Carl M. Archer Trust No. Three, Mary Frances G. Archer Trust No. Three, and Mary Archer Dixon and Carla Archer Johnson, Trustees v. Ronald Ralph Tregellas and Donnita Tregellas
Carl M. Archer Trust No. Three, Mary Frances G. Archer Trust No. Three, and Mary Archer Dixon and Carla Archer Johnson, Trustees v. Ronald Ralph Tregellas and Donnita Tregellas
Opinion
This case concerns whether the statute of limitations bars a claim for breach of a recorded right of first refusal to purchase a mineral interest. The grantors of the right conveyed the mineral interest to a third party without notifying the holders. More than four years later, the rightholders learned of the conveyance and sued the third party for breach, seeking specific performance. The trial court rendered judgment for the holders, but the court of appeals reversed, holding that the statute of limitations bars the claim. Specifically, the court of appeals held that the rightholders' cause of action accrued when the grantors conveyed the property without notice and that the discovery rule does not apply to defer accrual. We agree with the court of appeals' first conclusion but disagree with the second. Accordingly, we reverse the court of appeals' judgment in part and reinstate the trial court's judgment.
I. Background
On June 12, 2003, members of the Cook family executed a warranty deed conveying the surface estate of a tract of land in Hansford County, Texas, 1 to the trustees of the Carl M. Archer Trust No. Three and the Mary Frances G. Archer Trust No. 3 (Trustees). 2 The sellers retained ownership of the mineral estate but separately granted Trustees a right of first refusal (ROFR) to purchase the minerals. The ROFR stated in relevant part:
[The Cooks] ... have sold and granted, and by these presence do hereby SELL and GRANT unto [Trustees] the Right of First Refusal to purchase the following land described as follows, to-wit:
....
Tract 4: All of the oil, gas, and other minerals in, on or under W/2 of Section 85, Block 4-T, T & NO Ry. Co. Survey, Ochiltree County, Texas.
....
This right of first refusal shall be construed to mean that in the event that [the grantors], or their successors and/or assigns, desire to sell any or all of the above described property, [Trustees], their heirs or assigns, shall have the right to purchase the property, at the same price and on the same terms and conditions as offered by any other bona fide buyer.
[Trustees] shall have sixty (60) days after receipt of said offer to either accept or reject said offer. In the event that [Trustees] do[ ] not elect to accept said offer, and the property is purchased by the bona fide buyer, set forth above, at the offered price, then this agreement shall be null and void and of no further force and effect, only as to the property so purchased ....
The warranty deed and ROFR were filed in the Hansford County property records on June 16, 2003.
Trustees' attorney subsequently discovered that the ROFR erroneously described the property as being in Ochiltree County rather than Hansford County. The attorney drafted a Right of First Refusal Correction accurately describing the county. That document was signed by some of the original ROFR grantors and filed in the Hansford County property records in September 2004.
On March 28, 2007, Sharon Sue Cook Farber and Rodney Farber-two of the ROFR grantors-executed a mineral deed conveying their interest in the Tract 4 minerals to Ronald Ralph Tregellas and Donnita Tregellas. The deed was recorded on March 30, 2007. Before conveying the interest, the Farbers did not notify Trustees of the Farbers' intent to sell or of the price, terms, and conditions of the Tregellases' offer. Nor were Trustees notified about the sale after the fact.
Trustees learned of the conveyance over four years later, on May 4, 2011, when they were advised of it by a prospective oil and gas lessee. The next day, Trustees sued the Farbers and the Tregellases for breach of the ROFR and tortious interference, alleging that Trustees had the right to purchase the conveyed interest, that they had not been given notice of the sale, and that they "desire to exercise their right to purchase the [conveyed] interest." 3 Trustees sought damages as well as specific performance, asking the trial court to order the "transfer of the property" from the Tregellases to Trustees. They also requested attorney's fees.
The defendants raised several affirmative defenses, including that the four-year statute of limitations barred the contract claims. Trustees ultimately amended their pleadings to nonsuit their claims against the Farbers and pursue relief against only the Tregellases. 4 In their amended pleadings, Trustees alleged that upon their receipt of notice in 2011 of the Farbers' conveyance to the Tregellases, Trustees' right of first refusal "ripened into" an option to purchase the conveyed interest at the same price and on the same terms and conditions, and that Trustees timely exercised that option by filing suit. They further alleged that the Tregellases purchased the interest with actual or constructive notice of the ROFR and thus "st[oo]d in the shoes of the Farber[s]." Trustees sought "specific performance of the contract created by their exercise of the option to purchase." They also pled that the statute of limitations did not bar their contract claims because (1) the contract at issue was created when Trustees exercised their option to purchase the mineral interest, which occurred less than four years before suit was filed, and alternatively (2) the discovery rule and the doctrine of fraudulent concealment tolled the limitations period.
After a bench trial, the trial court rendered judgment for Trustees and granted specific performance, ordering the Tregellases to convey the pertinent mineral interest to Trustees upon their deposit of the purchase price-set at $9,000, the amount the Tregellases had paid-into the court's registry. 5 The court also awarded Trustees their attorney's fees. In its findings of fact, the trial court concluded that by filing their original petition, Trustees "exercised their right of first refusal under the ROFR to purchase the Farber interest from the [Tregellases]." The trial court further found that the Farbers and the Tregellases did not disclose to Trustees that the Farbers were willing to sell their mineral interest, and that Trustees "did not know, nor in the exercise of reasonable care and diligence, should they have known that the Farbers were willing to sell their mineral interests ... until they were notified of same by a third party on May 4, 2011." Finally, the court found that, had Trustees been notified earlier of that fact, "they would have immediately filed suit to enforce their rights under the ROFR." In its conclusions of law, the court held that the Tregellases took the Farbers' mineral interest with notice of the ROFR and were not bona fide purchasers for value, that the statute of limitations did not bar Trustees' causes of action, and that Trustees were "entitled to specific performance of the ROFR."
The Tregellases appealed, arguing that the trial court erred in finding that the statute of limitations did not bar Trustees' claim.
6
The court of appeals agreed and reversed, holding that Trustees' cause of action for breach of contract accrued when the minerals were conveyed without notice.
Trustees filed petitions for review of both judgments. The petitions were consolidated for oral argument.
II. Analysis
A. Rights of First Refusal
Because Trustees' right of first refusal is central to this dispute, we begin with a discussion of the legal principles governing this interest. "A right of first refusal, also known as a preemptive or preferential right, empowers its holder with a preferential right to purchase the
subject property on the same terms offered by or to a bona fide purchaser."
Tenneco Inc. v. Enter. Prods. Co.
,
A grantor's sale of the burdened property to a third party without first offering it to the rightholder on the same terms constitutes a breach of contract.
Riley v. Campeau Homes (Tex.), Inc.
,
To that end, a person who purchases property with actual or constructive notice of a right of first refusal takes the property subject to that right.
See
Jarvis
,
Here, the Farbers sold their mineral interest to the Tregellases without notifying Trustees, despite the Farbers' obligation to first offer the interest to Trustees on the same terms. Pursuant to the trial court's unchallenged findings, the Tregellases purchased the interest with notice of the ROFR and thus stand in the Farbers' shoes with respect to Trustees' request for specific performance. In this Court, the Tregellases' sole challenge to the trial court's judgment granting specific performance is that Trustees' claim is barred by the statute of limitations as a matter of law. Accordingly, we address only that issue.
B. Statute of Limitations
1. Accrual of Cause of Action
The statute of limitations is an affirmative defense that serves to "establish a point of repose and to terminate stale claims."
Murray v. San Jacinto Agency, Inc.
,
As a general matter, "a cause of action accrues and the statute of limitations begins to run when facts come into existence that authorize a party to seek a judicial remedy."
Provident Life & Accident Ins. Co. v. Knott
,
Applying these principles, the court of appeals in this case held that Trustees' cause of action accrued "when [their] bargained-for right of first refusal had been dishonored and the agreement breached."
Trustees disagree with this reasoning and contend that their cause of action accrued not in 2007, when the Farbers sold the property without notifying Trustees, but in 2011, when Trustees attempted to exercise their option to purchase (by seeking specific performance), which only "ripened" once they learned of the earlier conveyance.
See
A.G.E.
,
We agree with the court of appeals that the rules governing the accrual of causes of action point to the date of conveyance as the accrual date for limitations purposes. Again, the ROFR was breached when the Farbers conveyed their mineral interest without notifying Trustees of the Tregellases' offer. At that point, Trustees' preemptive right was impaired despite the fact that the Tregellases took the property subject to that right. This is because even if Trustees retained the right to purchase the mineral interest (albeit from the Tregellases rather than the Farbers) once they learned of the conveyance, they lost their right to purchase the interest at the time contemplated by the ROFR:
before
the property was sold to a third party.
See
Further, a closer examination of Trustees' theory reveals its circular reasoning. As explained, Trustees argue that they were injured only when they attempted to exercise their option by seeking specific performance. Thus, according to Trustees, by suing for specific performance, they suffered an injury entitling them to sue for specific performance. At bottom, Trustees fail in their attempt to materially distinguish between an action to enforce the ROFR-which was breached by the Farbers in 2007-and an action to enforce a contract to purchase the mineral interest from the Tregellases, who acquired the interest subject to the ROFR. The genesis of both claims is a breach of the ROFR.
In sum, when the Farbers sold the burdened mineral interest to the Tregellases in March 2007 without first giving Trustees the opportunity to purchase it pursuant to the ROFR, "a wrongful act cause[d] a legal injury," authorizing Trustees to
"seek a judicial remedy."
Knott
,
2. Discovery Rule
The discovery rule is a "limited exception" to the general rule that a cause of action accrues when a legal injury is incurred.
BP Am. Prod. Co. v. Marshall
,
An injury is inherently undiscoverable when it is "unlikely to be discovered within the prescribed limitations period despite due diligence."
Via Net v. TIG Ins. Co.
,
The court of appeals held that Trustees' injury was not inherently undiscoverable.
We have held that the discovery rule applies in certain circumstances even though the injury could have been gleaned from reviewing publicly available information. For example, in
Kelley v. Rinkle
, we held that the rule delayed accrual of a libel action based on the submission of a false credit report to a reporting agency.
Using similar reasoning, courts have applied the discovery rule to a property owner's fraudulent-lien claims despite the lien's filing in the property records.
E.g.
,
Vanderbilt Mortg. & Fin., Inc. v. Flores
,
On the other hand, we have held that the discovery rule does not apply to royalty owners' claims of underpayment of royalties where "[r]eadily accessible and publicly available information" would have revealed the underpayments.
Shell Oil Co. v. Ross
,
The Tregellases argue that holders of first-refusal rights resemble royalty owners with a duty to verify a lessee's contractual compliance, while Trustees compare such rightholders to property owners with no duty to continually confirm that their title is not being unlawfully impugned. As the Tregellases note, a right of first refusal does not itself convey title to its holder. But we have described the right as a property interest that "runs with the land itself and thus ... is not a collateral or personal contract between the parties."
Stone v. Tigner
,
A right of first refusal has been described as "essentially a dormant option."
A.G.E.
,
In light of the grantor's duty to provide notice of an offer, the corresponding absence of the rightholder's duty to act before receipt of said notice, and the fact that a purchaser takes property subject to a recorded first-refusal right, we agree with Trustees that a rightholder who has been given no notice of the grantor's intent to sell or the existence of a third-party offer generally has no reason to believe that his interest may have been impaired. In turn, we cannot conclude that such a rightholder in the exercise of reasonable diligence would continually monitor public records for evidence of such an impairment. This is in stark contrast to a rightholder who, for example, learns of the existence of a third-party offer but is unable, despite a reasonable investigation, to clarify the offer's specific terms.
See
Comeaux v. Suderman
,
We therefore hold that a grantor's conveyance of property in breach of a right of first refusal, where the rightholder is given no notice of the grantor's intent to sell or the purchase offer, is inherently undiscoverable and that the discovery rule applies to defer accrual of the holder's cause of action until he knew or should have known of the injury. 10 In this instance, the opposing policies at play-on the one hand, preventing stale claims and on the other, discouraging deceptive conduct and ensuring claims are not barred before a party even knows he is injured-weigh in favor of applying the discovery rule.
Here, the trial court found that Trustees did not know of their injury, nor in the exercise of reasonable diligence should they have known, until May 4, 2011. Other than their general arguments regarding the nature of Trustees' injury, which we have rejected, the Tregellases do not challenge this finding. That is, the Tregellases point to no evidence that purportedly would or should have put Trustees on notice before May 2011 that the Farbers had (or even may have) conveyed the burdened mineral interest. Therefore, Trustees sued well within four years of the date the cause of action accrued, and the statute of limitations does not bar their claim.
C. Attorney's Fees
Because the court of appeals partially reversed the trial court's judgment on the merits, it also reversed the award of attorney's fees, severing and remanding that issue for reconsideration. In light of our reversal of the court of appeals' judgment on Trustees' underlying claims, the court's judgment as to attorney's fees similarly cannot stand. Accordingly, we reverse that judgment as well.
III. Conclusion
The court of appeals erred in reversing the portion of the trial court's judgment granting Trustees specific performance of the ROFR with respect to the Farbers'
conveyed mineral interest. Consequently, the court of appeals also erred in reversing the trial court's award of attorney's fees. We therefore reverse the court of appeals' judgment in part in Cause No. 17-0093, reverse the court's judgment in Cause No. 17-0094, and reinstate the trial court's judgment.
The sellers include Robert Lynn Cook, Sharon Sue Cook Farber, Brenda Jean Cook Smith, and Lacie Anne Baker Tidwell, individually and as co-trustees of the A.F. Cook Children's Trust, as well as those individuals' respective spouses, Sharon Kaye Cook, Rodney Farber, Ed Smith, and Trent Tidwell.
Trustees are Mary Archer Dixon and Carla Archer Johnson.
Trustees initially named the Tidwells-two other ROFR grantors-as additional defendants, alleging they similarly breached the ROFR by selling their undivided interest in the Tract 4 minerals to the Tregellases without notifying Trustees. The Tidwells answered that their conveyance to the Tregellases was "an oversight and unilateral mistake" and that the conveyance had been rescinded, leaving the parties "in the same position they were before the controversy was created." Trustees eventually nonsuited their claims involving the Tidwell interest.
After filing suit, Trustees learned that the Tregellases had also acquired the mineral interest of the two remaining ROFR grantors-the Smiths-and Trustees amended their petition to seek specific performance as to that interest as well. The trial court rendered judgment for Trustees as to the Smith interest, and the court of appeals affirmed.
The trial court also found that Trustees were entitled to recover $25,666.00 from the Tregellases "as the equitable adjustment required to put [Trustees] in the same position they would have been had the[y] been allowed to timely exercise their rights under the ROFR." Aside from their argument that Trustees' claims are time-barred, the Tregellases have not complained on appeal about this portion of the trial court's judgment.
The Tregellases also argued that the ROFR's incorrect description of the county rendered the ROFR "ineffective" under the statute of frauds. Both the trial court and the court of appeals rejected this argument,
Disputes often arise over whether a rightholder properly exercises the ripened option to purchase. We need not discuss the related legal principles because no such dispute is before us here.
To be entitled to specific performance, the party seeking such relief must plead and prove he was ready, willing, and able to timely perform his obligations under the contract.
DiGiuseppe v. Lawler
,
We note that Trustees appear to have controverted their own accrual theory by seeking (and obtaining) relief from the trial court in the form of an "equitable adjustment" of over $25,000, which, according to the court's findings, represents the total amount the Tregellases have received in lease bonuses and extension fees on the purchased mineral interest since the Farbers conveyed it to them in March 2007. If Trustees were not injured until they sued for specific performance on May 5, 2011, surely they would not be entitled to any lease benefits the Tregellases received before that date.
We limit our holding to this particular breach-conveyance with no notice of the intent to sell or the existence of an offer-of this particular type of right.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Carl M. ARCHER Trust No. Three, Mary Frances G. Archer Trust No. Three, and Mary Archer Dixon and Carla Archer Johnson, Trustees, Petitioners, v. Ronald Ralph TREGELLAS and Donnita Tregellas, Respondents Carl M. Archer Trust No. Three, Mary Frances G. Archer Trust No. Three, and Mary Archer Dixon and Carla Archer Johnson, Trustees, Petitioners, v. Ronald Ralph Tregellas and Donnita Tregellas, Respondents
- Cited By
- 58 cases
- Status
- Published