Crews v. General Crude Oil Company
Crews v. General Crude Oil Company
Opinion of the Court
The suit is in trespass to try title to recover interests purportedly conveyed by a mineral lease, the ground of suit being that the land leased was the homestead of the lessors, namely, the plaintiffs, R. F. Crews and wife, C. A. Crews, and that the wife never made any acknowledgment of the lease.
This lease was dated February 11, 1948, and, subject to royalties reserved by lessors, it purportedly conveyed the oil, gas. and other minerals in a number of lots, totaling 1.8 acres, in Kountze, in Hardin County, for a primary term of five years and as long thereafter as production of minerals was made under said lease. It was an “unless” lease, and it provided for annual delay rentals.
The lease was signed by both lessors. The lessee was the defendant S. P. Benck-enstein. Subject to a reservation of royalties in his behalf, the defendant Bencken-stein assigned this lease to the defendant General Crude Oil Company by an instrument dated February 16, 1948 (the stipulation at S.F. 46 seems in conflict with this paper) ; and by an instrument dated January 17, 1950, he assigned a part of his reserved royalty to the defendant James F. Parker. The defendant General Crude assigned one-half of its interest to the defendant Sohio Petroleum Corporation by an instrument dated July 27, 1950.
It appears from allegations of the petition that in March, 1952, the defendants General Crude and Sohio began the drilling of a well on one of the lots leased and subsequently completed the well as a producer, ■and that they have continuously produced minerals from the well since a date in April, 1952.
This suit was filed on February 23, 1954, about twenty-two months after production began. The lessors were the plaintiffs, as we have stated, and the defendants were the lessee and the other three parties named above, claiming, under him. The cause was tried to a jury, and in response to the only special issue submitted, the jury returned a finding in .behalf of the plaintiff lessors, namely, that the' wife did not appear before the notary and acknowledge her execution of the lease. Defendants then moved for judgment non obstante veredicto, and this motion was granted and judgment was rendered in behalf of the defendants jointly, awarding them the interests purportedly conveyed by the lease. That is, the judgment established the validity of the lease as respects all of the land leased, in behalf of all persons claiming under it. From this judgment the plaintiffs have appealed.
Opinion
(1) It is not denied that the plaintiffs were married and were maintaining a home together at all times material to the questions to be determined.
(2) No question as to what constituted the plaintiffs’ homestead on the date of the lease and since was submitted to the jury; but we think that the evidence shows as a matter of law'that at least a part of the land leased, namely, lots 8 and 7 and probably lot 6, of Block 4 of the J. J. Allums 2nd Addition, was homestead on the date
The well is not op this part of the land leased. It is 136 feet north of the -residence, on lot 3 of said Block 4, 'and lot .3 is one of a group of. four, lots (numbered from.l to 4, inclusive) forming onh tract, which face or abut ón the sam'e street as do the residence and the three residential lots but which are separated from'the three residential lots by a lot 5 which apparently does not belong to the plaintiffs. At. least there is no evidence that plaintiffs own it. The dimensions of these various lots were not proved, but Mr. Sawyer’s map shows them to be rectangular, and of the same size.
For evidence that the lot on which the well is located was a part- of the homestead at the date of the lease- (and also that lots leased other than the three residential lots were, too), the plaintiffs must depend' on testimony of Mr. Coe and of the plaintiff Mrs. C. A. Crews, but the map and other testimony of Mr. Sawyer, the surveyor, must also be considered. It is not necessary to discuss the testimony of Mrs. Crews. As regards Mr. Coe, he testified on cross-examination that he “was away during that time,” referring to the year 1948 in which the lease was signed. The statement is general, but it indicates that at least some of Mr. Coe’s testimony about the year 1948 was hearsay. This would not be true of his testimony respecting other years. Further, Mr. Coe’s testimony is too indefinite and in terms too general to show as a matter of law, if at all, that the homestead extends beyond the three residential lots (Nos. 8, 7 and 6), when, it is considered with Mr. Sawyer’s map and testimony showing how the property leased was divided into non-contiguous tracts. Mr. Sawyer’s map was not questioned and his testimony about the separation and location of the various tracts was not contradicted. The photograph, defendants’ exhibit 1, does not show as a matter of law that the site of the well was a part of plaintiffs’ yard when it was taken. It must be considered with defendants’ exhibit 12, and both photographs taken together indicate that the area near the well is-not cared for as a part of ■ the yard and that the lots, Nos. 1 and 2, on the side away from the residence, are not used for any purpose. As regards lot 3, on which the well is situated, and the other three lots which with it form a single tract, namely, lots 1, 2 and 4, it seems to u-s that the plaintiffs have done no more, if they got that far, than make an issue for the jury, whether this property was a part of the homestead at the date of the lease. It is not necessary for us to determine whether the evidence actually did make this issue, for the question was not submitted to the jury and so was waived.
The lease covered four other lots in said Block 4, which we have not mentioned, namely, lots 9, 11, 13 and IS; but there is no evidence that these were a part of the homestead on the date of the lease, and there is no evidence that any of the other lots leased which are not in said Block 4 were ever a part of the homestead.
(3) Mrs. C. A. Crews testified that she never appeared before the notary whose ' certificate of acknowledgment is appended to the lease, or before any other notary. 'She said that the lessee’s agent came to her house, procured her signature to the lease, and took the lease away with him, and “I believe they told me that it was carried up to Mr. Englin’s office and fixed up ” When she got this information the evidence does not show. The agent, Pipkin, and the notary, Englin, both testified that they went together to Mrs. Crews’ house and that she signed the lease there and then acknowledged her execution of the lease to the notary as the law requires.
(4)The issue submitted to the jury, with the jury’s answer, was as follows: “Do you find from a preponderance of the evidence that Mrs. Cora A. Crews did not, on the occasion in question, appear before Frederick L. Englin in her home and acknowledge the instrument in question to him?.” Answer: “She did not appear and acknowledge said instrument.”
Defendants make this counterpoint: “The jury finding that Cora Crews did not appear and acknowledge the lease is not a finding that she did not appear or acknowledge the lease; and, under Rule 279 [Texas Rules of Civil Procedure], a finding that she did appear is presumed in support of the judgment.”
We construe the finding as meaning that Mrs. Crews did not appear before the notary. The issue made by the evidence has been stated and this makes plain the finding of the jury. There was no evidence that Mrs. Crews did appear before the notary but did not acknowledge her execution of the lease, or did not fully acknowledge it, and the trial court obviously was attempting to submit the .only issue made by the evidence. Further, special issues considered in Robertson v. Vernon, Tex.Com.App., 12 S.W.2d 991, were in analogous form and were so construed.
(5) There was no evidence that Mrs. C. A. Crews ever ratified the lease so that it became effective. After the lease was made the marriage continued to exist. Defendants do not claim an abandonment of any part of the surface except that enclosed by the fence around the well and the circumstances show that the homestead did continue on the residential lots. Mrs. Crews said that she never did acknowledge execution of the- lease. So, to accomplish a ratification by Mrs. Crews, the wife, she must, have executed a writing and duly acknowledged her execution thereof so as thereby to comply at least indirectly with the provisions of statutes and of Art. 16, § 50, Vernon’s Ann.St.Const., pertaining to a conveyance of the homestead. For statutes see: Arts. 1300, 4618, 6605 and 6608, Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St. For constructions of the constitutional provision and of some of these statutes see: Green v. Windham; 115 Tex. 162, 278 S.W. 1101; Stallings v. Hullum, 89 Tex. 431, 35 S.W. 2; Garner v. Black,. 95 Tex. 125, at pages 130-131, 65 S.W. 876; Nunn, Texas Homesteads, Sections 9 and 10;. 22 Tex.Jur. 124, Sec. 87. Also see: Humble Oil & Refining Co. v. Downey, 143 Tex. 171, 183 S.W.2d 426. Concerning ratification see: Thomas v. Williams, 50 Tex. 269, at page 275; Logan v. Aiken, Tex.Civ.App., 123 S.W.2d 401; Hill v. McIntyre Drilling Co., Tex.Civ.App., 59 S.W.2d 193, at page 197; Cleveland v. Milner, 141 Tex. 120, 170 S.W.2d 472, at page 476 (Hn. 7); Woods v. Alvarado State Bank, 118 Tex. 586, at page 592, 19 S.W.2d 35, at pages. 36-37; Grissom v. Anderson, 125 Tex. 26, 79 S.W.2d 619; Gose v. Burnett, Tex.Civ.App., 60 S.W.2d 886.
We do not agree with the defendants that the evidence shows any appropriation by Mrs. Crews of the delay rental payments; but if she had appropriated these payments, this act would only be an appropriation of proceeds of the lease and would not effect a ratification of the lease or, considered alone, an estoppel against Mrs.
(6) The principal contention made in support of the trial court’s judgment is, that Mrs. C. A. Crews is estopped as a matter of law to deny the validity of the lease (not to recover the well but to deny the validity of the lease) even if the homestead was situated on property leased when the lease was made. We have mentioned the evidence concerning the signature and acknowledgment of the lease by Mrs. Crews and the jury’s finding that she did not acknowledge it. The other evidence pertaining to the contention of estoppel is the following:
a. The property leased was the community property of the lessors on the date of the lease.
b. Lessee’s agent delivered his check for $155 to the husband on the date of the lease in payment of the consideration stated in the lease. The agent testified that he delivered it to Mr. Crews, not to the wife, Mrs. C. A. Crews. This check was payable to Mr. Crews alone and it was endorsed by him alone, and as we construe the testimony of the wife it does not show that she participated in any action concerning the check or its proceeds. See : S.F. 76-77. She had no power of control over check or proceeds.
c. The lease provided for annual delay rentals of $15.50, and the defendant General Crude paid these rentals annually for four years into the depository bank named in the lease, directing the bank in the case of each payment to credit the payment to-the lessors jointly, that is, to both Mr. and Mrs. Crews, and the bank credited these payments as directed. However, there is; no evidence that the plaintiffs, or either of them, have appropriated any of these payments; and, the deposits being credited to. lessors jointly, Mrs. C. A. Crews’ testimony (S.F. 77) that she and her husband had never signed any checks jointly indicates; that the rentals never had been appropriated. This testimony does indicate that Mrs. Crews had at some time learned of the deposits, but it does not prove this as a matter of law.
d. Mrs. Crews and her husband occupied the residence while the well was being drilled and so knew that the well was being-drilled from the time that this operation-began, and it seems plain from all of the circumstances that neither made any objection to this. The cost of the well was very great. Mr. Cutbirth, who testified that he was a vice-president, and the manager of the Land Department of the defendant General Crude, testified as follows: “That well completed cost approximately $120,-000.00, exclusive of the tank batteries^ That was another $7,000 or $8,000, making, total cost of approximately $127,000 or $128,000.”
It must also be true that both of the plaintiffs knew the well was being drilled under the lease, and so knew, or were necessarily charged with knowing, that the defendants were asserting a right to act under the lease.
It is not so clear to us that the evidence proves that the defendants General Crude, Sohio and Parker were ignorant of the-facts concerning the acknowledgment before the well was begun or completed, or that the' defendants General Crude and So-hio were misled by Mrs. Crews’ 'conduct when they drilled the well (Mr. Parke» did
The conduct of Mrs. Crews, the wife, now to be considered is, of course, simple inaction and silence, involving no affirmative representations nor any affirmative ■suppression of facts, and if it produce an ■estoppel against the wife it does so by virtue of her mere acquiescence in the drilling of an expensive well on her homestead while she was in possession of the homestead. Furthermore, nothing in the way of a fraudulent intent accompanying her inaction was proved against Mrs. Crews as a matter of law. Testimony of Mrs. Crews at S.F. 73 shows that at some time she learned that a notary’s certificate had been made, but the evidence does not show when she got this information. And her testimony made an issue for the jury, whether she knew when she signed the lease that she had to acknowledge her execution of it before a notary; and when she did learn the necessity of such an acknowledgment does not appear. What would be a fraud (or other conduct) sufficient to estop Mrs. Crews, the wife, from denying the validity of the lease we shall not undertake to say, but it seems to us that, on these conclusions, the facts which were proved as a matter of law do not include any element of fraudulent intent by Mrs. Crews while the well was being drilled.
In determining the effect of such conduct on the part of the wife, it is to be borne in mind that the burden of proof to show estoppel is on him who claims one in his behalf. Nixon v. Hirschi, 134 Tex. 415, 136 S.W.2d 583. Further, that under the evidence none of the defendants could be innocent purchasers as regards Mrs. Crews’ failure to acknowledge execution of the lease. See: Wheelock v. Cavitt, 91 Tex. 679, 45 S.W. 796; Yaseen v. Green, Tex.Civ.App., 140 S.W. 824; Cosgrove v. Nelson, Tex.Civ.App., 269 S.W. 891, affirmed on other grounds Tex.Com.App., 277 S.W. 1118; Lummus v. Alma State Bank, Tex.Civ.App., 4 S.W.2d 195., .at page 198. And see- again: Humble Oil & Refining Co. v. Downey, 183 S.W.2d 426, at page 428. On the evidence the defendants either knew, or were charged with knowledge of Mrs.- Crews’- marital status and o-f the homestead’s existence when the lease was made and when the well was drilled, and so were charged with notice of the legal consequences of these facts. See: Daniel v. Mason, 90 Tex. 240, 38 S.W. 161; Johnson v. Bryan, 62 Tex. 623, at page 626. For an illustration of the effect which constructive notice ‘ of another’s rights may have as regards the matter of estoppel see: Colquitt v. Eureka Producing Co., Tex.Com.App., 63 S.W.2d 1018, motion for rehearing overruled, Tex.Com.App., 67 S.W.2d 224. Further, the Supreme Court has held that a wife’s mere acquiescence in the erection of valuable improvements on the homestead did not estop.her to reclaim the property, although this decision doubtless now must be considered with others involving the- matter of abandonment. Eckhardt v. Schlecht, 29 Tex. 129: And it has several times been held that a wife’s mere acquiescence in the. erection of valuable improvements on her separate property under an invalid conveyance did not estop her or her heirs to attack the conveyance for. noncompliance -with the statutory requirements pertaining- thereto. See: Williams v. Ellingsworth, 75 Tex. 480, 12 S.W. 746, commented upon in McLaren v. Jones, 89 Tex. 131, at page 135, 33 S.W. 849; Johnson v. Bryan, 62 Tex. 623; Fitzgerald v. Turner, 43 Tex. 79; Berry v. Donley, 26 Tex. 737; Steed v. Petty, 65 Tex. 490; Cole v. Bammel, 62 Tex. 108, at page 115 et seq., on motion for rehearing. The matter of abandonment which may occur in the case of a home
Furthermore, it is the rule that where one is .only inactive and silent, he will not be estopped for failing to speak unless it can be said that he was under a duty to- speak, and normally that duty does not exist when one does not know what his rights are, although, perhaps, he may be bound to know them under some circumstances. See: Moore v. Carey Bros. Oil Co., Tex.Com.App., 272 S.W. 440, 39 A.L.R. 1247; Wright v. Bonta, 19 Tex. 385; Richey v. Miller, 142 Tex. 274, 177 S.W.2d 255, 170 A.L.R. 832; Gulbenkian v. Penn, 151 Tex. 412, 252 S.W.2d 929, at page 932. Our 'conclusions regarding the evidence show that it was not proved as a matter of law that Mrs. Crews, the wife, knew that she had any right to object to the drilling of the well. Was she bound to know this, as against the defendants? Such knowledge may involve or even depend on knowledge of -a matter of law, to wit, the legal necessity of her acknowledgment of the lease. ' Was she, as against the defendants, charged with such knowledge of the law pertaining to this matter that she was bound to speak when they began the well or be subjected to an estoppel regarding well or lease? We think not, for if she were, the requirement of her acknowledgment of the lease would simply be abrogated in this situation, and it is in this situation that the rules of decision just stated have charged the defendants with knowledge of facts and law. Concerning this matter see: Yaseen v. Green, Tex.Civ.App., 140 S.W. 824; Cosgrove v. Nelson, Tex.Civ.App., 269 S.W. 891, affirmed on other grounds Tex.Com.App., 277 S.W. 1118; Burkhardt v. Lieberman, 138 Tex. 409, 159 S.W.2d 847, at page 852 (discussion of abandonment). The wife was not charged with such a burden in the cases involving improvement of her separate property. Normally, the defendants would be bound to determine for themselves, before they began the well, that the law governing the conveyance - of the homestead had been complied with, and the evidence now under consideration does not take- the defendants out of this rule as a matter of law.
We hold that the evidence does not show as a matter of law that Mrs. C. A. Crews was estopped to deny the validity of the lease on the ground on which she now .attacks it.
(7) We have discussed matters pertaining to the validity of the lease as a whole, and we turn now to the question, whether the plaintiffs had any right to the well. As we have stated, the plaintiffs knew that the well was being drilled but made no objection to it. Mrs. Crews said that it took' six weeks to drill the well. This operation required the use of a part of the land leased, and the nature of the operation implies that the use was exclusive, that the area so used ceased to be in the possession of the plaintiffs, and that it was in the exclusive possession of the defendant General Crude or of said defendant and its associate, the Sohio, while the operation continued. Upon completion of the well the drilling equipment was removed, and what is referred to in the evidence as a flow line was attached to the well. This line is pictured in defendants exhibits 1 and 12; it is a pipe which carries the product of the well away from the property. About twenty days after the well was
We attach no significance, on the evidence before us, to the fact that the area abandoned, if of the homestead, was only a part of the leasehold in suit. Furthermore, we attach no significance to the-fdct that the exécution of a valid lease of the oil, gas and other minerals like that in suit is not, itself, an abandonment of the lessors’ homestead right in the surface and in the other interests retained by them. See: Thompson v. Thompson, 149 Tex. 632, 236 S.W.2d 779. Nor do we attach any significance to the fact that among the interests retained by lessors under a lease like that in suit is a rever-sionary interest and that the lessees’ interests end when production stops. For if we are correct in the assumption stated, the- plaintiffs had plainly given up to the defendants the area within the fence before this controversy began, and we think that on the facts summarized, we could say as a matter of law that until this controversy began the plaintiffs had no more definite or immediate intention of resuming-the use of the area within the fence as a part of their homestead than have claimants iñ cases where a part of the homestead has been appropriated for tenant houses or other rental properties apart from the residence and its appurtenances. See: Medlenka v. Downing, supra; Atwood v. Guaranty Construction Co., Tex.Com.App., 63 S.W.2d 685; Mays v. Mays, Tex.Civ.App., 43 S.W.2d 148; Strang v. Pray, supra. The lessee’s interest under the lease in suit is a determinable fee and, production occurring as it has here, this interest will exist indefinitely and may do so forever. See: Summers, Oil and Gas, Sec. 165. This is true of the well in suit, and the appropriation of surface made by the defendants- General Crude and • Sohio for the purposes of the well, a use inconsistent with use of the appropriated area for the purposes of a homestead, must be measured accordingly. It is not unfair to assume that the plaintiffs were aware of these matters, at • least after the well proved to be a producer. The rule of de-
The defendants argue that the abandonment is not limited to the area supporting and enclosed by the fence around the well and that the abandonment extends to all of the minerals conveyed by the lease, under as well as beyond the limits of any homestead, but we overrule this contention because of the conclusions just stated. That is, abandonment of the homestead right in the minerals would vali-. date the lease as regards the area abandoned and would therefore subject the surface above these minerals to use for the purposes of the lease; and this use, when actually made, would manifestly be inconsistent with use of the surface for the purposes of a homestead. Consequently, the fact that the plaintiffs continued to use and occupy the remainder of the .homestead while abandoning to the defendants the small area within the fence about the well shows that they intended nothing which would interfere with their use of the remainder of the homestead. And abandonment, as decisions already cited show, involves intention. Of the plaintiffs, we cannot say that the wife, at least, intended any such result as the defendants contend for. We think that the rule concerning adverse possession of minerals applied by this court in Kilpatrick v. Gulf Production Co., Tex.Civ.App., 139 S.W.2d 653, at page 657, is not applicable to this case, because this case involves a matter of intention not involved in that case. And we do not agree with defendants that the husband can abandon the minerals in the homestead without the wife’s consent while the homestead continues in the surface. Nor can we, as the defendants suggest in the alternative, segregate the surface of the residential lots, denying defendants access to this, while at the same time decreeing an abandonment of the minerals in these lots. For if abandonment of minerals means anything it validates the lessee’s rights in the surface, as we have stated; and these provisions of a decree would be inconsistent.
(8) The primary term of the lease has. expired, but the evidence about the payment of delay rentals and the plaintiffs’ allegations about the drilling of the well and the production had therefrom show that the lease is in force, if it is not invalid for lack of the wife’s acknowledgment.
(9) The lease is valid as regards that part of the property leased which was not a part of the homestead when the lease was signed and delivered to the lessee’s agent, but the evidence concerning the area and location of the homestead has not been fully developed. There are other uncertainties in the evidence. The cause, therefore, will be remanded generally.
The judgment of the trial court is reversed and the cause is remanded.
070rehearing
On Motions for Rehearing
Both parties have filed motions for rehearing.
Appellants’ motion is overruled. As regards Ground 2, plaintiffs’ allegations, about the drilling of a well and production. from this well are not made in the alternative and are not inconsistent with other' allegations of theirs.
Appellees’ motion is granted in part-Ground I assigns as error that the trial, court’s judgment should have been affirmed, as to the fenced area about the well. We-have reexamined the evidence and have concluded that, from all the circumstances, in proof, the evidence being considered as-a whole, it appears as a matter of law that the plaintiffs acquiesced in the exclusive appropriation of the area supporting and', enclosed by the fence around the well,, made by those of the defendants who. drilled this well, and did in fact abandon this area as a part of their homestead, if ever it was. a part of that homestead. There is no field note description of this area in the record, but Mr. Sawyer’s map shows that well and fence are on lot 3 of
We do not agree with appellees’ interpretation of the Commission’s opinion in Peterman v. Harborth, Tex.Com.App., 300 S.W. 33. The Commission did not give effect to a conveyance of homestead property. Instead, they gave effect to a conveyance of land which was not homestead. This land, because of the abandonment, had ceased to be homestead, and so the parol conveyance was enabled to operate as in other cases.
We remain of the opinion that the plaintiffs’ abandonment did not extend beyond the fenced area around the well. Abandonment of homestead rights is matter of intention and we see no reason to extend the intention beyond the surrender actually made; and this surrender was of a part only of the area alleged to be homestead. Retention and continued use of the rest of the homestead for homestead purposes logically ought to be, and we think is, a circumstance indicating that the owner intended nothing inconsistent with continuance of such use, and appropriation of any part of the surface for the purpose of the lease would be inconsistent, in fact,, with continuance of homestead use. Assuming for discussion, as we have done, that the well is on property once homestead, the question simply is, did the homestead owners intend to abandon more than: they actually gave up. Decisions that execution of an oil/gas lease does not, of itself, effect an abandonment of homestead’ rights in land leased are not in point because the intention to subordinate the surface to use for lease purposes is settled by an expression of intention and such a question as exists in this case does not exist in those cases.
Appellees have filed an offer to surrender the surface estate in lots 8, 7 and 6, and this, we assume, was done to support their contention that abandonment extended to all interests purportedly conveyed by the lease, by removing the possibility of interfering with homestead uses by using this surface area to get at the minerals below, or for other lease purposes. However, appellants have refused to accept this offer, and so the offer cannot be given any effect, since abandonment either did or did not occur before this suit was filed. If no abandonment happened, this offer cannot now effectuate one and so cannot help the argument that one should be declared.
On Appellees’ Second Motion for Rehearing
Grounds Land II are overruled on the authority of Colbert v. Dallas Joint Stock Land Bank of Dallas, 129 Tex. 235, at pages 244, 245, 102 S.W.2d 1031, at page 1036. The evidence pertaining to these grounds
Ground V apparently assigns error to our conclusion that the evidence proves as a matter of law that the lots on which plain-tiffs’ residence is situated were homestead property on the date of the lease. We have reconsidered this evidence and we adhere to our conclusion. The defendants, that is, the appellees, did not contest this- issue in the trial court yet plainly could have done so for, of their witnesses, at least Pipkin, Englin and Tebbs had information about the facts. On the other hand, the parties stipulated that the property, was community on the date of the lease. The photograph of the plaintiffs’ dwelling, defendants’ exhibit 1, shows shrubbery and trees which must be several years old. Mrs. Crews’ description of the dwelling where she signed the lease shows that it was the home of herself and her husband, and she described it and the dwelling in which she resided at the time of the trial in such a way as to identify the two. Her statements identifying trees destroyed by the drilling.- operations with trees on the property leased tend toward the same end. Mr. Coe’s testimony on direct examination shows that he was 29 years old at the time of trial, that he had been familiar with the property all of his 1¾, and that plaintiffs, who were his grandparents, had resided on the property all of that time. Plis testimony on cross-examination is consistent with this. That he was away in, or at some time in, 1948 does not detract from the force of his testimony concerning the long period before and after that year; and persistence of residence during the time of his actual knowledge is strong confirmation of Mrs. Crews’ testimony. Mr. Coe identified the photograph of plaintiffs’ present dwelling, defendants’ exhibit 1, as the plaintiffs’ house and said that "the house seems to be just like it always was.” This is plainly the house he had always known as plaintiffs’ residence. We have referred to defendants’ witnesses Pipkin, Englin and Tebbs. Mr. Pipkin said that after he procured Mr. Crews’ signature, he and Mr: Englin went over to “his residence”, that is, Mr. Crews’ residence, and procured Mrs. Crews’ signature and acknowledgment. On the date of the lease,' Mr. Englin, the notary, resided in the same town in which plaintiffs resided and he has lived there since. He said that he and Mr. Pipkin “went first to the store of" Mr. Crews over on the highway and I took his acknowledgment and then we went to the home of Mrs. Crews and took her acknowledgment to this instrument.” He said: “I believe the house faces east.” This statement is in accord with Mrs. Crews’ description of the house in which she signed the lease. Mr. Tebbs said that he had lived all of his life in Kountze, the town in which the property was situated; that he had known plaintiffs all of his life; and that he had had occasion to go on the premises many times before the well was drilled; and that he had only seen the plaintiffs in the house. Mrs. Crews’ testimony. shows that plaintiffs resided on the property while the well was being drilled. On the evidence, the question, whether any of the property leased was plaintiffs’ homestead on the date of the lease, depends on whether the house in which Mrs. Crews signed the lease is the same house in which she resided when the well was drilled and the cause was tried, and we think that the evidence proves as a matter of law that this was true. The statements of the defendants’ witnesses and, under the circumstances, defendants’ acquiescence in the testimony of Mrs. Crews and Mr. Coe afford sufficient confirmation of that testimony if any confirmation 'be needed.
Other • grounds for rehearing have been considered but are overruled, and appellees’, that- is, defendants’ second motion for rehearing is denied.
070rehearing
On Appellants’ Second Motion for Rehearing
Since our last opinion was filed, overruling appellees’ second motion for rehearing, the appellants have filed their own second motion for rehearing, and the ap-pellees, in reply, have filed a motion to strike it because it was filed after the time
The language referred to in the opinion of June 29th is the direction to the trial court “to render final judgment in defendants’ behalf, that plaintiffs take nothing as regards said land”; the land referred to is the small fenced, area about the well. This language in the opinion of June 29th was made with reference to the lease, not with reference to the title to the land independent of the lease, and so the trial court, in complying with our instructions on remand, should not simply render judgment that appellants take nothing as regards this fenced area but, instead, should render judgment that appellants (the plaintiffs) take nothing against the appellees (the defendants) as regards the estates, rights, interests and privileges in, respecting or appertaining to, said fenced area which the oil, gas and mineral lease in . suit purports to convey. The clerk is directed to draft the judgment of this court accordingly.
But to refer again to appellants’ second motion for rehearing: The' contention based oh paragraph 5 of the lease (which constitutes that part of the motion other than the criticism of language in our opinion of June 29th) would be overruled if the motion to strike had not been filed. If succeeding provisions of paragraph 5, with provisions concerning rental which are in paragraphs 3, 6, 8 and 9 of the lease, do not provide for annual delay rentals, then under paragraph 2, the lease would run for five years without rentals, and the well was drilled within this five years.
Reference
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- Robert F. CREWS Et Ux., Appellants, v. GENERAL CRUDE OIL COMPANY Et Al., Appellees
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