
Co-author Gunner West
… at least according to the El Paso Court of Appeals. In Craddick v. Cimarex Energy Co., that court affirmed a take-nothing judgment against owners of overriding royalty interests in an oil and gas lease that were washed out when the lessee surrendered the lease to the mineral owner. The court declined to recognize a common-law claim for bad-faith washout and construed the lease surrender clause’s “good faith” language as imposing only a duty to deliver a recordable release.
Facts
When BPX acquired an old lease covering 1,440 acres in Reeves County, there was one well plugged, one shut in, and one producing intermittently. BPX personnel doubted it was still producing in paying quantities. Cimarex owned the mineral estate. Craddick and Staley held overriding royalty interests totaling 11.5625%: Craddick’s reservation included renewal-or-extension (anti-washout) language; Staley’s had none.
Cimarex proposed an acreage trade to BPX that required an 87.5% net revenue interest in the lease. BPX’s NRI was less, the difference mostly being the two overrides. In an email to Cimarex, BPX suggested that terminating the lease would eliminate the overrides and BPX’s working interest, leaving Cimarex with a 99%+ NRI. Cimarex never responded but later declared the lease terminated for lack of production. BPX delivered a release rather than an assignment burdened by the overrides. The acreage reverted, free of the overrides. Cimarex then drilled new wells as owner-operator.
No duty of good faith and fair dealing
The court denied Craddick and Staley’s argument that the fiduciary-type duty of utmost good faith and fair dealing an executive-right holder owes to NPRI owners extends to a lessee’s dealings with an override carved from its working interest. The “executive” in the NPRI cases has always been the mineral owner, not a lessee. And the two interests differ structurally—an NPRI is carved from the mineral estate and runs with the land; an override is carved from the working interest and ordinarily terminates with the lease.
The Supreme Court has declined to find such a duty by a lessee to an override owner, and once expressly reserved the question in a co-lessee dispute. Under recent precedent, any such duty requires a relationship beyond an arm’s-length transaction and the summary-judgment record showed none. Numerous intermediate assignments separated the original override from BPX, neither plaintiff ever dealt with defendants, and both plaintiffs were sophisticated industry players. The court declined to be the first to recognize the claim, leaving the possibility open on a different record (and inviting the Supreme Court to review?)
The contract claim
There was a claim that Cimarex breached the surrender provision requiring the lessee desiring to cancel the lease to “in good faith” promptly prepare and deliver a release clearing any cloud on the lessor’s title. The Court denied that the phrase barred bad-faith surrender; it modified only the obligation to prepare and deliver the release. It was a release-of-record clause governing how a surrender is documented, not whether to surrender.
What about the statute?
In 2023 while this suit was pending, Tom Craddick, plaintiff and Texas House of Representatives member, authored Chapter 31 of the Texas Property Code, creating a cause of action for bad-faith washouts. But Chapter 31 applies only to transactions after September 1, 2023; BPX recorded its release in 2017. Craddick’s statute arrived too late to help him … this time.
Apart from the statute, there is a drafting lesson: Many, possibly most, renewal-or-extension provisions address a lessee renewing or taking a new lease but say nothing about the cancellation and surrender of the lease. The careful negotiator and drafter should consider this possibility.







