
Co-author David Priutt
So says the Supreme Court of Texas in Braxton Minerals III, LLC v. Bauer. For many years there was doubt and confusion over whether a Texas court could assert its jurisdiction in a suit over mineral rights located in another state. In Braxton the Court answered with an emphatic yes, reversing the Fort Worth Court of Appeals and disapproving a line of intermediate appellate court decisions that had muddied the waters.
The facts
Robert Bauer is a Texan who buys and sells mineral rights across the country. In 2015, Bauer and an associate formed Braxton Minerals II (BM2) and partnered with EnerQuest Oil & Gas to create an Oklahoma company, Braxton Minerals III (BM3), to acquire mineral rights in Appalachia. EnerQuest put up $10 million for seventy-five percent of BM3. Through a series of draw requests, BM3 purchased mineral rights from BM2. The problem: 19 mineral deeds listed BM2, not BM3, as grantee – resulting in royalty payments to the wrong entity.
BM3 asked Bauer to fix the deeds. He refused. BM3 sued in Tarrant County seeking reformation, specific performance, declaratory relief and injunctive relief – all those claim you make when you want the property. The district court granted summary judgment for BM3 and ordered Bauer and BM2 to reform the deeds and convey the mineral rights. The court of appeals reversed. Because the minerals were in West Virginia, Texas courts lacked jurisdiction. The court applied the “gist” rule — if the crux of the suit involves adjudication of title to foreign real property, Texas courts cannot hear it. The analysis was not simple.
The new rule
The Supreme Court tossed the “gist” rule entirely, disapproving of Kelly Oil Co. v. Svetlik and its progeny. The new framework highlights the distinction between suits in personam (against the person) and in rem (against the thing). A Texas court cannot exercise in rem jurisdiction over land in another state, but it absolutely can issue an in-personam judgment compelling a party within its jurisdiction to honor contractual obligations regarding that out-of-state land.
The Court relied on precedent stretching back 130 years — Texas & Pacific Railway Co. v. Gay (1894), Holt v. Guerguin (1914), and McElreath v. McElreath (1961) — all standing for the same proposition: If a person has a contractual obligation to convey land, a court having jurisdiction over his person may compel the conveyance, no matter where the land sits. The decisive question is whether the property or the person is the object of the judgment.
The Court concluded that every category of relief BM3 received — specific performance, deed reformation, declaratory judgment, and injunction — operated in personam and was within the district court’s power. The judgment was reversed and remanded.
Practical implications
No longer will an aggrieved party to a contract involving out-of-state lands have to delve into the intricacies of the “gist rule”, hoping to get it right and knowing, as in Braxton before the clarification, that it would have to start all over in another jurisdiction if it guesses wrong.
Your musical interludes – New Orleans, son of New Orleans, New Orleans/cousin of son of New Orleans (all in one, Ziggy) and to round out the discussion, the beginning of New Orleans.







