
Several weeks ago the Supreme Court of Texas addressed the double-fraction mineral conveyance, reinforcing the “Van Dyke presumption” but not addressing how the presumption could be rebutted or the presumed-grant doctrine. Last week’s Clifton v. Johnson addresses both.
The deed and the suit
The typewritten title to a “Mineral Deed” was crossed out and “Royalty Deed” was handwritten. The deed conveyed
“an undivided one twenty eighths (1/128) interest in and to all the all gas and other minerals in the and under” the land.
Under a separate clause the grantees would receive no bonuses or rentals on future leases, had no authority to sign leases, and would receive
1/128 (1/16 of the usual 1/8 royalty) under any such new lease
Johnson (successor to the grantees) sued Clifton (successor to the grantors) for a declaration that the deed conveyed a floating royalty. Pre-Van Dyke, the trial court deemed the royalty to be fixed. The court of appeals, refusing to apply the presumed grant doctrine for procedural reasons, reversed – the royalty was floating. The supreme court reinstated the trial court judgment – and its back to fixed.
The presumption is rebutted
The presumption in a double-fraction deed that the royalty floats with the royalty in future leases is “readily and generally rebuttable”. This deed’s plain language rebutted the presumption by showing that the parties used 1/128 as an ordinary numerical value, not as a term of art.
The Van Dyke analysis begins (emphasis by the Court) with the presumption. If textual provisions (whether expressed or structural) illustrate that a double fraction was used, and nothing more, then the double fraction presumption will be rebutted. The deed’s distinct provisions must be harmonized. There was no texturally demonstrative basis in Van Dyke to rebut the presumption.
The deed here contained language in both the granting clause and the future-lease clause that expressly used one 1/128th – the product of two fractions. In the granting clause 1/128th stood alone without an attached double fraction. In the future-lease clause 1/128th was followed by a parenthetical containing two fractions (1/16th of 1/8th) that, multiplied together produced 1/128. The double fraction explained how the parties reached their 1/128th future royalty figure. The court did not give the explanatory parenthetical greater weight than the single fractional product.
The 1/128 figure was read consistently throughout the document. This case was the “photographic negative” of Van Dyke. The operative terms clearly established a textually demonstrable basis to rebut the presumption. The court considered the 1/128 in the future-lease clause to be a conveyance independent of the granting clause.
If textual provisions (whether expressed or structural) illustrate that a double fraction was in fact used as nothing more than as a fraction, the court will apply it in that way. So, the Court held that the deed conveys a fixed 1/128 future royalty interest.
The presumed grant doctrine
In contrast to the Van Dyke presumption, the presumed grant doctrine is concerned not with textual meaning but with real world developments. A party pressing the doctrine must establish
- a long-asserted and open claim, adverse to that of the apparent owner;
- nonclaim by the apparent owner; and
- acquiescence by the apparent owner in the adverse claim.
The Court considered the seven decades in which the grantees and their successors received a fixed 1/128th royalty without any dispute. The Court believed that the parties and their predecessors in interest all agree on what the deed required, namely a fixed 1/128th royalty interest, and they paid and accepted royalties in accordance with that interest.
Regardless of the result of textual analysis, if the parties have acted as if the opposite of what the text says were true for such an extended time, then the court will apply the presumed grant doctrine when the requirements are satisfied.
After discussing the doctrine the court determined that it need not decide whether the Cliftons satisfied the doctrine’s requirements because even if the Court had applied the doctrine the result would be same as the court’s reading of the deed: either way, Johnson is left with a fixed 1/1 28 royalty.







