OPINION
In this mandamus proceeding, relators J. Robinson Kerr, 1 individually, James E. Thorp, individually, Thorp Petroleum Corporation, Cobra Operating Company, and Hal Energy Company, challenge the trial court’s denial of their motions to transfer venue. See Tex. Civ. Prao. & Rem.Code Ann. § 15.0642 (Vernon 2002). Section 15.011 of the Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code requires this action be brought in the county in which the property at issue is located. See Tex. Civ. Prao. & Rem.Code Ann. § 15.011 (Vernon 2002). We conditionally grant the petition for writ of mandamus.
The Dispute
Real party in interest Etoco, L.P. is an oil and gas company that discovers and produces oil, natural gas, and petroleum deposits throughout Texas. James E. Thorp served as president of Etoco from July 1983 to October 1996.
Etoco sued relators for breach of fiduciary duty, fraud, fraudulent inducement, and civil conspiracy, alleging that while Thorp was employed with the company, he conspired with the other defendants and fraudulently located certain oil, natural gas, petroleum deposits, and reserves in Harris County 2 for his benefit. Etoco asserts that the profits Thorp fraudulently acquired belonged to Etoco, because Thorp had a fiduciary duty to locate oil, natural gas, petroleum deposits, and reserves for the benefit of Etoco, not for himself.
Relators filed motions to transfer venue to Harris County, Texas. They contend venue is mandatory in Harris County under section 15.011 of the Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code because the mineral estates are located in Harris County and Etoco must prove its entitlement to the ownership of the leases before it may recover damages. Etoco alleges venue is proper in Jefferson County because “Jefferson County, Texas is the county where all or a substantial part of the events or omissions giving rise to the claims asserted herein occurred.” See Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem.Code Ann. § 15.002(a)(1) (Vernon 2002).
*356 The trial court held a hearing on the motion. Etoco argued at the hearing that section 15.011 did not apply because Etoco never owned the mineral interests and is seeking only damages, not recovery of any mineral interests. Although Etoco’s original petition sought recovery of the mineral interests, after relators filed their motions to transfer venue to Harris County, Etoco amended its petition to seek only damages and profit disgorgement related to the past production from the property. The trial court denied the motions to transfer venue.
Standard of Review
In a mandatory venue mandamus action, an appellate court reviews a trial court’s ruling on a motion to transfer for an abuse of discretion.
In re Applied, Chem. Magnesias Corp.,
Section 15.011
Section 15.011 of the Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code provides:
Actions for recovery of real property or an estate or interest in real property, for partition of real property, to remove encumbrances from the title to real property, for recovery of damages to real property, or to quiet title to real property shall be brought in the county in which all or a part of the property is located.
Tex. Civ. PRAC. & Rem.Code Ann. § 15.011. To demonstrate venue is mandatory in Harris County under section 15.011, rela-tors must show that all or a part of the realty at issue is located in Harris County, and that the suit is one of the actions described in section 15.011.
See Airvantage, L.L.C. v. TBAN Props. # 1, L.T.D.,
Relators contend Etoco’s claim is essentially about ownership of the mineral interests. Relators note that venue is dictated by the substance of the claim, not its form.
See Renwar Oil Corp. v. Lancaster,
A court considers the true nature of the dispute in making the venue determination under section 15.011. In
Ren-war,
applying a predecessor venue statute, the Supreme Court explained that the nature of the suit is determined from the facts alleged in the plaintiffs petition, the rights asserted, and the relief sought.
See Renwar Oil Corp.,
Recently, the Supreme Court noted that the statute has been changed over time to become more inclusive regarding the types of real property suits subject to mandatory venue.
See In re Applied
Chem.
Magnesias Corp.,
EleCtion of Damages
Etoco currently seeks damages and disgorgement of profits related to the past production from the property. Etoco argues this is a suit for fraud in an employment relationship, not for recovery of the mineral interests, and section 15.011 is inapplicable because “Etoco does not seek recovery of real property or an estate or interest in real property.”
See Bridges,
In
Bridges,
the plaintiff did not claim title to the property but instead requested damages incurred as a result of a failure to notify the plaintiff that it did not have a superior lien on the property.
See Bridges,
In
Moore,
the court held that a claim for an accounting and damages for failure to pay past royalties did not fall within the predecessor statute, because the claims were “properly characterized as claims to recover personalty!.]”
Moore,
In
Nix,
the plaintiff sought monetary damages for breach of a fiduciary duty.
See Nix,
Plaintiff’s ORIGINAL Petition
In plaintiffs original petition in this case, Etoco sought damages “and in addi *358 tion thereto the recovery by plaintiff of all assets in the form of existing mineral interests, operating interests, and lease hold interests that all said defendants fraudulently acquired an interest in[.]” Plaintiff alleged that as a result of fraud it had been “monetarily damaged in that it lost the income and interest in leases and other assets to which it was rightly entitled to receive[.]”
Essentially, the lawsuit originally sought relief equivalent to the imposition of a constructive trust and profit disgorgement in addition to damages.
See, e.g., Anglo Exploration Corp. v. Grayshon,
The Amended Pleading With a Disolaimer
After the motions to transfer venue to Harris County were filed, Etoco amended its petition and expressly disclaimed any attempt to recover any interest in land. Plaintiffs amended pleading asserts as follows:
Plaintiff does not seek the recovery of real property or any interest or estate in real property, does not seek to partition real property, does not seek to remove encumbrances from the title to real property, does not seek the recovery of damages to real property and does not seek to quiet title to real property. Plaintiff only seeks lost profits/net operating revenue incurred in the past as a result of the breach of fiduciary duty, fraud and conspiracy by the Defendants.
Plaintiff alleges that the profit from the production of the oil and gas deposits and reserves “should have belonged to the Plaintiff.” The live pleading also asserts that, had Thorp disclosed the discovery, “Plaintiff would have developed this prospect for the benefit of Plaintiff and realized the net profits that resulted therefrom[.]” Plaintiff seeks damages caused in the past and “disgorgement of any profits realized by Defendant, James E. Thorp, in the past related to the field[.]”
The Effect of the Disclaimer
When the underlying issue that a plaintiff must prove to show its entitlement to damages involves proof of the ownership rights to mineral interests, section 15.011 applies.
See Madera Prod. Co.,
Madera
In
Madera Production Company,
the court considered the effect of an amended pleading abandoning a request for a declaration of rights concerning ownership to real property.
Madera Prod. Co.,
Madera requested the trial court “‘declare the rights, status, and other legal relations, including issues of title and ownership to real property.’ ” Id. at 658. After some of the defendants filed motions to transfer venue under section 15.011, Ma-dera amended its petition and requested the trial court “ ‘declare the rights, status, and other legal relations ... excluding specifically any issues of title or ownership to real property.’ ” Id. at 658-59.
The trial court granted the motions to transfer. Id. at 655. The appellate court concluded Madera amended its pleading in an effort to exclude any issues of title or ownership to real property and avoid the reach of section 15.011. Id. at 659. Nevertheless, venue was mandatory in the county where the land was located because, regardless of the remedy elected or causes of action pled, the true nature of the suit required that the plaintiff prove ownership rights in a mineral lease in order to show entitlement to damages. Id. at 660. The court explained that, regardless of the disclaimer in the amended pleading, “the underlying issue that Ma-dera must prove to show its entitlement to damages involves proof of ownership rights in a mineral lease, which in Texas is well established as real property.” See id. at 559.
APPLICATION TO ETOCO’S CLAIM
In this case, a remedy sought in the live pleading is disgorgement of past profits and recovery of past damages based on production from land Etoco asserts was rightfully its own to develop. Etoco seeks “lost profits/lost net operating revenue incurred in the past from the oil, natural gas, petroleum deposits and reserves[,]” including those related to the field and wells in Harris County specifically named in the petition, and “the disgorgement of any profits realized by [Thorp]” related to the field and wells in Harris County.
By amending the pleading to omit the request for recovery of the mineral interests and to expressly disclaim any attempt to recover land — and also by describing the claim as requesting only past damages rather than including damages based on future production — Etoco at
*360
tempted to craft its petition to avoid the mandatory venue statute. Nevertheless, how the cause of action is described by the parties is not decisive.
See Airvantage, L.L.C.,
Conclusion
When rightful ownership of real property must be decided as a prerequisite to the relief requested, the mandatory venue statute governs.
See Renwar Oil Co.,
WRIT CONDITIONALLY GRANTED.
Notes
. Relators’ Petition for Writ of Mandamus states J. Robinson Kerr was incorrectly named in the plaintiff's pleadings as “Robert Kerr.”
. These oil, natural gas, petroleum deposits, and reserves are referred to as the Canadian Hunter Field, The Canadian Hunter, Yegua (10,630ft.), and Channelview, Yegua (10,-000ft.), and involve wells referred to as J.K. Brown (American Hunter), TNR Well # 1, and Cobra TNR Wells 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, and 6A.
