
Co-author Taylor Hall
Moore et al v. 1789 Minerals Fund I, LP, et al is another Texas decision addressing the effect of a Sheriff’s Deed after a tax foreclosure. Was the deed void for want of a sufficient property description? No, but the trial court will have to construe the document.
The facts
In the 1930s the Moore brothers—O.J., O.R. and Howard—inherited undivided interests in five tracts. O.J. and Howard also jointly owned a separate tract that was partitioned in 1933, resulting in a total of seven tracts. In 1939, the brothers executed a partition deed that severed the surface estate from the mineral estate of the inherited tracts, with each brother retaining an undivided one-third mineral interest. Over time the mineral and royalty interests passed through a series of deeds and inheritances, with ownership mostly concentrating in Obra III.
In 2014 the Harrison Central Appraisal District sued Obra III for unpaid property taxes on his royalty interests. HCAD obtained a judgment and foreclosure sale, resulting in a Sheriff’s Deed in 2017 conveying three royalty interests to Roberts. The deed identified each interest by a HCAD account number, well name, operator, and decimal royalty figure, specifying “ACRES: 0.000” for each.
Roberts conveyed those interests to 1789 Minerals using a broader description than the Sheriff’s Deed, purporting to convey a full 50-acre tract and all mineral interests in a pooled unit.
Meanwhile, Gunner and Maderet (appellants with Obra) acquired Obra’s remaining minerals, expressly excluding the “wellbore-only interests” described in the Sheriff’s Deed. Thereafter, they learned that Roberts and Caddo (appellees with 1789) claimed title to all mineral interests in the tracts.
Operator Rockcliff filed an interpleader action asking the court to figure it all out.
The trial court granted summary judgment for 1789 et al, holding:
- Obra’s cross-claims were barred by Texas Tax Code §33.54(a)(1)’s one-year statute of limitations and
- The Sheriff’s Deed conveyed all Obra’s rights in the disputed tracts, not merely wellbore royalty interests
Obra appealed.
The question
Did the Sheriff’s Deed convey only wellbore interests or Obra’s entire mineral interests?
Statute of Limitations
Texas Civil Practice & Remedies Code §16.006(a) allows an otherwise time-barred cross-claim if it:
- arise from the same transaction or occurrence as the original action, and
- are filed within 30 days of the answer date.
The CPRC authorized Obra’s cross-claims because they were filed within 30 days of his answer to Rockcliff’s interpleader and arose from the same transaction.
Adequacy of the property description in the Sheriff’s Deed
The Sheriff’s Deed was not void. It referenced HCAD account numbers, providing a means to identify the interests with reasonable certainty. But 1789 did not establish its right to summary judgment because Obra’s interpretation that only wellbore royalty interests were conveyed was supported by the property descriptions (“0.000 acres”), HCAD documents and tax statements, and Railroad Commission well identification numbers.
The court noted that Texas law does not require courts to “scrutinize the proceedings of a judicial sale with a view to defeat them.”
Bottom Line
(1) Obra’s cross-claims were timely;
(2) the Sheriff’s Deed was not void because it adequately described the interests; and
(3) genuine issues of material fact precluded summary judgment. The scope of the conveyance was not conclusively determined. The case was reversed and remanded for the trial court to construe the Sheriff’s Deed.
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