162 S.W.2d 677 | Tex. | 1942
This suit arose under Arts. 5367 et seq., R.S., 1925, commonly known as the Relinquishment Act. A general demurrer to plaintiff's first amended original petition was sustained and the case dismissed when plaintiff refused to amend. The order of the trial court was affirmed by the Court of Civil Appeals, at Fort Worth.
Plaintiff alleged that on February 8, 1928, the defendant Cross executed and delivered to it an oil and gas lease on 160 acres of land in Winkler County, Texas, by which it acquired an undivided 7/8 interest in all oil and gas under said land with the right to development therefor; that the consideration was (1) $12,000.00 cash paid to Cross, (2) $10,000.00 overriding royalty payable out of 1/4 of the oil, (3) delay rental of $160.00 per year and (4) ten cents per year per acre to the State of Texas; that the lease contract provided that "lessor (Cross) hereby warrants and agrees to defend the title to said land and agrees that lessee at its option may discharge any tax mortgage or other lien upon said land and in event lessee (Navarro Oil Company) does so, it shall be subrogated to such lien * *"; that said land belonged to the School and Asylum lands of the State and had been sold to Cross on March 9, 1926, with a mineral classification and the resulting reservation to the State of the oil and gas underlying it; that Cross executed the lease under authority of the RelinquishmentAct, supra, under which, as construed by the Supreme Court, the State became entitled to receive 1/2 of *275 the cash consideration, bonus, or down payments named in the lease, to secure which it enjoyed a first lien on the oil and gas in and under the land; that the $12,000.00 bonus paid Cross was paid to him individually and as agent for the State of Texas and that $6,000.00 thereof should have been paid over by him to the State but that he had not done so and had, therefor, wrongfully received the same from plaintiff; that in the year 1938 the State had demanded said $6,000.00 of plaintiff, sued it therefor and recovered judgment and that it had satisfied the judgment. Wherefore, plaintiff alleged, in three counts, (1) that Cross had breached the covenant of warranty contained in the lease, (2) that it had become subrogated to the right of the State to demand said $6,000.00 of Cross and to its lien to secure the same, and (3) that having discharged a duty which, as between it and Cross, should have been discharged by the latter, it was entitled to be indemnified by Cross; and it prayed judgment for $6,000.00, interest and costs and for general and special relief.
1 The trial court erred in sustaining the general demurrer. It was first stated in Green v. Robison, Land Commissioner,
Then came Shell Petroleum Corporation v. Tippett (Civ. App.),
Under similar facts the Supreme Court, in Allison v. Stanolind Oil Gas Co.,
Shell Oil Co., Inc., v. Lutz (Civ. App.),
2 The language of the contract quoted by the Court of Civil Appeals does not differentiate the case at bar from those we have cited. The sentence authorizing the lessee to deduct and *277 pay to the State its share of the royalty "in the event any of the lands embraced in this lease are classified as mineral lands" merely recognizes Art. 5367, supra, reserving to the State a 1/16 royalty for the school and asylum funds and says that Cross will be content with the other half of the 1/8 royalty ordinarily payable to the owner. It is of no import that the next succeeding sentence of the contract, referred to by the Court of Civil Appeals, does not allow any deductions from moneys to be paid to the owner, because Art. 5368, supra, expressly provides that the lessee "shall in every case pay the State ten cents per acre per year." No part of that could ever go to the owner or become due by him under the lease, hence there could never be any occasion to "deduct" from his part of the royalty to pay it. All of it belongs to the State and is required to be paid to the State by the leaseholder. That lessee agreed "to fully comply with all present and future laws of the State of Texas, the rules and regulations of the Commissioner of the General Land Office," etc., cannot be construed as an agreement to pay one half the bonus to the State. That language evidently refers to obligations expressly imposed by the Relinquishment Act, e.g., the provisions of Art. 5369 relating to drilling offset wells or those of Art. 5372 requiring a log on any well drilled to be furnished to the land commissioner. In this connection it is significant that the lease involved here was executed on February 8, 1928 (more than four months before the opinion in Greene v. Robison, supra, was handed down), at a time when it was generally thought that all bonus money went, under the Relinquishment Act, to the lessor, just as was the situation in the Tippett case, supra. It is more reasonable, therefore, to suppose that the parties to the lease were contracting with respect to obligations then known to be due to the State rather than to those then unknown.
Stanolind Oil Gas Co. v. Cerf (Civ. App.),
The judgments of the courts below are reversed and the cause is remanded to the district court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Opinion adopted by the Supreme Court May 13, 1942.
Rehearing overruled June 10, 1942.