*1 Fourth Court of Appeals San Antonio, Texas
OPINION
No. 04-13-00445-CV PNP PETROLEUM I, LP , PNP Management, Inc., Philip Zaccaria, and Cibolo Energy Operating, Inc., Appellants
v. Edna Earnest TAYLOR and Elizabeth Edna Earnest TAYLOR , Elizabeth Earnest Herbst, and U.S. Enercorp, Ltd.,
Appellees From the 81st Judicial District Court, Frio County, Texas
Trial Court No. 10-05-00167CVF Honorable Donna S. Rayes, Judge Presiding Opinion by: Catherine Stone, Chief Justice
Sitting: Catherine Stone, Chief Justice
Sandee Bryan Marion, Justice
Rebeca C. Martinez, Justice
Delivered and Filed: May 21, 2014
REVERSED AND RENDERED
This appeal arises from a dispute over whether the term of an oil and gas lease was extended by a payment made by the lessee. After the parties concluded their negotiation of the lease terms, the lease provided that the lessee could pay a “shut-in well royalty payment” to extend the term of the lease “[i]f, at the expiration of the primary term there is located on the leased premises a well
or wells not producing oil/gas in paying quantities.” After sustaining objections to the lessee’s summary judgment evidence, and applying the generally accepted industry definition of “shut-in royalty” to the language of the lease, the trial court construed the lease as providing that the lessee could pay a “shut-in royalty payment” to extend the term of the lease “[i]f at the expiration of the primary term there is located on the leased premises a well or wells not capable of producing oil/gas in paying quantities.” The issues raised on appeal challenge the trial court’s sustaining of the objections to the summary judgment evidence and its construction of the lease. Because we conclude that the trial court erroneously sustained the objections to the summary judgment evidence and consequently erred in its construction of the lease, we reverse the trial court’s judgment and render judgment that the term of the lease was extended by the lessee’s payment.
B ACKGROUND
PNP Petroleum I, LP entered into an Oil and Gas Lease with Edna Earnest Taylor and Elizabeth Earnest Herbst. The lease was dated June 1, 2009, and had a one year primary term. The lease stated that it would exist for the primary term and “as long thereafter as oil and/or gas in paying quantities is produced from and sold from the land subject to this lease.” The lease further stated that its term was subject to the following specific savings clause which is the subject of the underlying dispute: ii. SHUT-IN ROYALTY (Saving) If, at the expiration of the primary term
there is located on the leased premises a well or wells not producing oil/gas in paying quantities, Lessee may pay as royalty a sum of money equal to Twenty ($20) dollars per proration acre associated with each well not producing. The shut-in well royalty payment will extend the term of this lease for a period of one (1) year. Lessee may extend this lease for one (1) additional year by the payment of a like sum of money. MAXIMUM SHUT-IN It is agreed that this lease cannot be maintained by the payment of shut-in royalty for a period of more than two (2) years beyond the expiration date of the primary term.
At the time the lease was signed, thirteen wells existed on the leased land that were not producing. Those wells had been drilled by a prior lessee whose lease had expired.
On May 12, 2010, PNP sent Taylor and Herbst a letter stating its intent to extend the term of the lease pursuant to the afore-quoted clause (referred to herein as the “Savings Clause”) and enclosing payment of the requisite amount. Taylor and Herbst’s attorney responded with a letter returning PNP’s payment and stating that it was not their understanding that the lease could be extended by the payment under the terms of the Savings Clause. The letter concluded, “Absent proper extension of the lease, we understand that it will expire, by its own terms, on June 1, 2010.” Upon receipt of this letter, PNP filed its original petition seeking a declaratory judgment that its payment extended the term of the lease.
PNP subsequently filed a motion for partial summary judgment requesting a declaration that the term of the lease was extended by its payment. PNP attached the affidavit of Phil Zaccaria [1] which established that thirteen wells existed on the land covered by the lease that were not producing oil or gas in paying quantities. PNP also attached the prior correspondence and copies of the checks documenting its payment.
In response, Taylor and Herbst filed a cross-motion for partial summary judgment. In their motion, they assert the payment could not extend the term of the lease because no well on the land covered by the lease was capable of producing oil or gas in paying quantities. Taylor and Herbst asserted that under Texas law, a shut-in royalty payment could extend the term of a lease only if a well on the leased land was capable of producing oil and gas in paying quantities.
Before the trial court ruled on the summary judgment motions, U.S. Enercorp, Ltd. filed a petition in intervention because it had acquired a top lease from Taylor and Herbst on September 14, 2010. U.S. Enercorp also filed a cross-motion for partial summary judgment seeking to confirm that the PNP lease had expired. PNP filed a motion to strike U.S. Enercorp’s intervention, objections to its cross-motion, and a response to its cross-motion.
On November 11, 2010, the trial court signed an order granting the motion for partial summary judgment filed by Taylor and Herbst and denying the motion for partial summary judgment filed by PNP. The order does not address the cross-motion filed by U.S. Enercorp, but the trial court subsequently signed an order denying PNP’s motion to strike U.S. Enercorp’s intervention.
Seven months later, PNP filed a motion to reconsider the summary judgment ruling. PNP attached a second affidavit from Zaccaria. In this affidavit, Zaccaria provides details of the negotiations between the parties preceding the signing of the lease. Exhibits to the affidavit include e-mail correspondence and drafts revealing changes made to the lease form during the negotiations. Taylor, Herbst, and U.S. Enercorp filed a joint response and objections to Zaccaria’s second affidavit and the exhibits thereto. The objections globally assert that the affidavit and the attached exhibits are extraneous, parol evidence offered “to vary, contradict, and/or create ambiguity in the unambiguous PNP Leases.” Hearsay and relevancy objections also were made to the affidavit and exhibits. PNP filed a reply asserting that the affidavit and its exhibits should be considered as surrounding circumstances.
In ruling on PNP’s motion, the trial court signed an order stating that the pleadings, PNP’s motion to reconsider, and the response to the motion to reconsider were considered by the trial court in determining that the motion should be denied. The trial court also signed an order sustaining most of the objections to Zaccaria’s second affidavit and the exhibits thereto. The trial court later signed an amended order sustaining all of the objections. The trial court’s order sustaining the objections further stated that the exhibits were stricken from the record and were not considered as part of PNP’s motion to reconsider.
After the trial court denied PNP’s motion to reconsider, U.S. Enercorp filed an amended petition adding claims against Zaccaria individually and against Cibolo Energy Operating, Inc., [2] including claims for slander of title and conspiracy. Taylor and Herbst also amended their pleadings adding similar claims against Zaccaria and Cibolo Energy. After being brought into the litigation by these amended pleadings, Zaccaria and Cibolo Energy filed a motion to reconsider the trial court’s summary judgment ruling, adopting by reference the arguments and evidence submitted in PNP’s original motion and motion to reconsider. Zaccaria and Cibolo Energy also attached to their motion deposition excerpts from David Wallace, the oil and gas attorney who represented Taylor and Herbst in connection with the negotiation and drafting of the lease, and the original form of the lease used during the negotiations. Taylor, Herbst, and U.S. Enercorp filed a joint response and objections to the deposition excerpts and original form of the lease based on the parol evidence rule and relevancy. An additional hearsay objection was made with regard to the original form of the lease.
In ruling on Zaccaria and Cibolo Energy’s motion to reconsider, the trial court signed an order stating that the pleadings, the motion to reconsider, and the joint response were considered by the trial court in determining that the motion to reconsider should be denied. The trial court also signed an order sustaining the objections to Wallace’s deposition excerpts and the original form of the lease. The order sustaining the objections stated that the exhibits were stricken from the record and were not considered as part of Cibolo Energy and Zaccaria’s motion.
The trial court thereafter signed an order severing the claims relating to the validity of the lease, including its order granting the partial summary judgment in favor of Taylor and Herbst. PNP filed a notice of appeal, as did Zaccaria and Cibolo Energy.
M OTION FOR S UMMARY J UDGMENT /M OTION TO R ECONSIDER
A. Standards of Review
We review a summary judgment
de novo
.
Provident Life & Acc. Ins. Co. v. Knott
, 128
S.W.3d 211, 215 (Tex. 2003). We consider all the evidence in the light most favorable to the
respondent, indulging all reasonable inferences in favor of the respondent, and determine whether
the movant proved that there were no genuine issues of material fact and that it was entitled to
judgment as a matter of law.
Nixon v. Mr. Prop. Mgmt. Co.
,
“When a motion [to reconsider] is filed after the rendition of summary judgment, ‘a trial
court has the discretion to consider the grounds in [the] post-judgment motion and supporting
proof[,] and reaffirm its summary judgment based on the entire record.’”
Charbonnet v. Shami
,
No. 04-12-00711-CV, 2013 WL 2645720, at *5 (Tex. App.—San Antonio June 12, 2013, pet.
denied) (mem. op.) (quoting Timothy Patton,
Summary Judgments in Texas
§ 7.06[1] (3d ed.
2012)). “The trial court also has the discretion to simply deny a motion filed after the entry of
summary judgment without considering its substance.”
Id
. “In the latter situation, an appellate
court need only consider arguments and evidence presented prior to the summary-judgment
hearing.”
Id
. “Thus, the efficacy of a post-judgment motion to preserve a complaint for appellate
review depends upon whether the trial court affirmatively considers the new grounds and proof as
memorialized by a written order.’”
Id
. (quoting Timothy Patton,
Summary Judgments in Texas
§ 7.06[1] (3d ed. 2012)). Where the trial court affirmatively indicates on the record that it accepted
or considered the evidence attached to a motion to reconsider, this court reviews “the summary
judgment based upon the grounds and proof in both prejudgment and post-judgment filings.”
Timothy Patton,
Summary Judgments in Texas
§ 7.06[1] (3d ed. 2013);
see also Circle X Land &
Cattle Co., Ltd. v. Mumford Ind. Sch. Dist.
, 325 S.W.3d 859, 863 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th
Dist.] 2010, pet. denied) (holding appellate court would review evidence attached to motion to
reconsider where order reflected that the affidavits and exhibits were considered by the trial court);
Stephens v. Dolcefino
,
The order denying PNP’s motion to reconsider does not state that the trial court considered the evidence attached to the motion. In fact, the order sustaining the objections to that evidence expressly states that the evidence was stricken from the record and was not considered as part of PNP’s motion to reconsider.
Although an argument could be made that the trial court necessarily considered the evidence in ruling on the objections to that evidence, this court rejected a similar argument in the context of a late response to a motion for summary judgment. We reasoned, “if we were to hold a trial court’s rulings on a party’s objections constitute the requisite ‘something in the record’ indicating that the trial court considered a late-filed response, we would implicitly hold that a summary judgment movant must waive its right to complain on appeal about defects of form in the respondent’s summary judgment evidence to preserve its right to insist the respondent meet its burden of obtaining the trial court’s permission to file a response late.” Neimes v. Ta , 985 S.W.2d 132, 140 (Tex. App.—San Antonio 1998, pet. denied). “In short, … we would force summary judgment movants to waive one right to preserve another.” Id.
Similarly, in this context, the appellees should not be forced to waive their right to have a
trial court refuse to consider evidence attached to a motion to reconsider in order to obtain rulings
on their objections to that evidence. Because the trial court’s order denying the motion to
reconsider does not state that it considered the evidence, the trial court’s rulings on the objections
to that evidence cannot be construed as showing that the evidence was considered by the trial court,
especially since the order sustaining the objections also stated that the evidence was stricken from
the record and not considered as part of the motion to reconsider.
But see Corniello v. State Bank
& Trust, Dallas
,
C. Zaccaria and Cibolo Energy’s Motion to Reconsider
Although the appellees contend the same standard should apply in reviewing the motion to
reconsider filed by Zaccaria and Cibolo Energy, we agree with Zaccaria and Cibolo Energy that
application of the same standard to their motion implicates due process concerns. “Due process at
a minimum requires notice and an opportunity to be heard at a meaningful time and in a meaningful
manner.”
Univ. of Tex. Med. Sch. at Houston v. Than
,
S UMMARY J UDGMENT E VIDENCE
PNP contends the trial court erred in sustaining the objections to Zaccaria’s second affidavit and exhibits pertaining to the parties’ negotiation of the lease. PNP’s brief exclusively addresses the parol evidence rule. In the final point in their brief, Zaccaria and Cibolo Energy generally contend the trial court erred in sustaining the objections to the summary judgment evidence, but do not specifically address the objections.
A. Waiver
The appellees assert that the only objection addressed in the appellants’ briefs is the
objection based on the parol evidence rule. Because the evidence also was excluded based on
relevancy and hearsay objections, the appellees contend this court should summarily overrule the
contention that the trial court abused its discretion in sustaining the objections. Zaccaria and
Cibolo Energy respond to this waiver argument in their reply brief, specifically addressing the
hearsay and relevancy objections. This court has held that where an appellant responds to an
appellee’s waiver argument in a reply brief by fully addressing the issues not addressed in the
appellant’s opening brief, this court will address the merits of the issue.
Carone v. Retamco
Operating, Inc.
,
B. Standard of Review
A trial court’s rulings on objections to summary judgment evidence are reviewed under an
abuse of discretion standard.
See United Blood Servs. v. Longoria
,
C. Parol Evidence Rule
The primary objection made to Zaccaria’s second affidavit and the attached exhibits was that they were inadmissible extrinsic, parol evidence offered to contradict or create ambiguity in the lease. One of the key details PNP, Zaccaria, and Cibolo Energy sought to establish with this summary judgment evidence was the negotiation process in drafting the Savings Clause, and particularly the following red-lined changes which establish that the reference to “capable of” producing in paying quantities was stricken from the lease during the course of those negotiations:
If, at the expiration of the primary term – or at any time thereafter, there is
located on the leased premises a well or wells
not
capable of producing
oil/
gas in
paying quantities
or being used as a salt-water injection well(s)
, and such gas is
not otherwise produced and sold in paying quantities for lack of suitable market
and this lease is not otherwise being maintained in force and effect, Lessee may pay
[to extend the lease term.]
In determining whether the trial court properly sustained the parol evidence objection to
this evidence, we must consider the Texas Supreme Court’s decisions in
Anglo-Dutch Petroleum
Int’l, Inc. v. Greenberg Peden, P.C.
,
1. Anglo-Dutch Petroleum Int’l, Inc. v. Greenberg Peden, P.C.
In Anglo-Dutch Petroleum Int’l, Inc. , the court considered a dispute over whether an attorney fee agreement was ambiguous. 352 S.W.3d at 446. The client contended the plain language of the agreement established that its agreement was with the law firm on whose letterhead the agreement was drafted, not the lawyer who personally signed the agreement. Id . The lawyer countered that the use of personal pronouns in the agreement, as well as surrounding circumstances, created an ambiguity that a jury was required to resolve. Id .
The court began its analysis by noting, “Whether a contract is ambiguous is a question of law that must be decided by examining the contract as a whole in light of the circumstances present when the contract was entered.” Id . at 449-450 (internal citations omitted). The court then noted that one of the circumstances to be considered in that case was the existence of a lawyer-client relationship between the parties because the lawyer’s fiduciary duty covers contract negotiations between them. Id . at 450. With regard to other circumstances to be considered, the court asserted, “Other circumstances surrounding the execution of a contract may inform its consideration, but there are limits .” Id . at 451 (internal citations omitted, emphasis added). The court then explained:
An unambiguous contract will be enforced as written, and parol evidence will not be received for the purpose of creating an ambiguity or to give the contract a meaning different from that which its language imports. Only where a contract is ambiguous may a court consider the parties’ interpretation and admit extraneous evidence to determine the true meaning of the instrument.
Understanding the context in which an agreement was made is essential in determining the parties’ intent as expressed in the agreement , but it is the parties’ expressed intent that the court must determine. Extrinsic evidence cannot be used to show that the parties probably meant, or could have meant, something other than what their agreement stated.
Id . (internal citations omitted, emphasis in original).
Because the trial court had determined that the agreement was ambiguous, “the parties offered extensive extrinsic evidence of their intent in the ten-day trial.” Id . at 452. The court then noted,
Given our conclusion that the agreement was not ambiguous, this evidence is of limited relevance. It cannot be used to show the parties’ motives or intentions apart from the Fee Agreement; it can only provide the context in which the agreement was reached.
Id . The court then considered the context in which the agreement was reached, including evidence that the client proposed the terms of the agreement. Id . After considering this evidence, the court concluded, “the circumstances in which the Fee Agreement was executed do not suggest that the parties must have intended something different from what they plainly stated.” Id . at 453.
2. Houston Exploration Co. v. Wellington Underwriting Agencies, Ltd.
In
Houston Exploration Co.
, the court considered whether an insurance policy provided
indemnity for certain expenses.
In reaching this holding, the court stated, “[a] written contract must be construed to give effect to the parties’ intent expressed in the text as understood in light of the facts and circumstances surrounding the contract’s execution, subject to the parol evidence rule.” Id . at 469. The court also stated that the parol evidence rule does not “prohibit consideration of surrounding circumstances that inform, rather than vary from or contradict, the contract text.” Id . Finally, the court asserted that it previously had said, “[n]egotiations of the parties may have some relevance in ascertaining the dominant purpose and intent of the parties embodied in the contract interpreted as a whole.” Id . at 469-70 (internal citations omitted). The court then cited two earlier decisions (in which deletions from a printed form appeared on the face of the final agreement) as holding that “deletions in a printed form agreement are indicative of the parties’ intent.” Id . at 470. In reaching its holding, the court stressed that the parties did not write the policy from scratch but deleted some payment requirements while keeping others. Id . The court then concluded, “To see the deletions as irrelevant blinks reality.” Id .
In addressing an argument that deletions in a printed form agreement should be treated the same as deletions in a draft, the court first noted that changes in a printed form are accorded special weight in construing an agreement. Id . at 472. The court then also stated, “It may be that deletions in drafts indicate the parties’ intent in the final agreement, but we need not decide that issue here.” Id .
3. Analysis
This court has generally adopted the language in
Houston Exploration Co.
which allows
courts to consider contract negotiations as surrounding circumstances in construing a lease.
BP
Am. Prod. Co. v. Zaffirini
,
Although we apply an abuse of discretion standard in reviewing the trial court’s exclusion
of the lease drafts in the instant case, trial courts have no discretion in determining what the law is
or in applying the law to the facts.
In re Tex. Ass’n of Sch. Bds., Inc.
,
D. Hearsay
The appellees also asserted hearsay objections with regard to the revisions contained in the
lease drafts. This court, however, has held, “An out of court statement, offered to show
what
was
said, rather than the
truth
of what was said, is not hearsay.”
Ho Wah Genting Kintron Sdn Bhd v.
Leviton Mfg. Co.
,
E. Relevance
The final objection made by the appellees to the lease drafts was relevancy. “Relevant
evidence is evidence having the tendency to make the existence of any fact that is of consequence
to the determination of the action more probable or less probable than it would be without the
evidence.”
In re Estate of Denman
,
I NTERPRETATION OF O IL AND G AS L EASE
The crux of the dispute between the parties with regard to the interpretation of the oil and gas lease is whether the language can be read as requiring the wells in existence at the end of the primary term to be “capable of producing in paying quantities” before the payment under the Savings Clause will extend the term of the lease.
“Determining whether a contract is ambiguous and construing an unambiguous contract
are questions of law which we review de novo.”
BP Am. Prod. Co.
,
At the heart of the dispute in this case is the law that states, “If a lease term has a generally accepted meaning in the oil and gas industry, we use its generally accepted meaning.” Id . The appellees contend that the use of the term “shut-in royalty” has special meaning in the oil and gas industry. Although PNP, Zaccaria, and Cibolo Energy disagree with the engrafting of this law into the lease, they do not appear to dispute the legal principle itself, which can be summarized as follows:
A shut-in royalty clause provides for a substitute or contractual method of production, which will maintain the lease in force and effect when a gas well is drilled and for which no market exists. The shut-in royalty is considered constructive production and will maintain the lease if its terms are satisfied.
However, contrary to appellants’ argument on appeal, for a well to be maintained by the payment of shut-in royalties, it must be capable of producing gas in paying quantities at the time it is shut-in. This is true even though the shut-in royalty clause makes no mention of capacity for paying production.
Hydrocarbon Mgmt., Inc. v. Tracker Exp., Inc.
,
In the instant case, the Savings Clause provided: ii. SHUT-IN ROYALTY (Saving) If, at the expiration of the primary term
there is located on the leased premises a well or wells not producing oil/gas in paying quantities, Lessee may pay as royalty a sum of money equal to Twenty ($20) dollars per proration acre associated with each well not producing. The shut-in well royalty payment will extend the term of this lease for a period of one (1) year. Lessee may extend this lease for one (1) additional year by the payment of a like sum of money. MAXIMUM SHUT-IN It is agreed that this lease cannot be maintained by the payment of shut-in royalty for a period of more than two (2) years beyond the expiration date of the primary term.
Because the Savings Clause refers to a “shut-in royalty” payment even independent of its heading, [4] the general legal principle would appear to apply to our construction of the lease.
When the parties’ negotiations as reflected in the lease drafts are considered, however, an express reference to “ capable of ” producing in paying quantities was stricken from the draft as follows:
If, at the expiration of the primary term – or at any time thereafter, there is located on the leased premises a well or wells not capable of producing oil/ gas in paying quantities or being used as a salt-water injection well(s) , and such gas is not otherwise produced and sold in paying quantities for lack of suitable market and this lease is not otherwise being maintained in force and effect, Lessee may pay [to extend the lease term.] These negotiations deviate from the general law that would engraft the “ capable of ” producing in paying quantities requirement into this lease. [5] Therefore, taking into consideration the parties’ negotiations as reflected in the lease drafts and the plain language of the lease, we hold that the parties did not intend to apply the oil and gas industry’s generally accepted meaning of the term “shut-in royalty” in the Savings Clause. Quite simply, the parties could not have intended for the law to engraft into their agreement the very language they removed. Because wells were located on the leased premises that were not producing oil/gas in paying quantities at the end of the primary term, we hold PNP’s May 12, 2010 payment extended the term of the lease as a matter of law.
C ONCLUSION
The trial court’s orders sustaining the objections to the lease drafts and denying the motion filed by Zaccaria and Cibolo Energy are reversed, and judgment is rendered that the term of the lease was extended by PNP’s May 12, 2010 payment.
Catherine Stone, Chief Justice
Notes
[1] Zaccaria is the president of PNP Management, Inc., which is PNP’s general or managing partner.
[2] The petition alleges that Cibolo Energy “was the record operator of certain wells on the expired PNP leases.”
[3] The appellees also assert that the trial court was within its discretion in refusing to consider the evidence attached to PNP’s motion to reconsider because that evidence was available at the time of the hearing on the initial summary judgment motions. Although this argument might be persuasive as to PNP’s motion to reconsider, it fails as to the motion filed by Zaccaria and Cibolo Energy for the due process reasons previously stated.
[4] PNP correctly argues that the title of a contractual provision is not determinative, and the greater weight must be
given to the operative contractual clause.
Enterprise Leasing Co. of Houston v. Barrios
,
[5] This conflict also demonstrates how Zaccaria and Cibolo Energy were harmed by the trial court’s exclusion of the
lease drafts.
See In re Estate of Denman
,
