COURT OF APPEALS
EIGHTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS
EL PASO, TEXAS
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McDANIEL PARTNERS, LTD., No. 08-12-00312-CV
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Appellant, Appeal from
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v. 112th District Court
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APACHE DEEPWATER, LLC, of Upton County, Texas
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Appellee. (TC # 11-01-U4167-ANC)
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OPINION
We consider today an oil and gas assignment executed in 1953 which provides for a
production payment to the assignor. At issue is the construction of a parenthetical clause
describing the manner of calculating the payment and whether the expiration of two of the four
leases underlying the Assignment impacts the equation. McDaniel Partners, Ltd., appeals the
trial court’s final judgment allowing for a proportionate reduction in the production payment.
We reverse and render judgment for McDaniel, and remand for calculation of attorney’s fees and
damages.
PRECISE LANGUAGE OF THE ASSIGNMENT
[Ferguson] reserves unto himself, his heirs, representatives and assigns, and there
is expressly excepted from this conveyance as a ‘production payment interest,’ the
title to and ownership of one-sixteenth of thirty-five sixty-fourths of seven-eighths
(1/16th of 35/64ths of 7/8ths, being one sixteenth of the entire interest in the
production from said lands to which Assignor claims to be entitled under the
terms of said respective oil and gas leases) of the total oil, gas, casinghead gas
and other minerals in and under and which may be produced from the above
described land, i.e., from each and both of said Surveys 36 and 37, Block 40,
Township 5 South, T&P Ry. Co. Lands, until the net proceeds of said reserved
interest . . . shall have amounted in the aggregate to the sum of Three Million Five
Hundred Fifty Thousand Dollars ($3,550,000.00) . . . [and] one million four
hundred twenty thousand (1,420,000) barrels . . . .
As we have mentioned, the highlighted parenthetical is the focus of this dispute.
FACTUAL SUMMARY
This case concerns the rights and obligations of McDaniel Partners, Ltd. and Apache
Deepwater, LLC in relation to the assignment of four oil and gas leases situated in Upton
County. The Assignment was executed on March 3, 1953 by McDaniel’s predecessor in interest,
Hugh W. Ferguson, Jr., as assignor, in favor of Apache’s predecessor, L.H. Tyson, as assignee.1
Among other things, the Assignment reserves a substantial production payment on behalf of
Ferguson and his successors. At the time of the Assignment, the four leases owned by Ferguson
comprised 35/64 of the total mineral estate underlying two particular tracts of land, Survey 36
and Survey 37. The Cowden 36 lease was situated entirely within Survey 36 while the Cowden
37 lease was situated entirely within Survey 37. The two remaining leases--Peterman and
Broudy--consist of noncontiguous parcels of land located in both Survey 36 and Survey 37.2
Employing the fraction 64/64 to represent the entirety of the mineral estate underlying Surveys
36 and 37, the portion of the minerals attributable to each of the four leases at the time of the
conveyance was as follows:
Cowden 36 lease: 16/64 of the total;
Cowden 37 lease: 16/64 of the total;
Peterman lease: 1/64 of the total; and
1
McDaniel’s corporate representative in this case is Hugh W. Ferguson, III.
2
The Peterman and Broudy leases also contain other parcels of land located outside of Survey 36 and Survey 37,
but those parcels were not included in the Assignment.
2
Broudy lease: 2/64 of the total.
In 1994, the Cowden 36 and Cowden 37 leases expired for lack of production. Although there
had been no production in Survey 36 or Survey 37 under the Peterman and Broudy leases, those
leases nonetheless endured due to production on parcels located outside of Surveys 36 and 37,
which were not part of the Assignment. There continued to be an absence of production in
Surveys 36 and 37 under the assigned leases until sometime in late 2009 or early 2010, when
Apache began drilling after acquiring its interest.3 When Apache acquired the Assignment, it
obtained only a 3/64 interest, as the two Cowden leases had already terminated. In other words,
despite the Assignment’s purported grant of all four leases, the only leases that Apache actually
obtained were the two viable Peterman and Broudy leases. Although Apache never owned an
interest in the Cowden 36 or Cowden 37 leases, it nonetheless presently owns the leasehold
rights in the mineral interests that were originally covered by those leases. Following the
completion of producing wells in Surveys 36 and 37, Apache sent a division order to McDaniel
in which it disclosed its calculation of monies owed pursuant to McDaniel’s production payment
interest. According to Apache, McDaniel is entitled to 1/16 of 3/64 of 7/8 of the production
stemming from Surveys 36 and 37, with the middle fraction representing the portion of the total
mineral estate that is attributable to only the Peterman and Broudy leases (1/64 + 2/64 = 3/64 ).
Stated in decimals, it is Apache’s contention that McDaniel is entitled to .00256348 (or
.256348 %) of the production attributable to Surveys 36 and 37. Conversely, McDaniel contends
that it is entitled to 1/16 of 35/64 of 7/8 of the production, with the middle fraction representing
the part of the mineral estate that was attributable to all four of the leases at the time the
Assignment was executed (16/64 + 16/64 + 1/64 + 2/64 = 35/64). Stated in decimals, it is
3
Apache’s predecessor in interest, Mariner, obtained its interest in the Assignment in 2009. Apache acquired later
merged with Mariner. In light of the shared business interests and structure between Apache and Mariner, Mariner
will be included within the appellation “Apache.”
3
McDaniel’s contention that it is entitled to .029907226 (or 2.9907226 %) of the production
attributable to Surveys 36 and 37.
PROCEDURAL HISTORY
McDaniel filed suit against Apache on January 6, 2011, alleging claims for breach of
contract, conversion, and attorney’s fees, as well as a request for an accounting. Prior to trial, the
parties agreed to the entry of stipulated facts. Neither contends that the Assignment is
ambiguous; they simply disagree over the proper interpretation of its terms. Following a bench
trial, the court rendered judgment against McDaniel, holding that it take nothing. McDaniel
requested the entry of findings of fact and conclusions of law, which the trial court signed on
October 3, 2012. The trial court ultimately determined that the production payment, per the
terms of the Assignment, stems from four separately identifiable sources--namely, the minerals
produced under each of four underlying leases. As such, held the court, the production payment
must be proportionately reduced in the event one or more of the leases expires. In light of the
termination of the two Cowden leases (which constituted 32/64 of the 35/64 interest that was
conveyed in the Assignment), the court determined that the production payment is now properly
payable out of 1/16 of 3/64 of 7/8 of the minerals underlying Survey 36 and Survey 37.
McDaniel and Apache agree that the sole issue to be determined is the correctness of these
determinations.
APPLICABLE LEGAL STANDARDS
A contract is not ambiguous simply because the parties advance conflicting
interpretations. Columbia Gas Transmission Corp. v. New Ulm Gas, Ltd., 940 S.W.2d 587, 589
(Tex. 1996). For an ambiguity to exist, both interpretations must be reasonable. Id.; Nat’l Union
Fire Ins. Co. v. CBI Industries, Inc., 907 S.W.2d 517, 520 (Tex. 1995). When a written
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agreement is worded so that it can be given a certain or definite legal meaning, it is not
ambiguous and the court construes it as a matter of law. American Manufacturers Mutual
Insurance Co. v. Schaefer, 124 S.W.3d 154, 157 (Tex. 2003). In construing an unambiguous
contract, a court should attempt to harmonize and give effect to all of its provisions so that none
will be rendered meaningless. Coker v. Coker, 650 S.W.2d 391, 393 (Tex. 1983); First City Nat.
Bank of Midland v. Concord Oil Co., 808 S.W.2d 133, 137 (Tex.App.--El Paso, 1991, no writ).
We perform that review without considering parol evidence, and consider the entire document
under the “four corners” rule. Middleton v. Broussard, 504 S.W.2d 839 (Tex. 1974); Luckel v.
White, 819 S.W.2d 459, 461–62 (Tex. 1991).
McDANIEL’S SOLE POINT
As framed by McDaniel, the single issue for review is:
The trial court failed to correctly interpret the Production Payment reserved
in the 1953 Assignment consistent with (i) the parties’ objective intent that
the Production Payment be calculated and paid based upon 100% of
production from the ‘above described lands’ (i.e., Surveys 36 and 37) and
(ii) established Texas Supreme Court precedent which requires a
production payment payable from ‘above described lands’ (i.e., Survey 36
and 37) to be calculated and paid based upon 100% of production from the
lands which are described.
THE KING AND HOOKS CASES
The distinction that McDaniel addresses is the difference between a reservation of “lands
described” and “lands conveyed.” It relies heavily upon King v. First National Bank of Wichita
Falls to argue that the production payment must be calculated and paid out of production
attributable to Surveys 36 and 37 as a whole, rather than production attributable only to the
individual leases. King v. First Nat. Bank of Wichita Falls, 144 Tex. 583, 192 S.W.2d 260
(1946). But as a careful analysis reveals, neither King nor its counterpart Hooks applies here.
Id.; Hooks v. Neill, 21 S.W.2d 532 (Tex.Civ.App.--Galveston 1929, writ ref’d).
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King and Hooks define specific rules of construction applying to cases in which a grantor
conveys an undivided mineral interest and reserves a fraction of that interest. King, 192 S.W.2d
at 261-63; Hooks, 21 S.W.2d at 534-38. The questions presented in those cases and their
progeny center on whether a grantor has reserved a royalty or mineral interest in only the portion
of land actually conveyed, or whether the interest has instead been reserved from a larger tract of
land described in the deed. Id; Hooks, 21 S.W.2d at 534; Middleton, 504 S.W.2d at 843;
Winegar v. Martin, 304 S.W.3d 661, 667 (Tex.App.--Fort Worth 2010, no pet.). The distinction
turns on whether the reservation clause describes the interest as being reserved from the land
“conveyed” or from the land “described.” Middleton, 504 S.W.2d at 842; R. Lacy, Inc. v.
Jarrett, 214 S.W.2d 692, 693-94 (Tex.Civ.App.--Texarkana 1948, writ ref’d).
King establishes the controlling rule in instances where the deed reserves a fractional
interest under the land “described.” King, 192 S.W.2d at 263. There, a granting clause conveyed
an undivided one-half interest in a parcel of land that was then physically described as a whole.
Id. at 262. Thereafter in the reservation clause, a 1/8 royalty interest was reserved on behalf of
the grantor in the “hereinabove described land.” Id. Focusing on the use of that phrase, the court
held that the grantor had reserved 1/8 royalty “from the entire land,” rather than from only the
undivided one-half interest that had been conveyed. Id. at 263. As such, the rule of King is that
where a deed reserves a fraction of minerals under the “land described,” it reserves a fraction of
the minerals under the entire tract of land described in the deed, regardless of the part of the
mineral estate actually conveyed. Id.; Averyt v. Grande, Inc., 717 S.W.2d 891, 893 (Tex. 1986).
Conversely, Hooks establishes the controlling rule in instances where a deed reserves a
fractional interest under the land “conveyed.” Hooks, 21 S.W.2d at 538. In Hooks, the grantor
owned and conveyed all of his undivided one-half interest in a tract of land. Id. In a reservation
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clause, the grantor reserved a 1/32 interest in oil under the “said land and premises herein
described and conveyed.” Id. The court focused on the use of the words “and conveyed” in the
reservation clause, and held that the deed unambiguously reserved 1/32 of the 1/2 mineral
interest that the grantor conveyed, or a 1/64 mineral interest. Id. As the Supreme Court
summarized this holding in Averyt, “If the deed reserves a fraction of the minerals under the land
conveyed, then the deed reserves a fraction of the part of the mineral estate actually owned by the
grantor and conveyed in the deed.” [Emphasis in original]. Averyt, 717 S.W.2d at 893, citing
and discussing Hooks, 21 S.W.2d at 532.
The rules established in King and Hooks have been consistently applied by Texas courts.
See, e.g., Gibson v. Turner, 156 Tex. 289, 294 S.W.2d 781, 784 (1956); Winegar, 304 S.W.3d at
667; and Dowda v. Hayman, 221 S.W.2d 1016, 1018 (Tex.Civ.App.--Fort Worth 1949, writ
ref’d). And all of them are fundamentally different from the case at bar.
The classic King/Hooks scenario involves a reservation clause that attempts to define the
scope of a reserved interest through an abbreviated or “shorthand” reference to a description of
land appearing elsewhere in the deed. Winegar, 304 S.W.3d at 663, 667. That is not the case
here. The Assignment contains an exacting, “longhand” description of the interest that Ferguson
reserved. From this detailed language, it is clear that a production payment of a specified
duration has been reserved in favor of Ferguson and his successors. It is equally unambiguous
that there is a precise, fractional equation by which the production payment is to be measured:
1/16 of 35/64 of 7/8 of production. Additionally, the genesis of the fractional equation is
explained. The first fractional component of the equation, 1/16, represents the amount of the
interest that the assignor has reserved from the working interest he has conveyed. The second
and third fractional components--35/64 of 7/8--together represent the total working interest that
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has been conveyed through the assignment of the leases. Lastly, it is unambiguous that the entire
fractional equation (1/16 of 35/64 of 7/8) is to be calculated against the total production of oil
and other minerals “from each and both of said Surveys 36 and 37.” Unlike King and Hooks,
there is no need to look outside of the reservation clause to determine what was reserved.4
Further underscoring the inapplicability of King and Hooks is McDaniel’s repeated
insistence that the production payment must be calculated against “100% of the oil and gas
produced from the land (i.e., each and both of Surveys 36 and 37).” Whereas the very essence of
King was a debate about whether a fractional interest should be applied against the entirety of a
described tract of land, there is no such debate here. While Apache disagrees with McDaniel
about what the fractional equation should be, it nonetheless agrees that the equation must be
calculated against the entirety of Surveys 36 and 37. The only remaining question, then, is
whether the terms of the Assignment permit a reduction of the production payment in the event
any of the assigned leases expire.
THE FOUR CORNERS OF THE ASSIGNMENT
McDaniel contends that there is no language within the four corners of the Assignment
providing for a reduction of the production payment in the event of a partial lease failure. The
parties primarily disagree about the purpose and effect of certain language contained in a
parenthetical within the Assignment’s reservation clause. That language explains the origin of
the fractional equation:
(1/16th of 35/64ths of 7/8ths, being one sixteenth of the entire interest in the
production from said lands to which Assignor claims to be entitled under the
terms of said respective oil and gas leases.)
McDaniel argues that the parenthetical is not part of the operative language reserving the
4
King, 192 S.W.2d at 261-63; Hooks, 21 S.W.2d at 538; Averyt, 717 S.W.2d at 893; Middleton, 504 S.W.2d at 843;
Gibson, 294 S.W.2d at 784; Winegar, 304 S.W.3d at 667; Dowda, 221 S.W.2d at 1018; R. Lacy, Inc., 214 S.W.2d at
693-94.
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production payment, but that it was instead “included simply as an explanatory provision.”
Apache concedes that the language of the parenthetical is explanatory in nature, but argues that
the parenthetical explains how to calculate the production payment at any particular time, based
upon the amount of working interest that is then attributable to the underlying leases. Apache
further contends that McDaniel’s interpretation renders the parenthetical meaningless.
Undeniably, the parenthetical establishes that the working interest conveyed is 35/64 of
7/8. This is apparent when the parenthetical is read in conjunction with other portions of the
Assignment, such as its reference to “the thirty-five sixty-fourths of seven-eighths working
interest hereby transferred.” Additionally, the warranty clause provides the fractional interest of
the mineral estate underlying Surveys 36 and 37 that is attributable to each of the individual
leases.5 We agree that while all of the information necessary to determine a reduction of the
production payment in the event of a lease termination is present within the four corners of the
Assignment, there is no express language providing for a piecemeal reduction of the production
payment. “[C]ourts will not rewrite agreements to insert provisions parties could have included
or to imply restraints for which they have not bargained.” Tenneco Inc. v. Enterprise Products
Co., 925 S.W.2d 640, 646 (Tex. 1996).
Contrary to Apache’s arguments, interpreting the parenthetical to be an explanation of the
basis of the production payment calculation does not render it meaningless. It defines
Ferguson’s interest at the time of execution, as well as the relationship of his interest to those of
the individuals entitled to a 1/8 landowner’s royalty. The parenthetical’s explanation of the
fractional calculation is further meaningful in that supports and clarifies the warranty clause. By
5
The third fraction in the equation, 7/8, is what remains after the fee simple owners of the mineral estate are
afforded their 1/8 royalty. As the Supreme Court held in King, “as a matter of judicial knowledge, we know” that
the “usual and customary one-eighth royalty reserved by the landowner” is “one-eighth of the oil and gas produced
from land as a whole.” King, 192 S.W.2d at 262.
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cross-referencing the two, the reader can be assured that there is no discrepancy between the size
of the grant and the size of the reservation. One need not look any further than King and Hooks
for an illustration of the confusion that can result when such details are not specified. King, 192
S.W.2d at 260-63; Hooks, 21 S.W.2d at 534-40.
Apache emphasizes that if the production payment were not intended to be
proportionately reduced in the event a lease expires, there would have been no need for the
parties to include covenants requiring the assignees to pay delay rentals or comply with the
covenants in the underlying leases. But the covenants are not lease-specific. Instead, they apply
to the “leases” in general. The expiration of the two Cowden leases does not make it
unnecessary for the assignee to comply with the covenants contained within the Peterman and
Broudy leases. Moreover, in the event all four of the leases failed (a situation not before us),
there would be no remaining obligation under the Assignment for any party. As the record
stands, however, consideration of the production payment does exist, and there is no contractual
language providing for a partial reduction. There is no language through which the production
payment’s specified sum ($3,550,000) or volumetric total (1,420,000 barrels of oil) can even
conceivably be adjusted in the event of a lease termination. If Ferguson and Tyson had intended
to periodically adjust the production payment, the Assignment surely would have included
language providing for the adjustment of these significant numbers.
THE NATURE OF PRODUCTION PAYMENTS
Contending that McDaniel’s construction of the Assignment ignores the fundamental
nature of a production payment, Apache suggests such an interpretation leads to an unreasonable
or absurd result. A court should construe contracts “from a utilitarian standpoint bearing in mind
the particular business activity sought to be served,” and “avoid when possible and proper a
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construction which is unreasonable, inequitable, and oppressive.” Reilly v. Rangers Mgmt., Inc.,
727 S.W.2d 527, 530 (Tex. 1987); Reliance Insurance Co. v. Hibdon, 333 S.W.3d 364, 369
(Tex.App.--Houston [14th Dist.] 2011, pet. denied).
A production payment, sometimes referred to as an oil payment, is a share of the oil or
other minerals “produced from the described premises, free of costs of production, terminating
when a given volume of production has been paid over, or when a specified sum from the sale
of such oil has been realized.” Alamo National Bank v. Hurd, 485 S.W.2d 335, 340
(Tex.Civ.App.--San Antonio 1972, writ ref’d n.r.e.). Production payments have the same basic
characteristics as an overriding royalty, except that a production payment is limited in duration.
Id. While there is not an abundance of Texas authority construing the nature of production
payments, it is well settled that an “oil and gas lease is a contract, and its terms are interpreted as
such.” Tittizer v. Union Gas Corp., 171 S.W.3d 857, 860 (Tex. 2005). We are aware of no
Texas case deciding whether a production payment (absent express contractual language or
otherwise) can be proportionately reduced following the expiration of some but not all of the
leases. Certain legal scholars have opined that if a leasehold estate terminates, the production
payment interest expires with it. A.W. Walker, Jr., Oil Payments, 20 TEX. L. REV. 259, 270
(1942); Patrick H. Martin & Bruce M. Kramer, Williams & Meyers Oil and Gas Law § 422.3(f)
(5th ed. 2012). But we are unaware of any treatises that further particularize this issue to facts
that resemble those present here and the parties have not provided us with any.
Apache advised us during oral argument that we will be turning oil and gas law on its
head if we hold in McDaniel’s favor. Its arguments relate to effects on revenue and are based
entirely upon the trial testimony of Apache’s land man supervisor, Thomas McCray Sloan.
Since Sloan’s testimony is outside of the four corners of the contract, the parol evidence rule bars
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it from consideration. David J. Sacks, P.C. v. Haden, 266 S.W.3d 447, 450 (Tex. 2008).
Apache’s other arguments pertaining to the nature of a production payment interest are similarly
based upon the opinion testimony of its legal expert, Robert Stevens. This evidence is likewise
barred by the parol evidence rule. In sum, Apache has not demonstrated that the fundamental
nature of a production payment mandates the reduction of such a payment following a partial
lease failure in the absence of contractual terms so providing.
CONCLUSION
We sustain Issue One and reverse and render judgment in favor of McDaniel. We
remand the case to the trial court for calculation of attorney’s fees owed by Apache to
McDaniel, as well as calculation of damages owed by Apache to McDaniel.
March 28, 2014
ANN CRAWFORD McCLURE, Chief Justice
Before McClure, C.J., Rivera, and Rodriguez, JJ.
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