OPINION
In their suit for reformation of a deed, Jessie Johnson and Ila Steel Johnson, who sold property to Tom Conner and Lisa Conner, appeal the trial court’s order granting summary judgment in favor of the Conners. In one issue, the Johnsons contend that the trial court erred in granting summary judgment becаuse there were disputed fact issues regarding their claim of mutual mistake in the execution of the deed. We affirm.
*578 Background
The Johnsons listed forty acres of land that they owned near Whitehouse in Smith County with real estate agent Elaine Burgess. Burgess showed the property to the Conners. She later drew up a farm and ranch contract on a printed form promulgated by the Texas Real Estate Commission, which was signed by both the John-sons and the Conners. Under the relevant section for the issue before us, the contract in its printed form said as follows:
RESERVATIONS: Seller reserves the following minеral, water, royalty, timber, or other interests:
Burgess, on the blank line below that statement, wrote by hand the following:
None of the above are available to be conveyed.
The deed conveying the property, which was prepared based on the terms of this contract, contained the following clause:
RESERVATIONS FROM AND EXCEPTIONS TO CONVEYANCE AND WARRANTY: This conveyance is made аnd accepted subject to the following matters, to the extent same are in effect at this time:
Any and all easements, rights of way, and prescriptive rights, whether of record or not; all presently recorded restrictions, reservations, covenants, conditions, oil and gas lеases, mineral severances, and other instruments, other than liens and conveyances, that affect the property, rights of adjoining owners in any walls and fences situated on a common boundary; any discrepancies, conflicts or shortages in area or boundary line; аny encroachments or overlapping of improvements; taxes for 2004, the payment of which Grantee assumes, and subsequent assessments for that and prior years due to change in land usage, ownership or both, the payment of which Grantee assumes.
Immediately following this seсtion of the deed, the granting clause provides that
Grantor, for the consideration herein-before stated and subject to the reservations from and exceptions to conveyance and warranty, stated herein, grants, sells, and conveys to Grantee the property, together with all and singular the rights and appurtenances thereto in any wise belonging to have and hold it to Grantee.
The Johnsons signed the deed at closing. Less than two years later, the Johnsons learned that the Conners were receiving payments under an oil and gas lease thе Conners had executed on the forty acres. The Johnsons subsequently brought suit against the Conners asking the trial court to reform the deed conveying the land to the Conners because the deed did not reflect the provisions of the contract. The Conners filed a traditional motiоn for summary judgment in which they argued that the deed was unambiguous and conveyed all of the estate owned by the Johnsons at the time they signed it. As their only summary judgment evidence, they attached a copy of the deed. In their response, the Johnsons argued that the sales contract stаted that no minerals were being conveyed, they thought they were signing a deed that reserved to them their minerals, and the Conners thought they were obtaining no minerals. Therefore, they alleged, the deed was not in compliance with the contract and was executed by mutual mistakе. As summary judgment evidence, they presented the affidavit of Elaine Burgess and the sales contract. The trial court granted the Conners’ motion for summary judgment, finding that the deed the Johnsons signed was unambiguous and conveyed all of their estate in *579 the land, including their mineral interest. This appeal followed.
Summary Judgment
In their sole issue, the Johnsons contend that the trial court erred in granting summary judgment in favor of the Conners because they raised a fact question on the issue of mutual mistake in the execution of the deed. They contend, therefore, that they are entitled to reformation.
Standard of Review
We review the trial court’s summary judgment de novo.
Valence Operating Co. v. Dorsett,
The Deed
Whether a deed is ambiguous is a question of law for the court, which we review de novo.
Gore Oil Co. v. Roosth,
The reservations clause of the deed indicates that the Johnsons sold the property subject to, among other matters, “all presently recorded restrictions, reservations, covenants, conditions, oil and gas leases, minerаl severances, and other instruments ... that affect the property.” The granting clause conveyed to the Conners the property and all rights the John-sons had in the property.
See Cockrell,
The Contract
Whether a contract is ambiguous is a question of law for the court to decide by looking at the contract as a whole in light of the circumstancеs present when the contract was entered.
Coker v. Coker,
In her affidavit, Burgess stated that, when they listed the property, the John-sons “were very emphatic” that “they were not selling their minerals, which they owned.” She said that when she showed the рroperty to the Conners, she told them the Johnsons were not selling any of their minerals and thus no minerals were to be conveyed. She stated that the offer to purchase was made with the knowledge that the Johnsons were to retain the minerals. She explained that she added thе wording under the “Reservations” section in the contract to clarify that the Johnsons were keeping their minerals. She said that when the contract was ready to be signed, she reiterated to Mr. Conner that the Johnsons were not selling their minerals. Burgess stated that at closing she thought the Jоhnsons’ minerals had been reserved. She further explained that, in 2006, she learned that the deed did not reserve the minerals so she had a correction deed drawn up.
Burgess, in her affidavit, attempted to create an ambiguity stating that the language she used in the contract meant thаt the Johnsons were reserving their minerals. However, when Burgess had an opportunity to state in the “Reservations” section of the contract that the minerals were being reserved, she wrote “none of the above are available to be conveyed.” We afford the words contained in the agreement their plain, ordinary, and generally accepted meaning, unless the instrument requires otherwise.
Natural Gas Clearinghouse v. Midgard Energy Co.,
A mutual mistake of fact occurs when the parties to an agreement have a common intention, but the written contract does not reflect the intention of thе parties due to a mutual mistake.
N. Natural Gas v. Chisos Joint Venture I,
A mutual mistake asserting a material fact constitutes a ground for avoiding a contrаct, but the mistake must be mutual rather than unilateral.
Holley v. Grigg,
The Johnsons, in their response to the Conners’ motion for summary judgment, argued that the contract stated that no minerals were being conveyed and the deed, which was not in compliance with the contract, was executed by mutuаl mistake. The Johnsons specifically stated they believed they were reserving their minerals in the forty acres when they signed both the real estate contract and the deed. Burgess, according to her affidavit attached to their response, also thought the Johnsons were reserving their minerals and emphasized that fact to the Conners.
The Conners each filed an affidavit in reply to the Johnsons’ response to the motion for summary judgment. In contrast to the Johnsons, the Conners denied that any discussions about mineral interests ever took place and stаted that they thought they were purchasing 100% of whatever the Johnsons owned. This is not inconsistent with the language in the contract that no minerals were available to be conveyed. The Conners were entitled to assume under the contract that they would be receiving all of the estate that the John-sons owned.
The parties thus had different understandings about the mineral estate. The Johnsons believed the deed should contain a reservation clause reserving their minerals from the conveyance. The Conners believed the deed accurately reflected the status of the mineral title since it only *582 mentioned the minerals that were already reserved of record.
No probative summary judgment evidence established that the parties had the same misunderstanding about whether the mineral estate was to be conveyed. For a mutual mistake to exist, there must be the same mistaken belief or assumption in the minds of the grantors and grantees named in the deed.
See Holley,
Disposition
Because the Conners proved their entitlement to summary judgment as a matter of law and the Johnsons failed to raise a genuine issue of material fact, we affirm the judgment of the trial court.
