Tommy Yowell, Gail Yowell, Harry Graff, El Terico, LLC and Casuarina Investments, LLC (d/B/A Lar Resources, Llc) v. Granite Operating Company and Apache Corporation
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF TEXAS
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No. 18-0841
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TOMMY YOWELL, ET AL., PETITIONERS,
v.
GRANITE OPERATING COMPANY AND APACHE CORPORATION, ET AL., RESPONDENTS
══════════════════════════════════════════
ON PETITION FOR REVIEW FROM THE
COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SEVENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS
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Argued January 9, 2020
JUSTICE BUSBY delivered the opinion of the Court.
This dispute over the continuing validity of an interest in a mineral lease requires us to
decide issues regarding the rule against perpetuities, the scope of an indemnity agreement, and
recovery of appellate attorneys’ fees. Among the two petitions, there are four issues presented:
(1) whether a reserved overriding royalty interest (ORRI) in a lease that includes an anti-washout
provision extending the interest to new leases violates the rule against perpetuities (the Rule);
(2) whether Texas Property Code section 5.043 mandates judicial reformation of a commercial
instrument creating a property interest that violates the Rule; (3) whether an indemnity agreement
covers a particular suit; and (4) whether sufficient evidence supports the appellate attorneys’ fees
awarded. The court of appeals held the ORRI in new leases violated the Rule and was not subject
to reformation under the Property Code. The court further held that the indemnity agreement was
not invoked and evidence supported the award of attorneys’ fees.
We hold that the ORRI is a real property interest that violates the Rule and must be
reformed, if possible, in accordance with section 5.043 of the Property Code. We therefore reverse
the court of appeals’ judgment in part and remand for that court to consider whether the ORRI in
new leases may be reformed to comply with the Rule, as well as any other grounds for summary
judgment it did not reach. We affirm the court of appeals’ judgment in part on the issues of
indemnity and attorneys’ fees.
BACKGROUND
A. The 1986 Lease and ORRI
Aikman Oil Corporation leased the mineral rights in a section of land in Wheeler County
in 1986 (1986 Lease). Aikman later assigned its interest in the 1986 Lease to Jay Haber,
reserving an ORRI1 for itself. The ORRI reservation was subject to an anti-washout provision
that purported to cover any extension, renewal, or new lease executed by Haber or his
successors in interest. Through a series of conveyances, petitioners (collectively, the
Yowells) obtained Aikman’s reserved ORRI in the 1986 Lease, and Upland Resources
Inc. obtained Haber’s leasehold interest in the 1986 Lease.
1
An ORRI is a non-possessory “share of either production or revenue from production (free of the costs of
production) carved out of a lessee’s interest under an oil-and-gas lease.” Overriding Royalty, BLACK’S LAW
DICTIONARY (11th ed. 2019). “An overriding royalty interest is a non-participating interest. A royalty owner has no
right and thus no ability to go onto the underlying property and drill or otherwise take action to perpetuate a lease.”
Ridge Oil Co. v. Guinn Invs., Inc., 148 S.W.3d 143, 155 (Tex. 2004).
2
B. The 2007 Lease, lawsuit, and settlement
In May 2007, Amarillo Production Company executed a top lease2 (2007 Lease) with the
same mineral owner and covering the same property as the 1986 Lease. Just three months later,
Amarillo Production sued Upland, alleging that Upland’s 1986 Lease terminated and Amarillo
Production’s 2007 Lease went into effect. The parties resolved their dispute with a settlement
agreement that (1) terminated Upland’s 1986 Lease, (2) initiated Amarillo Production’s 2007
Lease, (3) assigned Amarillo Production’s new leasehold interest to Upland, and (4) reserved
ORRIs in the 2007 Lease for both Amarillo Production (3%) and Upland’s owner the Peyton
Group (2%). The ORRIs in the 2007 Lease were subject to proportionate reduction if the Yowells
successfully attached their ORRI to the 2007 Lease.
C. The Peyton Group sells the lessee and grants an indemnity
Before settling the Amarillo Production dispute, the Peyton Group was negotiating the sale
of Upland’s assets to Cordillera Energy Partners III, LLC, which was itself later purchased by
Apache Corporation. Cordillera, concerned about the then-pending litigation between Amarillo
Production and Upland, required indemnity for itself and Upland because its purchase of Upland’s
assets would bring with it all the potential liability associated with the 2007 Lease dispute.
Cordillera and the Peyton Group executed a sales agreement in which the Peyton Group agreed to
indemnify both Cordillera and Granite Operating Company—Upland’s new corporate identity.
For clarity, we refer to Granite, Upland, and Apache collectively as “Granite.”
2
A top lease is “[a] lease granted on property already subject to an oil-and-gas lease. Generally, any rights
granted by a top lease . . . are valid only if the existing lease ends.” Top Lease, BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY (11th ed.
2019).
3
D. The lessee stops paying the Yowells overriding royalties
Following these transactions and assignments, Granite owned Amarillo Production’s
leasehold interest in the 2007 Lease, subject to a 5% ORRI reservation. Amarillo Production later
conveyed its portion of the reserved ORRI to the PAC Group. As a result, the 2007 Lease was
subject to the Peyton Group’s 2% ORRI and the PAC Group’s 3% ORRI.
In light of this new ownership structure for the lease of the Wheeler County property,
Granite refused to continue paying the Yowells overriding royalties pursuant to the 1986 Lease,
despite the Yowells’ demands. Granite took the position that the 2007 Lease negated any
obligation it had to pay the Yowells because their ORRI in the 1986 Lease did not continue to the
2007 Lease.
E. History of this suit
The Yowells sued Granite to vindicate their royalty interest, seeking a judicial declaration
of ownership and recovery of payments owed. Granite sued the Peyton Group and the PAC Group,
seeking indemnity from liability in the Yowells’ suit. The PAC Group filed a counterclaim against
Granite—which had suspended ORRI payments under the 2007 Lease—as well as a cross-claim
against the Yowells to recover attorneys’ fees and to declare the Yowells did not own an ORRI in
the 2007 Lease. All parties filed motions for summary judgment, agreeing on a comprehensive
stipulation of facts.
The trial court denied the Yowells’ motion for partial summary judgment and request for
declaratory relief, and granted Granite’s and the PAC Group’s motions for summary judgment,
which were based on the Rule and other grounds. The trial court also granted summary judgment
for the Peyton Group and the PAC Group, rejecting Granite’s indemnity claim. Following a bench
4
trial on the Peyton Group’s request for attorneys’ fees from Granite, the court awarded the Peyton
Group $220,396.
A divided court of appeals affirmed, disagreeing on whether the trial court erred in
“dispos[ing] of this dispute, as a matter of law, based upon the rule against perpetuities and then
dismiss[ing] consideration of the [reformation statute].” 557 S.W.3d 794, 810 (Tex. App.—
Amarillo 2018) (Pirtle, J., dissenting). The majority held that the Yowells’ reserved ORRI violated
the Rule, the assignment of the leasehold interest was not an inter vivos instrument subject to
reformation under Property Code section 5.043, the statute of limitations would bar reformation
regardless of section 5.043’s applicability, the Peyton Group was not required to indemnify
Granite, and the evidence supported the attorneys’ fees awarded to the Peyton Group from Granite.
Id. at 802–09. The Yowells petitioned for review of the adverse summary judgment on their
claims. Granite filed a conditional cross-petition challenging the denial of its indemnity claim
against the Peyton Group and the award of attorneys’ fees to the Peyton Group.
ANALYSIS
I. The Yowells’ reservation of an ORRI in new leases is a property interest that violates
the Rule.
One of the grounds on which Granite and the PAC Group moved for summary judgment
was that the Yowells’ ORRI under the 2007 Lease violated the Rule. The trial court granted their
motions and invalidated the ORRI, simultaneously denying the Yowells’ competing motion for
partial summary judgment against Granite. We review the trial court’s summary judgment rulings
de novo. Provident Life & Accident Ins. Co. v. Knott, 128 S.W.3d 211, 215 (Tex. 2003). We take
as true all evidence favorable to the nonmoving party, indulging every reasonable inference and
resolving any doubts in its favor. Id. When both parties move for summary judgment, each party
5
bears the burden to establish that it is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. City of Garland v.
Dall. Morning News, 22 S.W.3d 351, 356 (Tex. 2000).
The Texas Constitution prohibits perpetuities: “Perpetuities and monopolies are contrary
to the genius of a free government, and shall never be allowed . . . .” TEX. CONST. art. I, § 26. A
perpetuity is a restriction on the power of alienation that lasts longer than a prescribed period.
ConocoPhillips Co. v. Koopmann, 547 S.W.3d 858, 866–67 (Tex. 2018). Our common law defines
this period for real property conveyances, providing that “no [property] interest is valid unless it
must vest, if at all, within twenty-one years after the death of some life or lives in being at the time
of the conveyance.” Peveto v. Starkey, 645 S.W.2d 770, 772 (Tex. 1982). If a grant or devise
could violate the Rule at the time the conveyance instrument is signed, the interest conveyed is
void. Id. If an instrument is open to two constructions, we do not declare the interest void because
it can be assumed safely that the grantor intended to make a legal conveyance. Kelly v. Womack,
268 S.W.2d 903, 906 (Tex. 1954).
The Rule does not apply to present property interests or to future interests that vest at the
time of their creation. BP Am. Prod. Co. v. Laddex, Ltd., 513 S.W.3d 476, 480 (Tex. 2017) (citing
Womack, 268 S.W.2d at 905–06). “We have held that the typical oil and gas lease in Texas, which
grants a lessee the right to explore and develop for a fixed term of years and as long thereafter as
minerals are produced, creates in the lessee a fee simple determinable in the mineral estate that
does not violate the Rule.” Koopmann, 547 S.W.3d at 867 (citing Rosson v. Bennett, 294 S.W.
660, 662 (Tex. 1927)).
6
A. The Yowells’ ORRI is both a property and a contract right.
The Rule is implicated only if the Yowells’ ORRI under a new lease is an interest in
property. See id. at 867. Granite argues that because neither Granite’s predecessor lessee (Haber)
nor the Yowells’ predecessor ORRI holder (Aikman) owned the mineral estate at the time they
contracted to reserve an ORRI payable under future leases, those original parties could not create
any property interest in future leasehold estates. According to Granite, the Yowells have only a
contract right to sue Granite for failure to comply with its obligation to execute an appropriate
recordable instrument evidencing the Yowells’ ORRI following Granite’s acquisition of the 2007
Lease.3
We therefore consider a preliminary question: do the Yowells have a property interest that
could be subject to the Rule? If the Yowells have merely a contract right, the Rule cannot apply
and the Yowells’ only form of recovery is a claim for breach of contract. If the Yowells’ interest
is also a property right, however, the Rule can apply and seeking a declaration of ownership is
appropriate.
We conclude the Yowells have a property interest under the 2007 Lease that could be
subject to the Rule.4 An ORRI is a share of production created and paid out of a lessee’s interest
under an oil and gas lease. See supra note 1. We have long held that ORRIs, like other royalty
3
This argument is surprising, as Granite chose to move for summary judgment on the ground that the
Yowells’ ORRI in future leases is a property interest invalidated by the Rule. Granite cannot defend its victory on
that motion by arguing that the Yowells have no property interest to which the Rule can apply. See Stiles v. Resolution
Tr. Corp., 867 S.W.2d 24, 26 (Tex. 1993) (“[A] summary judgment cannot be affirmed on grounds not expressly set
out in the motion or response.”).
4
To be sure, we recognize that the Yowells also have a contract right. The Yowells declined to pursue a
claim for breach of contract in this Court. These characterizations are not, however, mutually exclusive, and the
Yowells are not precluded from seeking a declaration of property ownership merely because they could have also
pursued a claim for breach of contract.
7
interests in production, are non-possessory property interests. See State v. Quintana Petroleum
Co., 133 S.W.2d 112, 114–15 (Tex. 1939) (citing Tennant v. Dunn, 110 S.W.2d 53, 57 (Tex.
[Comm’n Op.] 1937) (rejecting the argument that ORRI did not create an interest in land)).5 Yet
Granite argues that because a lessee is not certain to obtain a future lease, it has no vested property
interest under that lease and any reservation or conveyance of an ORRI that extends to a future
lease is purely contractual. We disagree.
As we have observed, parties may agree to extend an ORRI beyond the lifetime of a lease.
See Apache Deepwater, LLC v. McDaniel Partners, Ltd., 485 S.W.3d 900, 905 (Tex. 2016) (“Thus,
in the case of a single lease, an overriding royalty . . . will not survive termination of the leasehold
it burdens unless the parties have expressly agreed otherwise.” (emphasis added)); Sunac
Petroleum Corp. v. Parkes, 416 S.W.2d 798, 804 (Tex. 1967) (“Normally, when an oil and gas
lease terminates, the overriding royalty created in an assignment of the lease is likewise
extinguished.” (emphasis added)). Granite agrees that an ORRI retains its character as a property
interest when it extends to the renewal of a lease, and it offers no reason why that character would
not also carry forward when the ORRI extends to a new lease made to the same lessee or its
successor. In each case, the ORRI holder and the lessee cannot agree among themselves that a
renewal or new lease will be granted; that executive right is retained by the lessor as the
reversionary owner of the mineral interest. But they can agree that if the lessee or its successor
obtains a renewal or new lease covering the same property, the ORRI holder or its successor will
continue to own a share of production from that property payable out of the lessee’s interest. This
5
See also Minchen v. Fields, 345 S.W.2d 282, 287–88 (Tex. 1961) (observing that Tennant and Quintana
Petroleum settled Texas law “to the effect that an oil payment of the ordinary type which undertakes either to reserve
or to grant a title to a fractional share of the oil or of the leasehold estate, or which provides for a delivery of this share
of the production in kind to the payee, creates a present interest in land in the payee”).
8
conclusion is not unique to ORRIs; non-participating royalty interests (NPRIs)—shares of
production payable out of the lessor’s reserved royalty under a lease—can also change depending
on the execution and terms of future leases. See Luckel v. White, 819 S.W.2d 459, 464 (Tex. 1991).
In sum, whether the ORRI is extended and in what form—as a share of production under a
renewed lease or under a new lease involving the same land and parties—will be contingent on a
leasing decision by the lessor, a non-party to the ORRI. But that contingency does not deprive an
ORRI that continues under a new or renewed lease of its character as a property interest. See El
Dorado Land Co. v. City of McKinney, 395 S.W.3d 798, 800–01 (Tex. 2013) (holding right to
repurchase property upon occurrence of contingency was an estate in land, not merely a contractual
right). Rather, the contingency means that the part of the ORRI extending to future leases was not
vested at the time of its creation, which gives rise to the perpetuities problem we address below.
For these reasons, we conclude the Yowells obtained a property interest under the 2007 Lease and
are permitted to seek a judicial declaration regarding the continued validity of that interest.
B. The Yowells’ interest in new leases did not vest at the time of its creation.
To determine whether the Yowells’ property interest under new leases violates the Rule,
we ask two questions. First, did the property interest vest at the time of its creation? Laddex, 513
S.W.3d at 480. If the answer is yes, our analysis is complete and the Rule does not apply. Id. If
the answer is no, we ask a second question: must the interest vest, if at all, within the Rule’s
prescribed timeframe? Peveto, 645 S.W.2d at 772. If the answer to that question is yes, then the
interest does not violate the Rule and is valid. Id. If the answer is no, the interest violates the
Rule. Id.
9
As to the first question, the owner of an interest must have “an immediate, fixed right of
present or future enjoyment” for that interest to vest. Koopmann, 547 S.W.3d at 867 (citing Vest,
BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY (10th ed. 2014)). For example, a mineral interest owner’s possibility
of reverter upon the expiration of a lease is not subject to the Rule because it is a future interest
that vests at the time of its creation. Id. “A possibility of reverter is the grantor’s right to fee
ownership in the real property reverting to him if the condition terminating the determinable fee
occurs,” and it is vested because it is “a claim to property that the grantor never gave away.” Id.
(cleaned up). A partial alienation of a grantor’s possibility of reverter does not violate the Rule,
even when another plausible interpretation of the same conveyance results in vesting of the same
interest being dependent on the expiration of an existing lease. Laddex, 513 S.W.3d at 482.
If an interest can vest only “upon the happening of a condition or event,” then it is an
executory interest. Koopmann, 547 S.W.3d at 867. “An executory interest is a future interest,
held by a third person, that either cuts off another’s interest or begins after the natural termination
of a preceding estate.” Id. “Executory interests have historically been subject to invalidation by
the Rule when they were limited upon conditions precedent not certain [to] occur, if ever, and
followed a prior estate not certain to end.” Id. at 871.
Applying these principles to the Yowells’ ORRI, we conclude their interest in new leases
did not vest at the time of its creation and is an executory interest to which the Rule applies. The
instrument reserving an ORRI under the 1986 Lease provides:
Should the Subject Leases . . . terminate and in the event Assignee [the
lessee] obtains an extension, renewal or new lease or leases covering or affecting
all or part of the mineral interest covered and affected by said lease or leases, then
the overriding royalty interest reserved herein shall attach to said extension,
renewal or new lease or leases; and an appropriate recordable instrument shall be
executed to evidence Assignor’s [the ORRI holder’s] overriding royalty interest
10
therein. Further, any subsequent extension or renewal or new lease or leases shall
contain a provision whereby such overriding royalty shall apply and attach to any
subsequent extensions or renewal of Subject Leases.
In addition, the instrument “shall inure to the benefit of and shall be binding upon the parties
hereto, both Assignor and Assignee, their respective heirs, successors, legal representatives and
assigns.”
At the time this ORRI was reserved, it provided no immediate, fixed right of present or
future enjoyment as to new leases because those leases were not yet in existence. Rather, the ORRI
would not apply to a new lease unless the following additional events occurred: (1) the 1986 Lease
terminated; (2) the lessor granted a new lease covering all or part of the same mineral interest; and
(3) the new lease was obtained by a successor of Haber, the lessee at the time of the reservation.
Moreover, Aikman and Haber were lessees. Because neither was a lessor holding the
possibility of reverter and the right to re-lease the Wheeler County property, neither could agree
to create a vested future interest in production under new leases. Their interest is not derived from
a lessor’s partial alienation of his possibility of reverter, as the interest we upheld in Laddex was.
Cf. 513 S.W.3d at 480. Although this lack of ownership does not deprive the interest of its
character as an interest in property, as explained above, it does prevent the interest from vesting
immediately upon its creation.
The Yowells argue that Aikman’s intent was to create only one ORRI that vested at its
creation. As evidence of this intent, they point to the reservation’s provision that the ORRI shall
attach to new leases. In the Yowells’ view, the ORRI does not require re-vesting upon the
termination of the 1986 Lease. We disagree that the parties may avoid a Rule violation by
including automatic attachment language.
11
“Parties are free to contract for whatever division of the interests suits them. Their intent
. . . controls.” Wenske v. Ealy, 521 S.W.3d 791, 797 (Tex. 2017) (construing deed according to
the parties’ intent as expressed in the deed’s language). Although this principle may have aided
the Yowells in a claim for breach of contract, the Yowells chose not to pursue such a claim in this
Court. Instead, the Yowells sought a judicial declaration that their reserved ORRI was a property
interest under the 2007 Lease. Even assuming the parties intended to avoid a Rule violation by
including language automatically attaching their interest to new leases, that interest simply could
not vest in new leases that did not exist and that the parties to the reservation lacked the ability to
create.
We rejected a similar argument in Koopmann. There, Strieber granted fee simple title to
the Koopmanns, reserving a one-half NPRI for a primary term of fifteen years and “as long
thereafter as there [was] production in paying . . . quantities.” 547 S.W.3d at 863. The Koopmanns
argued their future right to Streiber’s NPRI “‘vested in interest’ immediately upon execution of
the deed.” Id. at 868. We disagreed, holding that “because at the time of the grant the executory
limitation on Strieber’s interest—lack of production in paying quantities—might not happen
within twenty-one years after the death of some life or lives in being,” the Koopmanns’ interest
was uncertain, constituted an executory interest, and “violated the Rule.” Id.6 The Yowells face
the same reality: their interest in new leases did not vest at the time Aikman and Haber created that
interest because its existence depends on the occurrence of the three uncertain events discussed
above.
6Koopmann went on to hold that the interest was not void, however, because it did not violate the purpose
of the Rule—an issue we address below. 547 S.W.3d at 868, 873.
12
The Yowells’ position gains no support from Independent Gas & Oil Producers, Inc. v.
Union Oil Co. of Cal., 669 F.2d 624 (10th Cir. 1982). There, the court imposed Union’s ORRI on
a second lease executed after the termination of the original lease. Id. at 628. The court held that
“Union’s property interest in any renewals or extensions of Lease I vested at the time of its
assignment . . . and the [Rule] is not operable in such a situation.” Id. (emphasis added). We agree
with the Tenth Circuit’s conclusion that Union’s ORRI in renewals or extensions did not violate
the Rule. See Sunac, 416 S.W.2d at 802–03 (discussing lease extensions and renewals). Whether
an ORRI reservation in new leases violates the Rule was not addressed in Union Oil.7
The Yowells also cannot benefit from Luecke v. Wallace, which they cite for the
proposition that a royalty interest under a lease not yet in existence vests at the time of its creation
because “the royalty-interest owner [has] a present right to a share of future production.” 951
S.W.2d 267, 274 (Tex. App.—Austin 1997, no writ). We agree with this proposition for royalties
payable out of the mineral estate owner’s share of production, but the same is not true for ORRIs
payable out of the lessee’s share of production. In Luecke, Wallace reserved an NPRI that
remained with the land irrespective of the lease’s lifetime. Id. at 270. Luecke owned the remainder
of the mineral estate subject to Wallace’s interest. Id. Luecke challenged the validity of Wallace’s
interest on the ground that Wallace’s reservation violated the Rule. Id. at 272. The court of appeals
correctly rejected this argument because Wallace’s reservation vested at the time she created the
interest. Id. at 274. Irrespective of who later leased from Luecke, those minerals were subject to
Wallace’s interest. See id.
7
Although the Yowells view the 2007 Lease as—in substance—a renewal, they concede that our decisions
categorize it as a new lease. See Sunac, 416 S.W.2d at 802–03 (defining lease renewals narrowly). We therefore need
not address the distinction between the renewal or extension of a lease, on the one hand, and the creation of a new
lease, on the other.
13
In contrast, an ORRI holder’s rights are subject to the lease’s survival according to the
parties’ agreement. The holder of an ORRI under potential future leases does not have a
guaranteed, present right to a share of future production; in this way, an ORRI differs from other
royalty interests and cannot be presently vested at the time it is created. We conclude the language
used in the Aikman-to-Haber assignment reserving an ORRI under future leases postponed the
interest’s vesting and subjected the reservation to the Rule’s timeframe parameters.
C. The Yowells’ interest is not certain to vest within twenty-one years after some
life in being.
Because the Yowells’ ORRI under new leases did not vest at the time of its creation, we
move to the second step of the Rule’s analysis, asking whether the interest must vest, if at all,
within twenty-one years after the death of some life in being at the time of the reservation. Peveto,
645 S.W.2d at 772. We conclude the answer is no because the Yowells’ ORRI in new leases is
contingent on three events that may not occur within the Rule’s timeframe.
First, for the Yowells’ interest in a new lease to vest, the existing lease must terminate.
More specifically, the Yowells’ ORRI in the 2007 Lease cannot become effective until the 1986
Lease terminates. The 1986 Lease’s secondary term extends the lease “as long thereafter as either
oil, gas, . . . or other mineral . . . is produced from said land hereunder.” So long as that lease
produced the covered minerals in paying quantities, it could continue indefinitely. At the time the
ORRI was reserved, there was no certainty the Yowells’ interest in a future lease would ever vest,
let alone within the Rule’s parameters. See Laddex, 513 S.W.3d at 480 (holding that an interest
“contingent on [the] expiration of a determinable-fee bottom lease, without more, generally
violates the Rule”).
14
Second, for the interest in a new lease to vest, the mineral interest owner with the executive
right to execute a new lease must actually sign a new lease—an event that may never happen.
When a lease terminates, fee ownership of the mineral interest reverts to the lessor, who has the
right to lease the minerals to another developer. See Koopmann, 547 S.W.3d at 867. Even if the
1986 Lease were certain to terminate within the Rule’s timeframe, which it is not, the mineral
owner’s decision to sign a new lease is not certain to occur, let alone within the Rule’s parameters.
This contingency “postpone[s] the vesting of [the Yowells’] interest until some uncertain future
date” and violates the Rule. Peveto, 645 S.W.2d at 772.
Third, for the interest in a new lease to vest, that lease must be obtained by a successor of
Haber, the lessee at the time of the reservation.8 That event is never certain to occur, and it could
occur long after any new lease is signed—for example, if the lease were granted to a third party
that later sold its interest to a successor of Haber. The Yowells’ ORRI in new leases therefore
violates the Rule.
D. The Rule’s purpose supports invalidating the Yowells’ interest in new leases.
When an interest violates the Rule, we typically hold that the provisions of the instrument
creating it are void. Koopmann, 547 S.W.3d at 868. We have declined to invalidate such an
interest, however, when doing so would not serve the purpose of the Rule. Id. at 868–69.
In Koopmann, as noted above, Streiber conveyed land to the Koopmanns, reserving a one-
half NPRI for fifteen years and as long thereafter as there was production in paying quantities. Id.
at 863. After the Koopmanns executed a lease, but nearing the expiration of Streiber’s fifteen-year
8
As the Yowells concede, their interest in new leases cannot bind parties not privy to the agreement reserving
the ORRI.
15
primary term, Streiber conveyed more than half of her NPRI to the Koopmanns’ lessee in an effort
to incentivize the lessee to begin drilling before Streiber’s interest expired. Id. No such drilling
occurred to save the NPRI held by Streiber and the lessee. Id. at 863–64.
The lessee argued that Streiber’s reservation created a future interest in the Koopmanns
that was not certain to vest within the Rule’s timeframe, so the Koopmanns’ interest was void. Id.
at 864. We agreed the Koopmanns had an executory interest that only vested once production
ceased. Id. at 868. That interest was not certain to vest within the Rule’s timeframe, which
supported holding that the Koopmanns’ interest violated the Rule. Id.
Nevertheless, we held the Koopmanns could keep their interest because the Rule’s purpose
would not be served by invalidating it. Id. at 872. We highlighted “dissatisfaction with the
harshness of [the Rule’s] application,” which had “resulted in significant statutory modifications,”
and noted another instance in which we opted not to invalidate an interest because it did not
“constitute an unreasonable restraint on alienation.” Id. at 868–69 (citing Cherokee Water Co. v.
Forderhause, 641 S.W.2d 522, 526 (Tex. 1982)).
We explained that the Rule’s purpose is to prevent “landowners from using remote
contingencies to preclude alienability of land for generations.” Id. at 869 (citing Kettler v.
Atkinson, 383 S.W.2d 557, 560 (Tex. 1964)). “[R]estraint on alienability and promoting the
productivity of land is not at issue in the oil and gas context,” however. Id. We held that because
Streiber’s interest “was certain to end, either because production in paying or commercial
quantities ceased . . . or the recoverable minerals were exhausted,” the Koopmanns’ interest was
more akin to a vested remainder. Id. at 871. “It [was therefore] appropriate to hold that in this oil
and gas context, where a defeasible term interest is created by reservation, leaving an executory
16
interest that is certain to vest in an ascertainable grantee, the Rule does not invalidate the grantee’s
future interest.” Id. at 873.
We limited Koopmann’s holding “to future interests in the oil and gas context in which the
holder of the interest is ascertainable and the preceding estate is certain to terminate.” Id. This
holding does not apply to the Yowells’ interest in new leases, which is subject to multiple
contingencies not certain to occur.
Like the Koopmanns’ interest, the Yowells’ interest in new leases is an executory interest
because it is conditioned upon the “natural termination of a preceding estate.” Id. at 867. The
expiration of the 1986 Lease is not certain to occur at all, much less within the Rule’s “twenty-one
years after the death of some life or lives in being.” Peveto, 645 S.W.2d at 772. If the natural
termination of the 1986 Lease were the only contingency, Koopmann would support validating the
Yowells’ executory interest.
In order for the Yowells to attach their interest to the 2007 Lease, however, additional
remote contingencies beyond the natural termination of the 1986 Lease must occur. Not only must
the mineral owner execute another oil and gas lease but one of Haber’s successors must also obtain
that lease. These are the sort of remote and uncertain contingencies the Rule seeks to prevent. In
Koopmann, we outlined a narrow exception for validating an interest even when it violates the
Rule. Because the Yowells’ interest in new leases is subject to a triple contingency, it falls outside
the Koopmann exception.
17
* * *
The Yowells’ ORRI in new leases was not vested at the time of its creation and is
contingent on at least three events that may not happen at all, let alone within the lives in being
plus twenty-one years stipulated by the Rule. This interest therefore violates the Rule.
II. Texas Property Code section 5.043 requires courts to reform property interests that
violate the Rule when possible.
Because we agree with the court of appeals that the Yowells’ ORRI violates the Rule, we
must next decide whether Texas Property Code section 5.043 can be applied to reform the
reservation in order to comply with the Rule.9 The court of appeals declined to apply this statute,
holding it does not reach commercial instruments and that, in any event, its use would be barred
by the residual four-year statute of limitations. 557 S.W.3d at 804–05. We disagree and hold that
section 5.043 is a judicial mandate to which limitations does not apply, and it requires reformation
of commercial instruments creating property interests that violate the Rule.
Section 5.043 provides:
(a) Within the limits of the rule against perpetuities, a court shall reform or construe
an interest in real or personal property that violates the rule to effect the
ascertainable general intent of the creator of the interest. A court shall liberally
construe and apply this provision to validate an interest to the fullest extent
consistent with the creator’s intent.
(b) The court may reform or construe an interest under Subsection (a) of this section
according to the doctrine of cy pres by giving effect to the general intent and
specific directives of the creator within the limits of the rule against perpetuities.
(c) If an instrument that violates the rule against perpetuities may be reformed or
construed under this section, a court shall enforce the provisions of the instrument
9
As a preliminary matter, we reject Granite’s assertion that the Yowells waived their statutory reformation
argument by failing to brief the argument adequately in the court of appeals. The Yowells’ brief requested that the
court of appeals (or the trial court on remand) utilize the reformation statute if it concluded the ORRI reservation in
new leases violated the Rule.
18
that do not violate the rule and shall reform or construe under this section a
provision that violates or might violate the rule.
(d) This section applies to legal and equitable interests, including noncharitable
gifts and trusts, conveyed by an inter vivos instrument or a will that takes effect on
or after September 1, 1969 . . . .
TEX. PROP. CODE § 5.043.
A. The reformation statute extends to instruments other than trusts and wills.
Granite first argues that to qualify for reformation under the statute, the instrument must
be either a trust or will. We disagree. Section 5.043 “applies to legal and equitable interests,
including noncharitable gifts and trusts.” Id. § 5.043(d). The phrases “‘includes’ and ‘including’
are terms of enlargement and not of limitation or exclusive enumeration, and use of the terms does
not create a presumption that components not expressed are excluded.” TEX. GOV’T CODE
§ 311.005(13). Granite’s argument that the statute applies only to gifts conveyed in a trust or will
is unpersuasive because the statute merely provides examples of what constitutes a “legal or
equitable interest.” The statute does not preclude reformation of other types of legal and equitable
interests.
B. Corporations can make inter vivos conveyances.
Next, Granite contends the court of appeals correctly held the statute inapplicable because
Aikman’s reserved ORRI was not created in an “inter vivos instrument.” PROP. CODE § 5.043(d).
The court of appeals reasoned that because Aikman is a corporation and does not have a “lifetime”
in the traditional sense, it can create only commercial instruments. 557 S.W.3d at 804. The court
interpreted “inter vivos instrument” to require that the conveying party have a true lifetime for the
reformation statute to apply, noting that a corporation’s perpetual existence is shortened only if
19
stated in its certificate of formation. Id. We disagree with the court of appeals’ conclusion for
three reasons.
First, corporations can execute inter vivos instruments—trusts, for example. The Property
Code articulates different methods a “property owner” may use to create a trust. PROP. CODE
§ 112.001. One method is “a property owner’s inter vivos transfer of the property to another
person as trustee for the transferor or a third person.” Id. § 112.001(2). Although this provision
does not define either “property owner” or “person,” we know from other sections of the Property
Code that a “settlor” is a “person who creates a trust.” Id. § 111.004(14) (emphasis added). And
both the Property Code and the Code Construction Act define “person” to include a corporation.
See id. § 111.004(10)(B) (defining person to include a corporation); GOV’T CODE § 311.005(2)
(“‘Person’ includes corporation, organization, government or governmental subdivision or agency,
business trust, estate, trust, partnership, association, and any other legal entity.”). Thus, a
corporation can be a settlor that creates a trust by an “inter vivos transfer of [its] property.” See
PROP. CODE § 112.001(2) (emphasis added).
Because a corporation can make an inter vivos conveyance of property to create a trust, we
decline to hold that the Legislature’s choice of the term “inter vivos” excludes corporate
conveyances of property interests from the reformation statute. The court of appeals erred when
it declined to reform a commercial instrument executed by Aikman—a corporation—on the
ground that it lacked the ability to create an inter vivos instrument. 557 S.W.3d at 804.10
10
We do not suggest, however, that a corporation conveying an unvested interest could be used as a
measuring life in applying the reformation statute. “At common law, a corporation did not qualify as a life in being.”
Am. Nat. Res., LLC v. Eagle Rock Energy Partners, L.P., 374 P.3d 766, 771 (Okla. 2016) (citing RESTATEMENT
(FIRST) OF PROP. § 374, cmt. h (AM. LAW INST. 1944)).
20
Second, the statute requires courts to “liberally construe and apply [it] to validate an interest
to the fullest extent consistent with the creator’s intent.” PROP. CODE § 5.043(a). This directive
weighs against “a strained or narrow construction” of the statute that would exclude virtually all
commercial transactions. Kroger Co. v. Keng, 23 S.W.3d 347, 349 (Tex. 2000) (“Because we
should liberally construe the Workers’ Compensation Act in favor of the injured worker, a strained
or narrow construction of section 406.033 would be improper.”). The exclusion of commercial
instruments from reformation is inconsistent with the statutory command to carry out the intent of
an instrument’s creator as fully as possible.
Third, the amendment history of section 5.043 is informative. The Legislature enacted the
reformation statute in 1969, providing that the “Act shall apply only to inter vivos instruments and
wills taking effect after the Act becomes effective.” Act of June 12, 1969, 61st Leg., R.S., ch. 693,
§ 4, 1969 Tex. Gen. Laws 2020, 2020 (emphasis added). In 1983, the Legislature removed the
word “only” from the statute’s text. Act of May 26, 1983, 68th Leg., R.S., ch. 576, § 1, 1983 Tex.
Gen. Laws 3475, 3484 (codified at PROP. CODE § 5.043(d)). Granite notes correctly that the
Legislature’s deletion of the word “only” in 1983 was not intended to be a substantive change. See
PROP. CODE § 1.001(b)(4). But we have said before that “every word excluded from a statute must
also be presumed to have been excluded for a purpose.” City of Richardson v. Oncor Elec.
Delivery Co., 539 S.W.3d 252, 260 (Tex. 2018) (quoting Cameron v. Terrell & Garrett, Inc., 618
S.W.2d 535, 540 (Tex. 1981)). The removal of the word “only” confirms that subsection (d) is an
instruction on how to apply the statute prospectively, not a scope limitation on the types of
instruments it covers.
21
C. The reformation statute is not subject to a four-year statute of limitations.
The court of appeals offered a second reason for refusing to apply section 5.043: the
Yowells’ “delay in requesting [reformation] relief.” 557 S.W.3d at 805. The court believed the
four-year residual statute of limitations should apply to the reformation statute. See id. at 804–05
(citing TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE § 16.051 (“Every action for which there is no express
limitations period, except an action for the recovery of real property, must be brought not later
than four years after the day the cause of action accrues.”)). We disagree.
Reformation under section 5.043 is not an “action” to which the residual statute of
limitations would apply. Rather, the Legislature enacted a remedial mandate for courts to reform
interests, like the one in this case, that violate the Rule. The plain language of subsection (a)
supports this conclusion:
Within the limits of the rule against perpetuities, a court shall reform or construe
an interest in real or personal property that violates the rule to effect the
ascertainable general intent of the creator of the interest. A court shall liberally
construe and apply this provision to validate an interest to the fullest extent
consistent with the creator’s intent.
PROP. CODE § 5.043(a) (emphasis added). The Legislature’s purposeful use of the word “shall”
throughout the provision imposes a duty on courts to reform or construe property interests that
violate the Rule. Id.; GOV’T CODE § 311.016(a)(2). The provision’s language shows it is an
instruction to courts on how to remedy a violation of the Rule, not a cause of action subject to a
statute of limitations.
The PAC Group asserts it is settled that actions for reformation are subject to a four-year
statute of limitations. It also cites authority for a prohibition on reforming deeds due to the four-
year statute of limitations in actions for breach of contract. But no party has pursued a cause of
22
action for either reformation or breach of contract in this Court. As we have explained, the
Yowells’ ORRI is a real property interest, and they seek a judicial declaration of ownership of that
interest in the 2007 Lease. It is Granite and the PAC Group that asserted the Yowells’ interest
violates the Rule, and the reformation statute simply addresses the remedy for such a violation.
For these reasons, we conclude section 5.043 applies to corporate conveyances and is not
subject to a four-year statute of limitations. We therefore reverse the portion of the court of
appeals’ judgment that affirmed the trial court’s summary judgment rulings on the Yowells’ claim
against Granite and the PAC Group’s cross-claim against the Yowells. The parties disagree,
however, about whether—and, if so, how—the Yowells’ interest in new leases can be reformed
under the statute to reflect the creator’s intent within the limits of the Rule. We remand for further
proceedings on this issue and any other grounds for summary judgment the court of appeals did
not reach.
III. The Peyton Group was not obligated to indemnify Granite because the parties’
agreement limited the scope of indemnification.
Turning to the cross-petition, Granite contends the trial court erred in rejecting its claim—
on cross-motions for summary judgment—that the Peyton Group breached its contractual
obligation to indemnify Granite from the Yowells’ suit. Courts must construe indemnity
agreements according to the normal rules of contract construction. Gulf Ins. Co. v. Burns Motors,
Inc., 22 S.W.3d 417, 423 (Tex. 2000). Each party to a contract bargains for superior language,
and the Court’s primary concern is “to ascertain and to give effect to the intentions of the parties
as expressed in the instrument.” Ideal Lease Serv., Inc. v. Amoco Prod. Co., 662 S.W.2d 951, 953
(Tex. 1983). Furthermore, the Court may not “expand the parties’ rights or responsibilities beyond
the limits agreed upon by them in the contract.” Id. Instead, courts are to construe indemnity
23
agreements strictly in order to give effect to the parties’ intent as expressed in the agreement. Gulf
Ins. Co., 22 S.W.3d at 423. “[P]hrases should have different meanings,” and parties may negotiate
the language of a contractual provision to expand or limit its scope. Utica Nat’l Ins. Co. of Tex. v.
Am. Indem. Co., 141 S.W.3d 198, 203 (Tex. 2004).
The indemnity agreement provides that following Cordillera’s purchase of Granite, the
Peyton Group will indemnify both Cordillera and Granite from “any Adverse Consequence arising
from or in connection with all pending or threatened claims or causes of action asserted against
[Granite] in the litigation” regarding the termination of the 1986 Lease and the beginning of
Amarillo Production’s 2007 Lease. We have held that the phrase “arise out of” simply requires
showing a causal connection or relation, which is a standard on the spectrum for establishing
causation. Mid-Century Ins. Co. of Tex. v. Lindsey, 997 S.W.2d 153, 156 (Tex. 1999). The phrase
can also mean “originating from,” which is a similarly low threshold for establishing a causal link.
Plains Expl. & Prod. Co. v. Torch Energy Advisors Inc., 473 S.W.3d 296, 308 (Tex. 2015). But
when parties narrow the scope of their rights and obligations purposefully, the Court must enforce
the terms as expressed within the four corners of the contract. Id. at 309 (“[W]hile the phrases
‘arising from,’ ‘with respect to,’ and ‘attributable to’ may seem expansive out of context, the
temporal limitations to which they are tied and other contextual clues necessarily narrow their
scope and require no less than a substantial-factor relationship.”); see also Utica Nat’l Ins. Co.,
141 S.W.3d at 203 (“Since the policy used different wording—‘arising out of’ versus ‘due to’ in
parallel exclusions—we conclude that the phrases should have different meanings in the context
of this policy.”).
24
Here, the parties utilized limiting language so that the Peyton Group’s obligations rose and
fell with the “pending or threatened claims or causes of action asserted against” Granite in the
Amarillo Production litigation. There, Amarillo Production sued Granite for trespass to try title,
conversion, and debt. 557 S.W.3d at 807. The Yowells were neither a party to that suit nor
involved in the pending or threatened claims asserted against Granite at that time. Id. Furthermore,
the continuing validity of the Yowells’ ORRI was never at issue in that dispute, which concerned
whether the 1986 Lease ceased to produce oil in paying quantities such that it terminated and
Amarillo Production’s top lease went into effect. Id.
Given the defined scope of the indemnity provision, Granite was required to show more
than a general connection between the Amarillo Production litigation and the Yowells’ suit against
it in order to qualify for indemnity. Because the Yowells’ claims against Granite are not connected
to claims asserted against Granite in the Amarillo Production litigation, we affirm the court of
appeals’ judgment that the Peyton Group was not obligated to indemnify Granite for the Yowells’
suit against Granite.
IV. The Peyton Group was entitled to the attorneys’ fees awarded.
After granting the Peyton Group’s motion for summary judgment against Granite regarding
breach of the indemnity agreement, the trial court held an evidentiary hearing on the issue of
attorneys’ fees by agreement of the parties and awarded the Peyton Group $220,396 in fees from
Granite. Id. at 807. Granite challenges two components of this award: $43,500 in contingent
appellate attorneys’ fees on the claim of breach, and $46,849.60 for defending against Granite’s
claim seeking a declaration of proportionate royalty reduction.
25
When reviewing a trial court’s award of attorneys’ fees, we must ensure the record contains
sufficient evidence to support such an award. Rohrmoos Venture v. UTSW DVA Healthcare, LLP,
578 S.W.3d 469, 505 (Tex. 2019) (concluding the record lacked sufficient evidence to support the
trial court’s award of attorneys’ fees). The party seeking attorneys’ fees bears the burden of proof
and must supply enough facts to support the reasonableness of the amount awarded. El Apple I,
Ltd. v. Olivas, 370 S.W.3d 757, 762–63 (Tex. 2012). If there is insufficient evidence in the record
to uphold the trial court’s award of those fees, we must reverse. See id. at 763–64.
A. The Peyton Group offered sufficient evidence of its contingent appellate fees.
Granite argues the evidence is legally insufficient to support the trial court’s award of
contingent appellate fees to the Peyton Group.11 According to Granite, because the Peyton
Group’s counsel based his testimony on nothing more than ipse dixit, the trial court’s award of
contingent appellate fees should be reversed.
We recently elaborated on the showing an attorney must make to support an award of fees
in “any situation in which an objective calculation of reasonable hours worked times a reasonable
rate can be employed.” Rohrmoos Venture, 578 S.W.3d at 498. In these situations, “the fact
finder’s starting point for calculating an attorney’s fee award is determining the reasonable hours
worked multiplied by a reasonable hourly rate, and the fee claimant bears the burden of providing
sufficient evidence on both counts.” Id. Such evidence “includes, at a minimum, evidence of
(1) particular services performed, (2) who performed those services, (3) approximately when the
11
Granite also argues that because the Peyton Group has an obligation to indemnify Granite under their sales
agreement, it is not entitled to attorneys’ fees. We reject this argument because, as explained above, the Peyton Group
is the prevailing party on the indemnity issue.
26
services were performed, (4) the reasonable amount of time required to perform the services, and
(5) the reasonable hourly rate for each person performing such services.” Id.
We have not previously addressed how this lodestar analysis may affect the evidence
needed to support a contingent award of fees that have not yet been incurred. Granite points us to
a court of appeals case citing El Apple that required an attorney to establish the reasonableness of
contingent appellate fees with the same level of specificity as fees already earned. See Sentinel
Integrity Sols., Inc. v. Mistras Grp., Inc., 414 S.W.3d 911, 928–29 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.]
2013, pet. denied). As we explained in Rohrmoos Venture, however, “[i]t should have been clear
from our opinion[] in El Apple” that the lodestar analysis applies to situations “in which an
objective calculation of reasonable hours worked . . . can be employed.” 578 S.W.3d at 498.
That is not the situation with respect to contingent appellate fees, which have not yet been
incurred and thus must be projected based on expert opinion testimony. See Ventling v. Johnson,
466 S.W.3d 143, 156 (Tex. 2015) (“An award of [contingent] appellate attorney’s fees to a party
is essentially an award of fees that have not yet been incurred . . . .”). At the point when fees are
awarded by the trial court, any appeal is still hypothetical. See id. There is no certainty regarding
who will represent the appellee in the appellate courts, what counsel’s hourly rate(s) will be, or
what services will be necessary to ensure appropriate representation in light of the issues the
appellant chooses to raise.
Of course, this uncertainty does not excuse a party seeking to recover contingent appellate
fees from the need to provide opinion testimony about the services it reasonably believes will be
27
necessary to defend the appeal and a reasonable hourly rate for those services.12 Having
independently reviewed the record, we conclude the Peyton Group’s uncontroverted evidence met
that standard.
B. The Uniform Declaratory Judgments Act permits an award of fees for
defending contingent claims.
Granite also argues that the fees awarded to the Peyton Group under the Uniform
Declaratory Judgments Act (UDJA) were impermissible because Granite’s claim seeking a
declaration of proportionate royalty reduction was not decided by the trial court due to its
contingent nature. Granite observes that its claim for royalty reduction would not arise unless the
Yowells first prevailed on their claims against Granite, which did not occur in the trial court.
Granite contends the Peyton Group should not be awarded fees for defending against such a claim.
The UDJA provides: “In any proceeding under this chapter, the court may award costs and
reasonable and necessary attorney’s fees as are equitable and just.” CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE
§ 37.009. The plain language of the UDJA authorizes courts to award equitable and just fees in
any proceeding under the Act; it does not require the trial court to consider or render judgment on
the merits of that claim. Castro v. McNabb, 319 S.W.3d 721, 735 (Tex. App.—El Paso 2009, no
pet.) (“The [UDJA] does not require a judgment on the merits of the dispute as a prerequisite to a
fee award.”).13
12
See, e.g., Assoun v. Gustafson, 493 S.W.3d 156, 168 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2016, pet. denied) (holding there
was insufficient evidence in the record to support award of contingent appellate fees when there was no testimony that
“included an opinion of what a reasonable attorney’s fees would be for the services that would be necessary in the
event of an appeal”); State & Cty. Mut. Fire Ins. Co. v. Walker, 228 S.W.3d 404, 408–10 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth
2007, no pet.) (holding there was sufficient evidence to support the award of appellate attorneys’ fees when the
attorney testified, without contradiction from opposing counsel, what he believed “a reasonable attorney’s fee would
be for the services that would ‘necessarily need to be rendered’ in the event of an appeal”).
13
See also Feldman v. KPMG LLP, 438 S.W.3d 678, 685 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2014, no pet.)
(adopting Castro court’s holding that the UDJA does not require a judgment on the merits as a prerequisite to a fee
28
Granite points to the court of appeals’ holding in EOG Resources, Inc. v. Wagner & Brown,
Ltd., 202 S.W.3d 338 (Tex. App.—Corpus Christi–Edinburg 2006, pet. denied). The EOG court
affirmed a trial court’s denial of attorneys’ fees for a claim pleaded “as a separate and alternative
cause of action” because it was not before the trial court due to its contingent nature. Id. at 347.
But that case applied section 91.406 of the Natural Resources Code, which provides stricter
parameters for an award of fees. Id.; TEX. NAT. RES. CODE § 91.406. Section 91.406 permits an
award of attorneys’ fees only “in any final judgment in favor of the plaintiff”; in contrast, the
UDJA permits a fee award in “any proceeding” within its purview. Compare NAT. RES. CODE
§ 91.406, with CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE § 37.009. The EOG court correctly held that the trial
court could refuse to award attorneys’ fees pursuant to section 91.406 because the party’s
alternative claim had not yet resulted in a final judgment. EOG Res., 202 S.W.3d at 348. The
UDJA’s language is broader, permitting an award of attorneys’ fees for defending against a UDJA
claim without a final judgment on the merits of that claim. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE § 37.009.
We affirm the court of appeals’ judgment on the issue of attorneys’ fees because there is
legally sufficient evidence in the record to support the trial court’s award of contingent attorneys’
fees, and because the UDJA does not prohibit a trial court from awarding attorneys’ fees to a party
defending against a contingent claim for declaratory judgment.
CONCLUSION
We affirm the court of appeals’ judgment in part regarding the indemnity agreement and
attorneys’ fees. We reverse the judgment in part regarding the validity of the Yowells’ ORRI and
award); Devon Energy Prod. Co. v. KCS Res., LLC, 450 S.W.3d 203, 220 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2014,
pet. denied) (same); Zurita v. SVH-1 Partners, Ltd., No. 03-10-00650-CV, 2011 WL 6118573, at *8 (Tex. App.—
Austin Dec. 8, 2011, pet. denied) (same).
29
the applicability of the reformation statute. We remand the case for the court of appeals to consider
whether the Yowells’ interest can be reformed to comply with the Rule, as well as any other
grounds for summary judgment the court did not reach.
____________________________________
J. Brett Busby
Justice
OPINION DELIVERED: May 15, 2020
30