Dorothea Levine, Individually and as Personal Representative of the Estate of Sol Levine v. El Paso Production Oil & Gas Company ( 2011 )


Menu:
  •                                  MEMORANDUM OPINION
    No. 04-10-00659-CV
    Dorothea LEVINE, Individually and
    As Personal Representative of the Estate of Sol Levine, Deceased,
    Appellant
    v.
    EL PASO PRODUCTION OIL & GAS COMPANY,
    El Paso Production Oil & Gas USA, L.P., and ConocoPhillips,
    Appellees
    From the 49th Judicial District Court, Zapata County, Texas
    Trial Court No. 5,357
    Honorable Jose A. Lopez, Judge Presiding
    Opinion by:       Sandee Bryan Marion, Justice
    Sitting:          Catherine Stone, Chief Justice
    Sandee Bryan Marion, Justice
    Rebecca Simmons, Justice
    Delivered and Filed: May 25, 2011
    AFFIRMED
    This is an appeal from the trial court’s order denying appellants’ motion for partial
    summary judgment and granting appellees’ motion for summary judgment. We affirm.
    BACKGROUND
    In mid-1970, Colorado Oil and Gas Corp. (“Colorado”), Flying Diamond Oil Corp.
    (“FDOC”), Gifford E. Joseph, and W.C. DeArman decided to explore for oil and gas in Zapata
    04-10-00659-CV
    County, Texas. Consequently, Colorado executed an oil and gas lease (“the Dye lease”) with
    James D. Dye on 850.72 acres located in Zapata County. Colorado conveyed twenty-five
    percent of its interest in the Dye lease to FDOC, and twelve and one-half percent of its interest in
    the Dye lease each to Joseph and DeArman. Pursuant to a joint venture agreement, Colorado,
    FDOC, Joseph, and DeArman were required to contribute their interest in the Dye lease to the
    joint venture in exchange for a corresponding interest in the joint venture. However, it is
    undisputed that no writing evidences FDOC’s conveyance of its interest in the Dye lease to the
    joint venture. The joint venture agreement stated that the parties believed certain land subject to
    the agreement was “prospective for oil and/or gas and that an exploratory well should be drilled
    thereon to evaluate the possibility of producing oil and/or gas therefrom in commercial
    quantities, which prospective area shall be hereinafter referred to as “‘The Prospect[.]’”
    [Emphasis added.]
    According to the Levines, because FDOC needed capital for its contribution to the
    expenses of the joint venture, FDOC formed a limited partnership, known as the Flying Diamond
    Oil Corporation – 1975 Western Drilling Program (“FDLP”), with FDOC as general partner.
    FDOC executed an assignment to FDLP of various “rights and interest[s] earned or to be earned”
    in, among other “rights and interests,” the following:
    Dye-Laredo Prospect
    Zapata County, Texas
    By virtue of that certain Joint Venture Agreement . . . between [Colorado, FDOC,
    Joseph, and DeArman], for the drilling of a well to an approximate depth of
    8500´, Wilcox test, [FDOC] earns 50% working interest before payout and 25%
    working interest thereafter in an 850.72 acre, more or less, lease situated in the La
    Perla Subdivision of the Jose Vasquez Borrego Grant, Abstract No. 209, Zapata
    County, Texas.
    -2-
    04-10-00659-CV
    The record does not contain a signed copy of the limited partnership agreement or
    indicate FDOC’s conveyance to FDLP was recorded.              FDLP had several limited partners,
    including Sol Levine, all of whom contributed various amounts of cash in return for “profits”
    from wells “on each of the prospects owned by” FDLP. The Levines point to a certificate of
    limited partnership as proof of the existence of the partnership. The certificate specifically
    provides as follows: “A Limited Partner shall not have the right to demand and receive property
    other than cash in return for his contribution.”
    In 1982, FDOC executed an “Assignment of Mineral Lease” in which it assigned its
    “right, title, and interest” in the Dye lease to Bow Valley Petroleum, Inc. (“Bow Valley”). In
    1986, Bow Valley, acting as successor-in-interest to FDOC and as the general partner of FDLP,
    executed and recorded an “Agreement, Assignment, and Dissolution” (the “Dissolution
    Instrument”). The Dissolution Instrument terminated and dissolved FDLP and provided for
    distribution of assets to the general partner and the limited partners. Pursuant to this instrument,
    Sol and Dorothea Levine received working interests in four wells on the Dye lease, 1 in addition
    to wells located on other leases. Over the years, through a series of name changes, mergers, and
    assignments, Bow Valley’s interest in the Dye lease was ultimately conveyed into Coastal Oil &
    Gas Corp. Coastal Oil & Gas Corp. later conveyed its interest to ConocoPhilips.
    The Levines later sued El Paso Production Oil & Gas Co. (f/k/a Coastal Oil & Gas
    Corp.), El Paso Production Oil & Gas USA, L.P. (f/k/a Coastal Oil & Gas USA, L.P.), and
    ConocoPhillips (collectively, “the defendants”). In their second amended petition, the Levines
    (1) requested a declaratory judgment on their rights, status, and interest in the Dye lease; (2)
    asserted a trespass to try title claim against ConocoPhillips as the party in possession of the
    mineral interest at issue in the suit; (3) requested an accounting and audit; (4) asserted a cause of
    1
    These four wells are not at issue in this appeal.
    -3-
    04-10-00659-CV
    action under the Texas Natural Resources Code for nonpayment of proceeds regarding wells
    producing on the Dye lease; (5) asserted a breach of contract claim against all defendants; and
    (6) asserted a conversion claim against all defendants. All of the Levines’ claims are premised
    on their argument that they are entitled to twenty-five percent of the oil, gas, and other minerals
    produced under the Dye lease, together with all revenue and proceeds attributable to the sales of
    that production, from the date of the alleged wrongful possession commencing on June 12, 1996
    (the date of the purported assignment to Coastal Oil & Gas Corp.).
    The Levines filed a motion for partial summary judgment on the issue of liability only in
    which they asked the trial court to construe various documents and then judicially declare the
    extent and size of their mineral interests. All of the defendants jointly responded to the Levines’
    motion for a partial summary judgment, and jointly filed a separate cross-motion for a traditional
    and no-evidence summary judgment. While these motions were pending, the defendants jointly
    filed a first amended motion for a traditional and no-evidence summary judgment, in which they
    incorporated all arguments made in their original cross-motion and in their response to the
    Levines’ motion for summary judgment. The trial court signed an order denying the Levines’
    motion for a partial summary judgment, granting the defendants’ first amended motion for a
    traditional and no-evidence summary judgment, and rendering a take-nothing judgment against
    the Levines. The trial court did not state its basis for granting the defendants’ motion. This
    appeal by the Levines ensued, in which the Levines raise one procedural challenge and four
    substantive challenges to the summary judgment in favor of the defendants.
    SPECIAL EXCEPTIONS
    After the defendants filed their first amended motion for a traditional and no-evidence
    summary judgment, the Levines filed special exceptions arguing the motion was “not
    -4-
    04-10-00659-CV
    categorically premised on either no evidence or traditional grounds,” the defendants did not
    identify the elements of the Levines’ causes of action for which there was no evidence, and the
    defendants did not state on which affirmative defenses they sought a traditional summary
    judgment. The Levines also excepted to the defendants’ request to incorporate all the grounds
    contained in their original motion for summary judgment and their response to the Levines’
    motion for partial summary judgment into their amended motion. On appeal, the Levines
    contend this court should reverse the trial court’s order denying their special exceptions and
    require the defendants to clearly explain their entitlement to summary judgment on either
    traditional or no-evidence grounds.
    Texas Rule of Civil Procedure 166a does not prohibit a party from combining in a single
    motion a request for traditional summary judgment with a request for a no-evidence summary
    judgment. Binur v. Jacobo, 
    135 S.W.3d 646
    , 650 (Tex. 2004). Here, the defendants’ request for
    a no-evidence summary judgment is contained in a section separate from the defendants’
    arguments in favor of their request for a traditional summary judgment. Therefore, their first
    amended motion for a traditional and no-evidence summary judgment motion was not improper.
    However, Rule 166a requires a party moving for a no-evidence summary judgment to state the
    essential elements of a claim or defense on which an adverse party would have the burden of
    proof at trial as to which there is no evidence. TEX. R. CIV. P. 166a(i). We agree with the
    Levines that the defendants’ no-evidence motion failed to state the specific elements of the
    Levines’ causes of action as to which there is no evidence. Consequently, the no-evidence
    motion was not sufficiently specific to meet the requirements of Rule 166a(i). Therefore, the
    following discussion focuses on only whether the traditional motion for summary judgment was
    -5-
    04-10-00659-CV
    properly granted in favor of the defendants and whether the trial court properly denied the
    Levines’ motion for partial summary judgment. 2
    DEFENDANTS’ TRADITIONAL MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT AND THE
    LEVINES’ MOTION FOR PARTIAL SUMMARY JUDGMENT
    In their motion for a partial summary judgment, the Levines asserted, among other
    grounds, that (1) the joint venture agreement established FDOC’s mineral interest, (2) the limited
    partnership agreement established the mineral ownership of both themselves and FDLP, and (3)
    the Dissolution Instrument proved that FDLP and its limited partners continue to own
    undistributed mineral interests in the Dye Lease. In their amended motion for a traditional
    summary judgment, the defendants argued that the summary judgment evidence established an
    unbroken chain of title to the twenty-five percent undivided interest in the Dye lease conveyed
    by Colorado Oil & Gas Corp. (the original lessee) to FDOC, and this chain of title continued,
    unbroken, through to the conveyance into ConocoPhillips. The defendants also argued that, in
    this chain of title, there is no conveyance of any undivided interest in the Dye lease to FDLP or
    the Levines, and both of these missing conveyances were essential elements in order for the
    Levines to prove their claimed title to an interest in the entire Dye lease.
    On appeal, the Levines do not raise a broad Malooly challenge that the trial court erred in
    granting the defendants’ motion for summary judgment. Malooly Bros., Inc. v. Napier, 
    461 S.W.2d 119
    , 121 (Tex. 1970) (holding that a general issue on appeal that the “trial court erred in
    granting the motion for summary judgment” allows the nonmovant to dispute on appeal all
    possible grounds upon which summary judgment should have been denied). Instead, in addition
    2
    Our discussion of the Levines’ challenge to the traditional summary judgment focuses only on those grounds
    specifically stated in the defendants’ amended motion. Our disposition of these challenges does not require us to
    review the Levines’ complaint regarding the defendants’ request to incorporate all the grounds contained in their
    original motion for summary judgment and their response to the Levines’ motion for partial summary judgment into
    their amended motion.
    -6-
    04-10-00659-CV
    to the procedural challenge discussed above, the Levines challenged the summary judgment on
    four specific substantive grounds: (1) the trial court erred by granting the defendants’ motion
    based on El Paso’s status as a bona fide purchaser for value; (2) the trial court ignored the
    Dissolution Instrument, which was in the defendants’ chain of title and, thus, gave notice of the
    Levines’ competing title claim; (3) a title opinion prepared for Coastal raised a fact issue on the
    defendants’ actual knowledge of the Levines’ claim; and (4) a 1982 Stipulation of Settlement and
    General Release did not foreclose the underlying litigation arising under the Dissolution
    Instrument. However, these challenges do not address all possible grounds upon which the
    defendants moved for a traditional summary judgment.
    When the nonmovant fails to raise on appeal a general Malooly point of error contending
    the trial court erred in granting summary judgment and also fails to specifically challenge every
    ground raised in the motion for summary judgment, the summary judgment must be affirmed.
    Gamboa v. Shaw, 
    956 S.W.2d 662
    , 665-66 (Tex. App.—San Antonio 1997, no pet.) (citing
    Malooly 
    Bros., 461 S.W.2d at 121
    ). Here, the Levines did not challenge all of the grounds on
    which the defendants sought a traditional summary judgment. For example, the defendants
    alleged, and the Levines do not challenge on appeal, that all the documents on which the Levines
    base their claim of interest in the Dye lease do not convey any interest in the Dye lease for the
    following reasons: (1) the purported FDLP limited partnership agreement is not signed, (2) none
    of the instruments contain any words of present conveyance purporting to convey an interest in
    the Dye lease to either FDLP or the Levines, (3) none of the instruments contain a legally
    sufficient description of the Dye lease, and (4) no oral or written conveyance of an interest in the
    entire Dye lease is valid under the Statute of Conveyances. The defendants also alleged, and the
    Levines do not challenge on appeal, that any claim for cancellation or reformation of an
    -7-
    04-10-00659-CV
    instrument and any claim for reexamination of the accounts or distribution of FDLP is barred by
    a four-year statute of limitations.
    CONCLUSION
    Because the trial court could have rendered summary judgment in favor of the defendants
    on these, and other, unchallenged grounds, we do not review the merits of the Levines’
    challenged grounds and we affirm the take-nothing summary judgment in favor of the
    defendants. Also, because these unchallenged grounds would defeat the Levines’ claims, we
    affirm the trial court’s denial of the Levines’ motion for partial summary judgment.
    Sandee Bryan Marion, Justice
    -8-
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 04-10-00659-CV

Filed Date: 5/25/2011

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/16/2015