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On April 24, the Supreme Court issued an opinion in two consolidated appeals, Boren Descendants v. Fasken Oil and Ranch, Ltd., and Mabee Ranch Royalty Partnership LP v. Fasken Oil and Ranch, Ltd. I wrote about the Eastland Court of Appeals, decision in these cases in December 2024. The issue is construction of a 1933 deed of 60,000 acres in which the grantor reserved “an undivided one-fourth (1/4th) of the usual one eighth (1/8th) royalty.” Fasken owns the reserved royalty and the Boren and Mabee descendants on the fee mineral interest. Relying on the Supreme Court’s guidance on how to construe such deeds in Van Dyke v. Navigator Group, the Eastland Court held that the deed reserved a “floating” 1/4th of the royalty.

The more interesting part of the case is the applicability of the presumed grant doctrine, also addressed in Van Dyke. The appeal of the Fasken cases was a permissive interlocutory appeal; the Eastland Court refused to consider the the Boren and Mabee parties’ contention that the presumed grant doctrine applied, concluding that it was not one of the issues referred by the trial court for the interlocutory appeal.

The Supreme Court has elected to return the case to the Eastland Court for further proceedings. First, it told the Eastland Court that it should consider the Supreme Court’s more recent opinion in Clifton v. Johnson, which addressed a another fraction-of-royalty issue. Second, it said the Eastland Court should have considered the Boren and Mabee parties’ claim that the presumed grant doctrine applied.

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On March 3, 2026, the Texas Supreme Court issued its opinion in Fasken v. Puig, No. 24-1033. It reversed the courts below and held that the words “free of all costs” in a reservation of a non-participating royalty interest did not include post-production costs. The reservation, in a 1960 deed covering lands in Webb County, reads:

There is SAVED, EXCEPTED AND RESERVED, in favor of the undersigned, B. A. Puig, Jr., out of the above described property, an undivided one-sixteenth (1/16) of all the oil, gas and other minerals, except coal, in, to and under or that may be produced from the above described acreage, to be paid or delivered to Grantor, B. A. Puig, Jr., as his own property free of cost forever. Said interest hereby reserved is Non-Participating Royalty . . . .

In Chesapeake v. Hyder,  483 S.W.3d 870 (2016), the Texas Supreme Court ruled on a similar issue. The Hyders’ lease contained an unusual provision granting them an overriding royalty on production from horizontal wells the surface location of which was on the Hyders’ land but whose lateral produced from adjacent land. The reservation of overriding royalty provided that they would receive “a perpetual, cost-free (except only its portion of production taxes) overriding royalty of five percent (5%) of gross production” from such wells. Chief Justice Hecht, joined by four other justices, held that the overriding royalty must be paid free of post-production costs. Justice Hecht said that “We disagree with the Hyders that ‘cost-free’ … cannot refer to production costs. … But Chesapeake must show that while the general term ‘cost-free’ does not distinguish between production and post-production costs and thus literally refers to all costs, it nevertheless cannot refer to post-production costs.”  Four justices dissented; they concluded that, because the overriding royalty was based on “gross production,” it was valued at the well, and so the Court’s prior decision in Heritage v. NationsBank meant that, not withstanding the cost-free language, post-production costs can be deducted.

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The only three essential terms of an oil and gas lease are the granting clause, including a description of the property, the habendum clause, which defines the term of the lease, and the royalty clause. The following would be a valid, enforceable lease:

John Doe hereby leases to Gusher Oil Company the oil and gas in and under Section 5, Block 4, T&N RR Co. Survey, Jones County, Texas, for the purpose of exploring for and producing oil and gas. This grant shall be for a term of three years and as long thereafter as oil or gas is produced from the property. John Doe reserves a royalty of 1/4th of all oil and gas produced and saved.

Dated ___________________, 2014

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On December 2, 2025, the Texas Supreme Court issued its opinion in Clifton v. Johnson, No. 23-067. This is the first Supreme Court case on fixed vs. floating since its decision Van Dyke v. The Navigator Group, 668 S.W.3d 363 (Tex. 2023), its effort to clarify how double-fraction conveyances and reservations should be construed.

The reservation construed in Van Dyke was a mineral reservation:

It is understood and agreed that one-half of one-eighth of all minerals and mineral rights in said land are reserved in grantors … and are not conveyed herein.

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The Corpus Christi Court of Appeals, in Devon Energy Production Co. v. Robert Leon Oliver, No. 13-25-00131-CV, has reversed a $9 million judgment against Devon in a suit for failure to pay royalties in accordance with Oliver’s leases. The court followed the reasoning of the Texas Supreme Court’s opinions in Heritage Resources v. NationsBank, 989 S.W.2d 118 (Tex. 1996), holding that Oliver’s lease provision prohibiting post-production-cost deductions from Oliver’s royalty was “surplusage,” and that Oliver’s royalty should be based on the “market value at the well.”

Oliver’s leases were on a printed form with an addendum that provided the addendum’s provisions would prevail over any conflicting language in the leases. The royalty clause in the lease form provided that the royalty on oil would be

1/5th of all oil produced and saved by lessee from said  land, or from time to time, at the option of lessee, to pay lessor the average posted market price of such 1/5th part of such oil at the wells as of the day it is run to the pipeline or storage tanks, lessor’s interest, in either case, to bear 1/5th of the cost of treating oil to render it marketable pipeline oil. …

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After the Texas Supreme Court issued its opinion in Van Dyke v. The Navigator Group, 668 S.W.3d 363 (Tex. 2023), setting out presumptions to apply when construing royalty conveyances and reservations that contain so-called double fractions, it considered Thompson’s petition for review of the San Antonio Court of Appeals’ opinion in Hoffman v. Thomson, 630 S.W.3d 427 (Tex.App.–San Antonio 2021) construing another royalty fraction deed. The Supreme Court remanded the case back to the San Antonio court, instructing it to reconsider its decision in light of the Supreme Court’s opinion in Van Dyke. Thomson v. Hoffman, 674 S.W.3d 927 (Tex. 2023). The San Antonio Court has now issued its second opinion, reaffirming the conclusion it reached in its first opinion. 2026 WL 758737, March 18, 2026.

The deed being construed in Hoffman v. Thomson contains the following relevant language:

[T]here is hereby expressly reserved … an undivided three thirty-second’s (3/32’s) interest (same being three-fourths (3/4’s) of the usual one-eighth (1/8th) royalty) in and to all of the oil, gas and other minerals ….

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An essential element of any oil and gas lease is a description of the land to be covered by the lease. The test for a legal description is that it must contain, or make reference to recorded documents that contain, a description of the land of sufficient specificity that a surveyor could locate the property on the ground with reasonable certainty.

The lease itself can contain a metes and bounds description from a survey, or (more commonly) it can refer to an earlier recorded document that contains a metes and bounds description of the property. Sometimes descriptions have to be cobbled together from two or more other descriptions. For example: “All of that certain 100 acres of land described in deed from John Doe to Robert Smith recorded at Volume 99, page 99 of the deed records of Karnes County, Texas, save and except 10 acres of land described in deed from Robert Smith to Mary Jones recorded at Volume 100, page 100 of the deed records of Karnes County, Texas.”

There are other ways to adequately describe a tract. The test is whether the surveyor can use the description to locate the property.

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In Texas, an oil and gas lease grants to the lessee the fee mineral estate in the leased premises for the term of the lease. The lease provides for an initial term during which the lessee need do nothing in order to keep the lease in effect — called the “primary term.” Thereafter, the lease terminates unless the lessee is producing oil or gas or conducting operations in an effort to discover and produce oil or gas. If the lease remains in effect beyond the primary term, the remaining time the lease is in effect is called the “secondary term.” A typical lease will provide that

“This lease shall remain in effect for a term of three (3) years (the primary term) and as long thereafter as oil or gas is produced from the leased premises or operations, as provided herein, are being conducted on the leased premises.”

The primary term can be one month or ten years or more. Today, most leases provide for a three-year primary term. If no production or operations take place during the primary term, the lease terminates automatically and the mineral estate reverts to the lessor.

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I was recently reminded of a series of blog posts I did more than 10 years ago about the oil and gas lease. A law student who had come across one of my posts contacted me, telling me that she was the great-granddaughter off J.A. Heydrick of Oil City, Pennsylvania, who I identified in my post as the author of the first oil and gas lease form, published in 1880.

So, I have decided to republish my blog series on the oil and gas lease. Here is Part I.

The oil and gas lease is the foundational document on which the oil and gas industry in the US is based. Its form and provisions have been modified and shaped over the years to respond to changing industry practices and developments in the law, but its essential form has remained unchanged since the latter half of the 19th century. It is one of the most commonly used and successful legal documents in US commerce.

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