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APACHE DEEPWATER, LLC, v. MCDANIEL PARTNERS, LTD
Date: 02-26-2016
Case Number: 14-0546
Judge: John P. Devine
Court: IN THE SUPREME COURT OF TEXAS
Plaintiff's Attorney: Ms. Rachel Anne Ekery, Mr. Roger D. Townsend, Mr. Max E. Wright,
Ms. LaDawn H. Conway, Mr. Bruce M. Kramer
Defendant's Attorney: Mr. Barry F. Cannaday, Ms. Deborah G. Hankinson, Mr. William Richard Thompson,
Ms. Rebecca Adams Cavner
four oil and gas leaseholds. The four leases were assigned in one instrument. After two of the leases
terminated, a dispute arose over the production payment’s calculation. The payor asserted the
production payment should be reduced to reflect the loss of the underlying mineral-lease interests.
The payee disagreed, asserting the production payment burdened the four leases jointly and the
assignment included no language authorizing an adjustment to the payment.
The trial court concluded the production payment could be adjusted to account for the
termination of an underlying lease because the payment was carved respectively from the four leases.
The court of appeals disagreed. 441 S.W.3d 530, 531 (Tex. App.—El Paso 2014). It concluded (1)
the assignment fixed the production payment at a stated percentage of the cumulative working
interest assigned under the four leases, (2) the assignment provided no mechanism for reducing that
payment if one or more of the underlying leases expired, and (3) the fixed payment endured so long
as production continued under at least one of the assigned leases. Id. at 536-37. Because we agree
with the trial court’s construction of the assignment as allowing for the production payment’s
adjustment based on the expiration of an underlying lease, we reverse and render.
I
The assignment at issue dates back to 1953. In it, Hugh W. Ferguson, Jr., assigned to L.H.
Tyson four oil and gas leases Ferguson owned in Upton County, Texas. The four leases included
the Peterman, the Broudy, and two Cowden Leases. Cowden Lease 36 was entirely within Survey
36; Cowden Lease 37 was entirely within Survey 37. The Peterman and Broudy Leases covered both
Surveys 36 and 37. The Peterman and Broudy also included additional acreage outside these two
surveys, but the Peterman and Broudy Leases were assigned to Tyson only insofar as they covered
Surveys 36 and 37.
At the time of the assignment, the four leases represented a 35/64 mineral interest in the two
surveys, derived from the respective leases as follows:
Cowden Lease, Survey 36: 1/2 of Survey 36
Cowden Lease, Survey 37: 1/2 of Survey 37
Peterman Lease: 1/64 of Surveys 36 and 37
Broudy Lease: 2/64 of Surveys 36 and 37
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The two Cowden Leases thus comprised 32/64 of the working interest in Surveys 36 and 37, the
Peterman and Broudy Leases adding another 3/64. The leases also reserved a 1/8 royalty to the
lessors, leaving the operator a 7/8 working interest in the two surveys.
The assignment reserved to Ferguson a 1/16 production payment, which it described with the
following equation: “1/16th of 35/64ths of 7/8ths” of the total production from Surveys 36 and 37. 1
This descriptive equation included the fractional interest in production reserved from the conveyance
(1/16); the fraction of the mineral estate within Surveys 36 and 37 conveyed in 1953 under the four
leases (35/64); and the fraction representing the leasehold estate after subtracting the lessors’ 1/8
royalty interest (7/8). The assignment provided further that the production payment would continue
until net proceeds from the reserved interest amounted to $3.55 million and 1.42 million barrels of
oil.
About twenty years after Ferguson assigned the four leases, both Cowden Leases expired for
lack of production. Production on acreage outside of Surveys 36 and 37, however, perpetuated the
Peterman and Broudy Leases. These two leases were still held by production in 2009 when Apache,
as Tyson’s successor-in-interest, acquired its interest under the Ferguson assignment. Because
production under the Cowden Leases had ceased long before, the 3/64 mineral interest attributable
The assignment provides in pertinent part:1
Assignor reserves unto himself, his heirs, representatives and assigns, and there is expressly excepted from this conveyance as a “production payment interest,” the title to and ownership of one-sixteenth of thirty-five sixty-fourths of seven-eighths (1/16th of 35/64ths of 7/8ths, being one-sixteenth of the entire interest in the production from said lands to which Assignor claims to be entitled under the terms of said respective oil and gas leases) of the total oil, gas, casinghead gas and other minerals in and under and which may be produced from the above described land, i.e., from each and both of said Surveys 36 and 37 until the net proceeds of said reserved interest in the production . . . shall have amounted in the aggregate to [$3,550,000.00 and 1,420,000 barrels of oil].
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to the Peterman and Broudy Leases were the only interests that Apache acquired subject to the
assignment. Apache, however, acquired additional leases in Surveys 36 and 37 that were not subject
to the assignment, completed additional wells, and began production in the two surveys.
After obtaining production, Apache sent a division order to Ferguson’s successor-in-interest,
McDaniel Partners, Ltd., stating that the production payment reserved in the 1953 assignment should
now be 1/16 of 3/64 of 7/8, reflecting the expiration of the Cowden Leases. McDaniel disagreed and
instead requested a new division order reflecting a production payment calculated under the
assignment’s original equation. When Apache paid McDaniel for the 3/64 interest instead of the
assignment’s original 35/64 interest, McDaniel sued.
After a bench trial, the trial court rendered a take-nothing judgment against McDaniel,
issuing findings of fact and conclusions of law at McDaniel’s request. The court held that the
production payment was reserved from the four leases separately and “was thus subject to
extinguishment upon expiration of each lease to the extent it existed as a burden against the
production attributable to that lease.” The court concluded further that Apache’s division order,
which provided for a production payment of 1/16 of 3/64 of 7/8, correctly reflected the production
payment that remained after the 32/64 interest attributable to the former Cowden Leases was
extinguished. McDaniel appealed, and the court of appeals reversed the trial court’s judgment.
The appellate court held the assignment did not authorize Apache to adjust the production
payment equation to reflect the effect of an expired lease on the assigned interests. 441 S.W.3d at
536-37. The court reasoned that, even though the production payment was reserved out of the
working interest conveyed and lease terminations effectively reduced that working interest, no
4
adjustment could be made to the production payment’s stated equation because the assignment did
not contemplate such an adjustment. See id. at 536 (finding in the assignment “no express language
providing for a piecemeal reduction of the production payment”). Having concluded that McDaniel
was entitled to 1/16 of 35/64 of 7/8 of production and had thus been underpaid, the court remanded
the case to the trial court to calculate McDaniel’s damages and attorney’s fees. Id. at 538. Apache
appealed to this Court, where the dispute over the assignment’s meaning remains the central issue.
II
The focus of that dispute concerns the percentage that should be used to calculate the
production payment. McDaniel contends the correct percentage is approximately 3% of production
from the two surveys. McDaniel derives this figure from the equation the assignment uses to
describe the production payment, that being “1/16th of 35/64th of 7/8th [of the total oil and gas]
which may be produced from the above described land, i.e., from each and both of said Surveys 36
and 37.” Because this equation states the production payment as a percentage of the cumulative
working interests conveyed (35/64) and is used throughout the agreement, McDaniel views it as
indicative of the parties’ intent to burden the individual leases jointly with a production payment
based upon the original, cumulative working interest conveyed. McDaniel thus interprets the
assignment to reserve a fixed production payment of 1/16 of 35/64 of 7/8, which amounts to a
payment of about 3% of production from the two surveys without regard to the termination of some
of the underlying leases.
Apache, on the other hand, reads the assignment as tying the production payment to the
extant working interest rather than to the working interest that was originally conveyed in 1953.
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Apache finds this evident from the assignment’s explanation of the production-payment equation:
“1/16th of 35/64ths of 7/8ths, being one-sixteenth of the entire interest in the production from said
lands to which Assignor claims to be entitled under the terms of said respective oil and gas leases.”
Apache submits that this language acknowledges that the production payment consists of 1/16 of the
7/8 working interest from each of the four leases, which in the aggregate amounted to 35/64 of the
leasehold estate of Surveys 36 and 37 at the time of the assignment, but which is now only a 3/64
interest. In particular, Apache emphasizes that the word “respective” recognizes the separate nature
of each lease, and the respective burden of the production payment on each. Noting further that the
phrase “entire interest in the production” is an active explanation, rather than a passive description
of the interest at the time of conveyance, Apache concludes that the language essentially describes
how to derive the production payment at any point in time based on the practical effect of the
production payment’s burden on each individual lease. Because termination of the Cowden Leases
reduced the assigned working interest from 35/64 to 3/64, Apache asserts that the production
payment was correspondingly reduced to 1/16 of 3/64 of 7/8, or about 0.26% of production from the
two surveys.
Although the parties have different views about calculating the production payment, they do
not contend the assignment creating the interest is ambiguous. The parties’ conflicting
interpretations, without more, do not create an ambiguity. Columbia Gas Transmission Corp. v. New
Ulm Gas, Ltd., 940 S.W.2d 587, 589 (Tex. 1996). Instead, ambiguity exists when an agreement’s
meaning is uncertain or its terms are reasonably susceptible to more than one interpretation. Dynegy
Midstream Servs., Ltd. P’ship v. Apache Corp., 294 S.W.3d 164, 168 (Tex. 2009). When an
6
agreement can be given a definite or certain legal meaning, it is not ambiguous and is construed as
a matter of law. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. v. Sturges, 52 S.W.3d 711, 728 (Tex. 2001). The courts
below found the assignment here to be unambiguous, and we agree.
The court of appeals, agreeing with McDaniel’s interpretation, concluded that the assignment
fixed the production-payment equation at 1/16 of the original working interest conveyed (35/64),
burdening the leases jointly and continuing so long as any of the four leases remained in effect. 441
S.W.3d at 536-37. The court, however, also agreed in principle with Apache that the assignment
contained “all of the information necessary to determine a reduction of the production payment in
the event of a lease termination.” Id. at 536. The court nevertheless concluded that the production
payment equation could not be proportionately adjusted based on an individual lease’s expiration
because the assignment did not expressly provide for “a piecemeal reduction.” Id. The court was
thus unwilling to adjust the production-payment’s stated equation to reflect the loss of any part of
the assigned interest absent a proportionate-reduction clause or similar provision in the agreement.
Apache argues that the inherent nature of the production payment reserved in this agreement
affected the adjustment as a matter of course, rendering a proportionate-reduction clause superfluous.
In fact, Apache submits that had the parties intended for the production-payment calculation to be
unaffected by the termination of an underlying lease, an express savings clause or similar provision
would have been necessary. Apache further submits that the court of appeals inverted the analysis
by concluding that the original fractional basis for the production payment continued unless the
assignment specifically said it terminated when, instead, the interest terminated because the
7
assignment did not expressly say that it survived. Apache’s argument thus rests on its understanding
of the nature and operation of the production payment reserved in the assignment.
The court of appeals analyzed the production payment as though it were an overriding-royalty
interest. See id. at 537 (noting that “[p]roduction payments have the same basic characteristics as
an overriding royalty”). For purposes of this case, we agree that no meaningful difference exists
between the two.
A production payment, sometimes referred to as an “oil payment” when so limited, is a share
of production from described premises, free of production costs at the surface, terminating when a
given production volume has been paid or when a specified sum from its sale has been realized. 2
PATRICK H. MARTIN & BRUCE M. KRAMER, WILLIAMS & MEYERS, OIL & GAS LAW § 422 (2015).
Production payments may be created from different estates and in a variety of ways. See 5 EUGENE
O. KUNTZ, A TREATISE ON THE LAW OF OIL AND GAS § 63 (2015) (discussing production payment
variations and dividing them generally into two categories, the “lien” type and the “title” type, for
purposes of discussion). When, as in this case, the production payment is carved from the lessee’s
working interest, it is like an overriding-royalty interest, except for its more limited duration. Alamo
Nat’l Bank v. Hurd, 485 S.W.2d 335, 340 (Tex. Civ. App.—San Antonio 1972, writ ref’d n.r.e.).
And, like an overriding royalty, “anything that terminates the lease necessarily destroys the
[production] payment.” A.W. Walker, Jr., Oil Payments, 20 TEX. L. REV. 259, 288 (1942). Thus,
in the case of a single lease, an overriding royalty (and by analogy a production payment) will not
survive termination of the leasehold it burdens unless the parties have expressly agreed otherwise.
See Sunac Petroleum Corp. v. Parkes, 416 S.W.2d 798, 804 (Tex. 1967) (“Normally, when an oil
8
and gas lease terminates, the overriding royalty created in an assignment of the lease is likewise
extinguished.”); see also Keese v. Cont’l Pipe Line Co., 235 F.2d 386, 388 n.3 (5th Cir. 1956)
(collecting Texas cases); 2 ERNEST E. SMITH & JACQUELINE LANG WEAVER, TEXAS LAW OF OIL &
GAS § 2.4[B][3], at 2-66 (2d. ed. 2015) (“Because an overriding royalty is created from the lessee’s
interest, it will not outlast the lease unless there is an express savings clause . . .”) (internal footnotes
omitted).
Although the court of appeals appeared to accept that a production payment generally ends
when the burdened leasehold terminates, the court was unaware of any authority extending that
relationship to the present situation—a multi-lease assignment in which only some of the leases
remained in effect. 441 S.W.3d at 537. Analogizing this situation to that of a partial-lease failure,
the court concluded that “Apache has not demonstrated that the fundamental nature of a production
payment mandates the reduction of such a payment following a partial lease failure in the absence
of contractual terms so providing.” Id. at 538.
Apache submits that the court’s analogy of its circumstances to that of a partial-lease failure,
while not entirely accurate, nonetheless supports Apache’s construction of the assignment because, 2
when a portion of leased acreage is released back to the lessor, overriding-royalty interests terminate
as to the portion released. See SM Energy Co. v. Sutton, 376 S.W.3d 787, 791 (Tex. App.—San
Antonio 2012, pet. denied); Wagner v. Sheets & Walton Drilling Co., 359 S.W.2d 543, 544-46 (Tex.
App.—Eastland 1962, writ ref’d n.r.e.); Fain & McGaha v. Biesel, 331 S.W.2d 346, 347-48 (Tex.
Apache observes that the Cowden Leases did not partially fail; they totally failed.2
9
App.—Fort Worth 1960, writ ref’d n.r.e.). Apache argues that the principle underlying these
holdings—that an overriding-royalty interest terminates as to a surrendered portion of a leasehold
estate—applies with even greater force here because two separate leasehold estates entirely expired.
The court of appeals nevertheless concluded that the production payment could not be
reduced because the assignment failed to include “express language providing for a piecemeal
reduction of the production payment.” 441 S.W.3d at 536. The court thought such a clause
necessary because the assignment provided no mechanism “through which the production payment’s
specified sum ($3,550,000) or volumetric total (1,420,000 barrels of oil) can even conceivably be
adjusted in the event of a lease termination.” Id. at 537. It thus concluded that, had the parties
“intended to periodically adjust the production payment, the Assignment surely would have included
language providing for the adjustment of these significant numbers.” Id. at 537.
While we agree that the assignment fixed the dollars and volume of oil reserved to the
assignor from production on the two surveys, we do not agree that this necessarily informs the rate
at which it was to be delivered to the assignor’s account, which is the gist of Apache’s complaint
here. This production payment has two parts: (1) the fractional share of production that Apache
must pay, and (2) the total amount of money and production that is to be received before the interest
terminates. Apache concedes the agreement fixes this latter part. Apache does not dispute that the
production payment is to continue until a cumulative $3.55 million and 1.42 million barrels of oil
are realized under the four leases assigned, two of which remain in effect. It argues, however, that
the 1/16 production payment was reserved from the working interest of each individual lease and,
as a result, the production-payment share attributable to the Cowden Leases was extinguished when
10
the leases expired, affecting the first part of the reserved payment—that is, the fractional share of
production to be paid.
Ultimately, the nature of this particular production payment and its burden on the underlying
leasehold estates rests on what the assignment says, not on what a party argues it should have said.
When a contract’s meaning is unambiguous, our task is to determine the parties’ intentions as
expressed in the written instrument. Seagull Energy E & P, Inc. v. Eland Energy, Inc., 207 S.W.3d
342, 345 (Tex. 2006). Our approach is holistic. Hysaw v. Dawkins, ___ S.W.3d ___, ___ (Tex.
2016). We “examine and consider the entire writing in an effort to harmonize and give effect to all
the provisions of the contract so that none will be rendered meaningless.” J.M. Davidson, Inc. v.
Webster, 128 S.W.3d 223, 229 (Tex. 2003). No single provision taken alone is controlling, but
rather all provisions are “considered with reference to the whole instrument.” Id. Moreover, we
“construe a contract from a utilitarian standpoint, bearing in mind the particular business activity
sought to be served.” Lenape Res. Corp. v. Tenn. Gas Pipeline Co., 925 S.W.2d 565, 574 (Tex.
1996).
The assignment clearly conveys four oil and gas leases out of two surveys in Upton County,
describing them individually:
1. Cowden Lease—covering Survey 36
2. Cowden Lease—covering Survey 37
3. Peterman Lease—insofar only as it covers Surveys 36 and 37
4. Broudy Lease—insofar only as it covers Surveys 36 and 37
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The warranty clause states that the conveyance includes half of the mineral interest in Surveys 36
and 37 under the Cowden Leases, another 1/64 interest in the two surveys under the Peterman Lease,
and a 2/64 interest under the Broudy Lease—cumulatively the 35/64 interest originally conveyed.
From this conveyance, the assignor reserves and excepts a “production payment interest” of 1/16 of
the entire production from Surveys 36 and 37 to which the assignor is entitled under the four
respective oil and gas leases. These respective interests are incorporated into the equation that the
assignment employs in the reservation clause, using the following language:
Assignor reserves . . . as a “production payment interest,” the title to and ownership of one-sixteenth of thirty-five sixty-fourths of seven-eighths (1/16th of 35/64ths of 7/8ths, being one-sixteenth of the entire interest in the production from said lands to which Assignor claims to be entitled under the terms of said respective oil and gas leases) of the total oil, gas, casinghead gas and other minerals in and under and which may be produced from the above described land, i.e., from each and both of said Surveys 36 and 37 . . .
(emphasis added).
McDaniel interprets these words to reserve the production payment from the conveyance as
a whole, binding all of the assigned leases jointly. McDaniel’s interpretation thus separates this
reservation from the individual leases, arguing that “the production-payment interest was carved out
of the conveyance, not the leases, and was payable out of total production from the lands, not the
leases.”
But the assignor here did not convey the “lands” in 1953. Rather, he conveyed what he
owned—the four leasehold estates identified in the assignment. From that conveyance, he reserved
a 1/16 production payment, which the assignment clearly ties to the assignor’s interests in the
respective leases—“being one-sixteenth of the entire interest in the production from said lands to
12
which Assignor claims to be entitled under the terms of said respective oil and gas leases.”
McDaniel’s interpretation incorrectly suggests the reservation of an interest unrelated to the
determinable fee interests the assignor actually owned and purported to convey.
Neither the inclusion of the four leases in a single instrument nor the instrument’s statement
of the leases’ cumulative working interest as a single fraction demonstrates that the parties intended
the production payment to be carved from something other than the estates conveyed. To the
contrary, the explanatory phrase that follows the stated fraction ties the 1/16 reservation to the
assignor’s interest in the “respective” leases, indicating that the reserved interest pertains to the
particular leases separately. See WEBSTER'S NINTH NEW COLLEGIATE DICTIONARY 1004 (1984)
(defining “respective” to mean particular or separate). The assignment neither states, implies, nor
suggests that the production payment would be unaffected by the termination of the leaseholds from
which it was carved or, as McDaniel seems to suggest, shift its otherwise allocable burden to one or
more of the remaining leases. Absent express language in the assignment to the contrary, we apply
the general rule that “when an oil and gas lease terminates, the overriding royalty [or similar
production payment] created in an assignment of the lease is likewise extinguished.”
that the trial court rendered the correct judgment in the case.
We accordingly reverse the court of appeals’ judgment and render judgment that McDaniel Partners, Ltd., take nothing.
About This Case
What was the outcome of APACHE DEEPWATER, LLC, v. MCDANIEL PARTNERS, LTD?
The outcome was: Applying that rule to the unambiguous language of this assignment, we conclude that the trial court rendered the correct judgment in the case. We accordingly reverse the court of appeals’ judgment and render judgment that McDaniel Partners, Ltd., take nothing.
Which court heard APACHE DEEPWATER, LLC, v. MCDANIEL PARTNERS, LTD?
This case was heard in IN THE SUPREME COURT OF TEXAS, TX. The presiding judge was John P. Devine.
Who were the attorneys in APACHE DEEPWATER, LLC, v. MCDANIEL PARTNERS, LTD?
Plaintiff's attorney: Ms. Rachel Anne Ekery, Mr. Roger D. Townsend, Mr. Max E. Wright, Ms. LaDawn H. Conway, Mr. Bruce M. Kramer. Defendant's attorney: Mr. Barry F. Cannaday, Ms. Deborah G. Hankinson, Mr. William Richard Thompson, Ms. Rebecca Adams Cavner.
When was APACHE DEEPWATER, LLC, v. MCDANIEL PARTNERS, LTD decided?
This case was decided on February 26, 2016.