
Co-Author Gunner West
In B.H.C.H. Mineral, Ltd. v. Needmore Minerals, LLP, the San Antonio Court of appeals held that a reservation of “1/32 of all oil, gas and other minerals” coupled with attribute-stripping language and a minimum royalty requirement created a non-executive mineral interest with a floating royalty. The court also declined to apply the presumed-grant doctrine.
The deed and the dispute
Ninety years ago Esperanza Livestock & Land Company conveyed a 23,513-acre Webb County ranch to John Sinclair, reserving an undivided 1/32 of the minerals, giving the grantee exclusive leasing authority, and requiring any lease to retain at least a 1/8 royalty. Sinclair’s interest ran through John Nance Garner (Speaker of the U.S. House and, under FDR, the nation’s thirty-second vice president) and his successors, who leased in 1967 at a 1/6 royalty. (This well-traveled interest was even owned for a while by golden-throated, Poteet, Texas-born George Strait.)
The royalty floats
The Esperanza successors claimed a fixed 1/32 NPRI. The court considered the deed as a whole, harmonizing the reservation, the stripping lanuage, and the minimum royalty requirement. The words “in and under said land” are classic mineral-estate language, and stripping executive, bonus, and delay-rental rights left a non-executive mineral interest. It was not a royalty interest. According to the Court, the royalty floats because a fixed 1/32 of production would render the deed’s “at least 1/8” clause meaningless. The result left the Esperanza successors with 1/32 of the 1/6 lease royalty, 1/192 of production – quite modest, to say the least.
Presumed-grant does not apply
The Court deemed presumed-grant to be a cousin of adverse possession. In Clifton v. Johnson, the Supreme Court recently allowed that the doctrine might extend to a royalty but declined to decide whether it could do so on the facts of that case. This Court came down against extension, stating that the doctrine has never reached a royalty interest. The Court reasoned that a mineral estate, being possessory, can be adversely possessed, while a royalty is incorporeal and confers no right to possess.
The parties’ predecessors and their operators had a long history of treating the interest as fixed. But the Court believed that an underpayment may reflect a lessee’s breach or mistake, but cashing royalty checks is not the open, adverse claim the doctrine requires. The Court cited Sun Oil Company (Del) v. Madeley, where lessees corrected more than forty years of overpayments and the Supreme Court refused to let the royalty owners lock in the inflated rate. It did not help that the Court believed that the Esperanza successors presented no evidence of an open claim of their own.
Equitable defenses were unavailable
The equitable defenses failed too. Estoppel by deed binds only parties and their privies, and the Esperanza successors were strangers to Garner deeds. Quasi-estoppel, waiver, and ratification cannot manufacture rights the deed withheld, and division orders distribute proceeds, not title.
The dissent
Justice McCray would have applied presumed-grant to establish a 1/32 royalty; the doctrine reached incorporeal interests long before it reached land; Clifton and Boren Descendants v. Fasken signal it can fix a royalty; and five decades of consistent treatment, including a Garner successor’s testimony that his side always regarded the interest as a fixed 1/32, at least raised a fact issue for trial.
Your musical interlude … his exes and his minerals.








