) of the usual one-eighth (l/8th) royalty interest in all oil, gas, and other minerals in the 735.85 acres in Karnes County.
It is clear from the “four corners” of the unambiguous 1950 deed that the (1/2) of (l/8th) royalty interest reserved by Pro-
The majority asserts the “one-eighth royalty” must be read with the surrounding descriptive language. I agree. However, to reach the conclusion that Prochas-ka reserved a one-half royalty interest, the majority asserts the “one-eighth royalty” in the save and except clause is modified by the “to be provided in any and all leases for oil, gas and other minerals now upon or hereafter given on said land, or any part thereof,” and therefore describes a floating interest. However, the majority ignores the rest of the clause that provides clarity and sets out the exact meaning of the entire clause, that is the “same being equal to one-sixteenth (l/16th) of all oil, gas and other minerals of any nature, free and clear of all costs of production except taxes.” The “same being equal to one-sixteenth (l/16th)” removes any doubt about the meaning: the save and except clause contains a I/16th reservation to Prochaska of the land owner’s royalty. To hold otherwise renders the “same being equal to one-sixteenth (l/16th) of all oil, gas and other minerals” meaningless, which we cannot do. See Hausser, 345 S.W.3d at 466 (referencing Luckel,
With regard to the nature of the Pro-chaska reservation, looking only within the four corners of the deed, there is no indication the parties intended the l/16th royalty interest to be a floating interest. Rather, it is сlear the l/16th royalty interest is a fixed or “fractional” royalty interest entitling Prochaska to “an absolute fraction of production — it is not affected by the amount of the landowner’s royalty.” Luckel,
The clear, objective intent of the parties, based on harmonization of the applicable clauses in the 1950 deed, and without looking beyond the four corners, was to convey all of the land to the Regmunds, grant the Regmunds a fixed one-sixteenth royalty interest, and to reserve to Prochaska a fixed one-sixteenth royalty interest, burdened by prior interests until such interests terminate. Accordingly, pursuant to the terms of the 1950 deed as harmonized and without reference to outside documents, I would hold the royalty interest reserved by Prochaska is a simple one-half of one-eighth, i.e., a fixed l/16th royalty interest.
Conclusion
I believe looking beyond the four corners of the unambiguous 1950 deed in an attempt to determine the parties’ intent is not permissible under Texas law. In the absence of such error, the 1950 deed clearly establishes the parties’ intent to reserve to Prochaska a fixed one-sixteenth royalty interest. Accordingly, I dissent.
. I agree with the majority and the parties that the 1950 deed is unambiguous. An unambiguous deed "is so worded that it can be given ‘a certain or definite legal meaning or interpretation.’ ” Hausser v. Cuellar,
. I note that where the Texas Supreme Court adopts the judgment of a Commission decision, this indicates the supreme court approved neither the Commission's specific holdings nor its reasoning. See The Green-book, Texas Rules of Form 5.2.4 (Texas Law Review Ass’n ed., 12th ed. 2010).
. The majority asserts, contrary to my position, that the reservation was ineffective until the reservations described in the John Hancock/Joslin and Joslin/Powell deeds expired. Majority Op. at 665. Under the plain language of the "save and except” and the "and provided,” clauses, it is clear Prochaska was immediately entitled to the interest reserved in the “save and except clause. The "and provided" clause merely advises that Prochaska's interest is burdened, requiring him to pay the outstanding royalty reservations contained in the John Hancock/Joslin and Joslin/Powell deeds until they expire. And, those reservations expired in 1963.
. I agree with the Prochaskas that the royalty interest received by the Regmunds pursuant to the 1950 deed is an unburdened, fixed one-half (1/2) of one-eighth (l/8th), i.e., a fixed one-sixteenth interest.
