OPINION
*415 Appellees, 1 non-executive mineral interest owners, sued appellants, Joseph C. Hlavinka, Jr., Terrance Hlavinka, and Kenneth Hlavinka (“the Hlavinkas”), owners of the executive and surface rights of an 802.25 acre tract of land located in Wharton County for breach of fiduciary duty. In three issues, the Hlavinkas contend: (1) the evidence is legally and factually insufficient to support the jury’s finding of liability; (2) the evidence is legally and factually insufficient to support the jury’s finding of damages; and (3) the trial court erred in its instructions to the jury. We reverse and render.
A. BACKGROUND AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
In February 1996, the Hlavinkas purchased the 802.25 acre tract of land for farming operations. The property was once part of a 4,000 acre tract owned by the Northington family. In addition to the surface, the Hlavinkas received a one-ninth mineral interest and the executive rights to the 802.25 acre tract. Collectively, ap-pellees own approximately sixty percent of the mineral interest in the subject property, making them co-tenants in the mineral estate with the Hlavinkas.
In 1996 and 1997, there was significant activity in the oil and gas market in the Wharton County area. In late 1996, Craig Charbonnet, an independent landman hired to negotiate oü and gas leases on behalf of Adobe Energy, Inc., began contacting several of the surrounding landowners. Charbonnet contacted John Wynn, who controlled the surface and executive rights to a 1,876 acre tract out of the old Northington tract; Peggy Manske, who controlled the executive rights to a 274 acre tract between the Wynn and Hla-vinka tracts; and appellant Joseph C. Hla-vinka, Jr. with regards to the 802.25 acre tract. Charbonnet initially offered Wynn a three-year paid-up lease for $150.00 per acre and a one-fifth royalty. After refusing this offer, Wynn successfully negotiated a three-year lease paying a $250.00 per acre bonus, with delay rentals of $50.00 per year for the second and third years, and a one-fourth royalty interest. Manske also negotiated and signed a lease identical to Wynn’s.
When approached with an offer of a three-year, paid-up lease for $175.00 per acre and a one-fifth royalty, the Hlavinkas resisted, seeking more money. 2 The Hla-vinkas discovered that other landowners in the area were being paid more than was offered to them and more than was paid to Wynn. One neighbor, Harry Goudeau, received a lease of $600.00 per acre, with a $450.00 per acre bonus and delay rentals of $75.00 per acre in the second and third years. The Hlavinkas believed the 802.25 acre tract should lease for more money, in the range of $600.00 to $1300.00 an acre.
In January 1997, Charbonnet sent the Hlavinkas a letter offering a three-year lease paying a $250.00 per acre bonus, with delay rentals of $50.00 per year for the second and third years, and a one-fourth *416 royalty interest. The letter provided that the offer would expire in five days, if it was not accepted. The Hlavinkas did not respond to the offer.
In September 1997, David Wolda, Char-bonnet’s associate, made a subsequent offer of a three-year lease paying a $250.00 per acre bonus, with delay rentals of $25.00 per year for the second and third years, and a 22.5 percent royalty interest. This offer, lower than the previous offer, was declined by the Hlavinkas.
In early 1998, seismic work was being conducted in the area. Coastal Oil & Gas Corporation, working with Adobe, attempted to get a permit to conduct seismic operations on the Hlavinka property. The Hlavinkas initially resisted, seeking instead to have the property leased at $650.00 per acre. After appellees demanded that the 802.25 acre tract be included in the seismic shoot, the Hlavinkas agreed to allow seismic operations on the property. The Hlavinkas received $40.00 per acre for surface damages and disruption of their farming operations.
Appellees subsequently sued the Hlavin-kas. They alleged that the Hlavinkas had breached their fiduciary duties by: (1) ignoring significant offers to develop the minerals; (2) refusing to negotiate in good faith; (3) ignoring conflicts of interest; (4) withholding material information and/or giving false, misleading, or deceptive information; and (5) engaging in self-dealing. The jury found against the Hlavinkas and found damages in the amount of $187,195.65. After the trial court signed the judgment, the Hlavinkas filed this appeal.
B. Suffictency of the Evidence
In their first issue, the Hlavinkas contend the evidence is legally and factually insufficient to support the jury’s finding of liability.
1. Standard of Review
When a party without the burden of proof complains on appeal of a jury finding, the appropriate issues are that there is “no evidence” or “insufficient evidence” to support the jury finding.
Croucher v. Croucher,
When we review a legal sufficiency or “no evidence” issue, we must view the evidence in a light that tends to support the finding of the disputed fact and disregard all evidence and inferences to the contrary.
Bradford v. Vento,
When we review a factual sufficiency or “insufficient evidence” issue, we con
*417
sider, weigh, and examine all of the evidence which supports or undermines the finding of the trier of fact.
Plas-Tex, Inc. v. United States Steel Corp., 772
S.W.2d 442, 445 (Tex.1989). We then set aside the finding only when we determine that the evidence standing alone is too weak to support the finding or that the finding is so against the overwhelming weight of the evidence as to be manifestly unjust and clearly wrong.
Ortiz v. Jones,
2. Duty of Executive to Non-Executive Mineral Interest Oumer
Texas courts have generally held that the standard of “utmost good faith” applies to one who exercises executive rights to lease or develop minerals.
See Schlittler v. Smith,
In 1984, the Texas Supreme Court couched the duty of “utmost good faith” as a fiduciary duty, arising from the relationship between the executive and the non-executive and not from the contract or deed.
3
See Manges v. Guerra,
The Manges case arose out of the purchase by Manges of certain mineral interests and executive rights from the Guerras. Following the purchase, Manges and the Guerras each owned a one-half mineral interest in the Guerra ranch, which made them co-tenants in the mineral estate. Id. at 181. Manges acquired the exclusive executive rights to all the minerals. Id. Thereafter, various members of the Guerra family sued Manges based on a series of instruments, including a deed of trust which purported to cover the entire mineral estate. Id. at 182. Manges, claiming that the lawsuit made it impossible to lease to a third party, leased 25,-911.62 acres to himself. Id. The lease was for ten years, and provided for a one-eighth royalty, a $5.00 bonus for the entire acreage, and a $2.00 per acre annual delay rental. Id. After executing this lease, Manges entered into a farm-out agreement 4 covering the same land and reserved a fifty percent working interest for *418 himself, free of drilling costs. Id. at 188. The Guerras sued Manges for failure to exercise diligence in leasing the minerals to third persons and for leasing a portion of the minerals to himself at unfair terms. Id. at 181. The supreme court held that, under the circumstances, Manges owed the Guerras a fiduciary duty, which he breached by leasing the entire fee to himself for a nominal bonus and by otherwise “dealing with the entire mineral interest so that he received benefits that the non-executives did not receive.” Id. at 184. In upholding the award for punitive damages, the court commented that Manges had “willfully, wantonly, maliciously and unconscionably breached his fiduciary duty.” Id. at 184-85.
Because the Hlavinkas owned the exclusive executive rights to the 802.25 acre tract, appellees had no right to participate in oil and gas leasing.
See Dearing, Inc. v. Spiller,
3. Breach of Fiduciary Duty
Having determined that the standard of “utmost good faith” is a fiduciary duty, we must next determine whether the Hlavin-kas’ actions were in derogation of this duty. By their ninth amended petition, appellees allege that the Hlavinkas had breached their fiduciary duty by: (1) failing or refusing to enter into any lease; (2) failing to disclose information material to the development of the minerals; and (3) allowing seismic operations to be conducted on the property without compensation to appellees as part mineral owners.
a. Failure to Enter into any Lease
Appellees contend that under either a fiduciary standard or an utmost-good-faith standard, the Hlavinkas were required to lease the land for mineral development if a reasonable offer to lease was made. They assert that by failing to negotiate with Adobe, the Hlavinkas breached their duty to appellees, the non-executive mineral interest owners.
The trial court instructed the jury that as holders of the executive rights, the Hla-vinkas had “the duty to exercise their executive rights with the same degree of diligence and discretion as would be expected of an average landowner who because of self-interest is normally willing to take affirmative steps to seek or to cooperate with prospective lessees.” 5 The trial court also instructed the jury that “executive rights” means the exclusive right or power to make and execute leases and other agreements for the exploration for and production of oil, gas and other minerals, without the joinder of co-owners of the mineral estate.
*419 Appellees contend the Hlavinkas refused to negotiate or accept any offers to lease by Adobe because the Hlavinkas owned only one-ninth of the minerals and were unsuccessful in their efforts to acquire more. Appellees assert the situation is analogous to the Manges case where the jury found that Manges had willfully disregarded the rights of the Guerras by his failure to negotiate for mineral leases with third persons. See id. at 184.
Appellees improperly analogize the facts in Manges with those in the present case to support their breach of fiduciary duty claim against the Hlavinkas. Testimony at trial established that surrounding landowners had received greater consideration for executing oil and gas leases than was being offered to the Hlavinkas. The Hla-vinkas, admittedly not experienced in oil and gas lease transactions, attempted to acquire lease terms equal to or above the market value of the surrounding land owners. This was not a case where the Hla-vinkas were arbitrarily refusing to lease under any circumstances. The record reflects that just prior to suit being filed against them, the Hlavinkas were willing to negotiate with Adobe and were asking for $650.00 an acre. Thus, the record shows that the Hlavinkas were willing to lease and were seeking terms similar to those obtained by neighboring land owners.
Further, this is not a case where the Hlavinkas entered into a transaction affecting the mineral estate where they exacted a benefit for themselves, to the exclusion of the appellees. Where a party having executive leasing privileges enters into a transaction in which he and the non-executive mineral holders are both interested and the executive is authorized to act for both parties, he must exact for the non-executive every benefit that he exacts for himself.
Portwood v. Buckalew,
Conversely, if the Hlavinkas had accepted Adobe’s first offer of a three-year paid-up lease for $175.00 per acre and a one-fifth royalty, they could conceivably be held liable for failing to negotiate for market value. An executive interest owner may be held hable to the non-executive mineral interest owner if he accepts a lease containing inferior terms.
See Dearing,
Unlike the
Manges
case, there was also no self-dealing by the Hlavinkas. The Hlavinkas did not execute a lease to themselves or to an entity they controhed as was the situation in
Manges. See Manges,
Moreover, appellees misconstrue
Manges
in seeking to impose a fiduciary duty to lease upon the executive interest owner. Appellees seek to equate the duty to develop with the executive’s duty to use utmost good faith in the exercise of his rights. A duty to develop a mineral estate arises not from a fiduciary relationship, but from an implied covenant applicable to oil and gas leases when necessary to effectuate the intent of the parties.
Danciger Oil & Ref. Co. v. Powell,
In Bass, the supreme court refused to impose an implied covenant to develop land, relying primarily on the fact that there existed no oil and gas lease. Id. at 743. The supreme court noted that in both the Schlittler and Manges decisions, it had imposed duties upon the executive interest owners in conjunction with the execution of oil and gas leases. Id. at 744. The court concluded that the executive did not breach a fiduciary duty to the non-executives without having exercised his executive power. Id. at 744-45.
Accordingly, because they have not acquired any benefits for themselves pursuant to any lease, we conclude the Hlavin-kas did not breach their fiduciary duty to appellees by failing to enter into any lease.
b. Failure to Disclose Information Material to the Development of the Minerals
Appellees contend that the Hla-vinkas’ failure to notify or inform the non-executive mineral interest owners of continuing negotiations amounted to a breach of their fiduciary duty. On March 5, 1997, appellee Joe Bruce Hancock wrote a letter to the Hlavinkas requesting an accounting of all the lease offers received by the Hlavinkas. On March 5, 1998, counsel for appellees sent a letter to the Hlavinkas requesting information concerning offers, counteroffers, and informal solicitations and inquiries, which the Hlavinkas were a party to with respect to the development *421 of the minerals. The Hlavinkas failed to respond to either request.
The information requested by appellees all pertained to continuing lease negotiations between the executives and possible lessees. As owners of the executive rights, the Hlavinkas owned the exclusive right to make a lease.
See Dearing,
Therefore, we conclude that the Hlavin-kas did not breach their fiduciary duty to appellees by failing to disclose information material to the development of the mineral estate.
c. Surface Damages
Appellees contend the Hlavinkas breached their fiduciary duty by permitting seismic operations to take place on the property pursuant to agreements which provided the surface owners with all of the compensation, thereby receiving a benefit to the exclusion of the non-executive mineral interest owners.
As executive interest owners, the Hlavinkas’ executive duty extends to the negotiation of surface damages to the extent that the surface damage payments are a substitute for a larger bonus, royalty, or other benefit that would have to be shared with the co-mineral owners.
See Portwood,
Here, the Hlavinkas are the sole owners of the surface estate. As such, the money received by the Hlavinkas as compensation for surface damages due to the seismic operations on the property did not have to be shared with appellees, unless the compensation was a substitute for a larger bonus, royalty, or other benefit that would have to be shared with the co-mineral owners.
See id.
Because they have not used their power to lease, we conclude the Hla-vinkas have not breached a fiduciary duty to appellees.
See Bass,
Because we have found no evidence in the record establishing that the Hlavinkas breached a fiduciary duty or that the Hla-vinkas committed any acts of preference or self-dealing, we hold the evidence is legally insufficient to support the jury’s finding of liability. Accordingly, we sustain the Hla-vinkas’ first issue.
In light of our disposition of the Hlavin-kas’ first issue, it is unnecessary to address their remaining issues. See Tex. R.App. P. 47.1.
We reverse the judgment of the trial court and render judgment that appellees take nothing by their suit.
Notes
. Appellees are: Joe Bruce Hancock, Jr.; Reeves W. Westmoreland, Trustee for the Reid T. Westmoreland Trust; Dr. John T. Wynn; Joe Bruce Hancock Jr., as Administrator of the Estate of W.A. Northington, Jr., Deceased; Essie Leslie and Joe Bruce Hancock Jr., Co Trustees for the Estate of Clements Northington Trust; Essie Lynn Hancock Leslie; Mary Hancock Post; Joshua Ryan Hancock; Anita Northington; Frances Cannon Meriwether; Nancy Hancock Sanders; Lou Anne Hancock Kellman; Harold M. Northington; Clara Jane Lovell; William R. Suggs; and Bruce Carlton Suggs.
. Terrance Hlavinka testified that during the same time period, the Hlavinkas turned down a similar offer on a nearby 338 acre tract under which the Hlavinkas owned the entire mineral estate because they believed the offer to be below market.
. Until
Manges,
the utmost-good-faith standard had not been considered to create a fiduciary duly.
See Mims v. Beall,
. A farm-out agreement is an agreement between operators whereby a lease owner assigns the lease or a portion of it to another operator. The obligation of the assignee to drill one or more wells on the assigned acreage is the primary characteristic of the farm-out. 8 H. Williams & C. Myers, Oil and Gas Law, Manual of Oil and Gas Terms 262-63 (1982).
. The language used fay the trial court in this case is similar to the trial court's jury charge in
Manges.
In
Manges,
the trial court instructed the jury that the executive "owes to the co-mineral owners the same degree of diligence and discretion in exercising the rights and powers granted under such Execu-rive Rights as would be expected of the average land owner who because of self-interest is normally willing to take affirmative steps to seek or to cooperate with prospective lessees.”
Manges v. Guerra,
