Co-author Caleb White

In Fasken Oil and Ranch, Ltd. v. Puig the Supreme Court of Texas resolved whether a deed conveying a non-participating royalty interest “free of costs forever” relieved the royalty owners from bearing postproduction costs for minerals sold downstream. Under the language in the deed in this case, it did not.
The facts
The Puig’s own an NPRI in a mineral estate located in Webb County reserved in a 1960 deed in which their predecessor in interest sold ranchland to Palafox Exploration Company. Fasken is the successor in interest to Palafox, and operates oil and gas wells on the leaseholds.
The Puig deed provides:
There is SAVED, EXCEPTED AND RESERVED, in favor of [Puig] an undivided … 1/16 of all the oil, gas and other minerals, … in, to and under or that may be produced from the above described acreage, to be paid or delivered to [Puig] … free of cost forever.
After Fasken produces minerals from the wells, it transports, treats, processes, and sells them as condensate and natural gas. In calculating the Puigs’ royalty on produced minerals Fasken deducts costs incurred between the wellhead and the point of sale from the price obtained for the processed gas.
Puig challenged this method of calculation and sought a declaration that their royalty was free of PPCs, and should be based solely on the price obtained on the processed minerals in sales at the downstream market. Puig pointed to the deed language: The royalty was “free of cost forever.” As such, Fasken should be precluded from deducting PPCs prior to calculating the royalty. Fasken responded that Puig’s royalty was calculated based on the value of the gas “produced from the above described acreage”, not a downstream sales price.
The analysis
The Court began with the default rule: Unless the parties agree otherwise, an NPRI is subject to PPCs incurred to prepare the raw oil or gas for sale downstream. The Court noted two primary ways parties may free a royalty interest from bearing PPCs.
- setting the valuation point of the royalty downstream of the well, or
- employing explicit terms that add some or all PPCs to the royalty base.
The Puig deed did neither. The deed described a geographic location: minerals “produced from the above described acreage.” The Court explained that production is the process of bringing minerals to the surface, and production of raw gas occurs at the wellhead. While parties to a deed can set the valuation point and method independently, absent contrary language, a royalty in minerals “produced” and nothing more is a royalty valued at the well.
The Court likened “produced from the above describe acreage” as the functional equivalent of an at-the-well designation. The Court reasoned that this language identified the physical location at which the Puigs’ interest is created, indicating that the royalty interest is in minerals as they come out of the ground, not after PPCs have increased the minerals’ value.
The Court concluded that “free of cost forever” does not change the valuation point or formally relieve the royalty of PPCs. Instead, “forever” merely refers to the temporal duration of the royalty interest. Absent a reference to another valuation point or calculation method in the deed, the cost-free language merely restates the rule that a royalty interest is free of cost incurred in exploring for and producing raw minerals.
The Result
The Court determined that the Puig deed provided for a royalty that is free of costs incurred in exploring for and producing minerals. “Free of costs forever” did not change the valuation point of the royalty interest from the wellhead to the fully processed minerals downstream. Fasken was correct to deduct PPCs from the downstream sales price in calculating the Puigs’ royalty.
David Alllen Coe RIP. He made it famous, remember it was written by the late great Steve Goodman.








