DocketNumber: V-791
Judges: Price Daniel
Filed Date: 7/2/1949
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 2/18/2017
i ~ NEY GENEELM. EXAS AuS’rxiw 11. ‘I’EXaS PRICE DANIEL ATTORNEY CF.NERAL March 211,1949 Hon. C. H. Cavness State Auditor Austin, Texas Opinion No'.V-791 Re: Legal interest on delin- quent bonuses, rentals, and royalties due the Pub- lic Free School Fund. Dear Sir: You have requested our opinion regarding interest on bonuses, rentals, and royalties arising from mineral leases, payment of which has been with- held or allowed to become delinquent. You do not submit copies of any lease contracts. We assume that they contain no specific provisions for wlth- holding royalties or the payment or non-payment of interest. Since In each of your cases the principal sums which were withheld have been paid and accepted by the General Land Office without demand for interest, we do not have before us any question of interest as damages. Our discussion Is therefore confined to the interest which can arise by operation of law. We are appreciativeof the fact that the proceeds of the sale of lands set apart to the Public Free School Fund are, by the Constitution,directed to be invested in bonds and securities. Art. VII, Sec. 4, Constitutionof Texas. The Interest derived therefrom is the Available School Fund which is applied annually to the support of the public free schools. Art. VII, Sec. 5, op. cit. If the payment of proceeds for the sale of school fund lands is withheld for any reason, the school fund loses the interest which might be derived from the investment of such proceeds. .. In Texas, when no specified rate of interest Is agreed, interest at six per cent is allowed by sta- ’ i Han, C. H. Cavness - Page 2 - V-791 tute on "all written contracts ascertainingthe sum payable from and after the time when the sum is due and payable." See Art, 5070, R. C. S. 1925. The State, when circumstanceswarrant, is due interest under this statute. State v. Powell,70 S.W. 26
297; Bee?Stat’e`` ir.:‘Stg&&rd ‘&$$$d&t I*#; &;$‘;203 Si W.i2d 984',(Cl~*:"Agp."lp47,:brjr,ref.,)1ci Qden. _~ v, Gates;''24,:. 8,..W-Y: 381 o ea., Your case No. 1 involves the question of interest on the State's 1/16th 011 and gas royalty withheld after productionunder what we assume is a RelinquishmentAct lease, The lessee, who also pur- chased the minerals after production,submitted affi- davits of production each month for the period July 1, 1942 to April 30, 1948 but withheld payment of royalty until June 14, 1948, when payment under pro' test was made to the General Land Office. No express demand for the principal is shown prior to March 25, 1948. No interest was paid by lessee or demanded by the Commissionerof the General Land Office. You ask us to assume that the General Land Office now holds the principal In suspense as requested by the lessee. The lessee has given as its reason for withholding the royalty payments "the general boundary line dis- pute in this area." It is settled that an oil and gas lease of mineral reserved school lands executed under the Re- linquishmentAct Is a contract between the State and the lessee. It is also settled that Articles 5380 and $381, R, C. S., which provide a t%me and place for the payment of the State's royalties,are Incorporatedby law into every RelinquishmentAct lease, and that "toge- ther they constitutean obligation in writing. o e .' Empire G. & F. Co. v. State,121 Tex. 138
,47 S.W.2d 265
; Permian oil CO. v. State,161 S.W.2d 568
, The sums payable as royalty by the lessee to the State un- der the instant contract were ascertainable,and In fact were ascertained,by the lessee each month, It is therefore our opinion that the obligationof this RelinquishmentAct lessee to pay royalty bears legal interest under the statute. The,lnterestshould be calculated on each royalty payment withheld from the time such payment became due and payable under the Hon. C. H. Cavness - Page 3 - V-791 statutes cited to the date of payment under protest. 31-A Tex. Jur. 338. We enclose herewith a copy of the Opinion of Hon. R. W. Yarborough,when an Assistant Attorney General, to Hon. T. J. Tapp, Assistant State Auditor, dated July 9, 1931, reaching the same conclusion. We do not believe that the lessee's reason for withhold- ing the royalties, "the general boundary line dispute in this area," is sufficient to suspend the Interest. The obligation of the lessee to pay royalty is uncon- ditional and the time for payment is fixed by statute. We understand that the pipe line companies have a custom of withholding royaltieswhen title is in dls- pute. This custom may be both profitable for such companies and convenient for lessees, but it cannot relieve this lessee from its obligation Imposed by statute. See Wolfe v. Texas Company, 83 F. 2d 1125(10th Cir., 1936). This rule does not require the State's lessee to pay royalties at Its peril. As owner of the mineral estate, such lessee Is a necessary party to any boundary litigation affecting the leased pre- mises. As a party, it could avoid liability for inter- est by payment into the registry of the court. Hishl v. Humble Oil & Refining Co.,10 F.2d 356
(5th Mr.). If the leasehold were not affected but the right to the royalty were in dispute, this lessee could have interpleadedthe rival claimants. If this lessee were concerned that litigation as to other lands might af- fect its leasehold, though not directly, it could have prevented any liability for interest to the State by paying the royalties under protest, as was finally done, and, as you say, this same lessee did on other state leases in the same field. No liability to third parties for interest could arise after such action, there being no written contract with such third party, no demand by him, and no detention of any royalty money by the lessee. The fact that the principal sum was accepted by the General Land Office In this and your other cases does not discharge the obligationfor unpaid "legal interest" accruing prior to such payment. It is stated -_ Hon. C. PI.Cavness - Page 4 - V-791 that: "Where the debtor makes a payment equal in amount to the principal, upon the stipulationand agreement that It shall be applied In satisfactionof the principal, and It is so accepted and ap- propriated by the creditor, the principal is thereby extinguishedand ceases to bear interest, leaving nothing due but the un- paid Interest." 32 Tex. ,Jur.689, 690. "The right to recover interest after the payment of'the principal sum due de- pends upon whether Interest is due by the terms of the contract; or whether It Is merely implied and allowed by way of dam- ages in an action for the principal. If interest is due by the terms of the con- tract, the payment of the principal is no bar to Its subsequentrecovery, but if it is not due by the terms of the contract, the payment of the principal sum due is a bar to recoveryan100 A. L
. R. 96. Regarding "legal Interest,",it Is stated that: "Where the obligationis one that by statute bears interest, some courts regard this as an equivalentof contractualinter- est and, therefore, allow recovery, even though the principal sum has been paid, while others regard it in the nature of dam- ages, and refuse recovery after the payment of the principal sum."100 A. L
. R. 104. The Texas courts have long distinguishedbe- tween interest which is a matter of right and Interest which is assessed as damages. 3 Tex. Jur. 96. It is our conclusion that payment of the principal sum does not absolve the debtor from liability for "legal ln- terest" previously accruing by statute on a written contract. State v,Powell, supra
, sustains us in this. Your case No. 2 involves the question of Hon. ::.H. Cavness - Page 5 - V-791 Interest orithe State's 1/16th free royalty interest reserved in the sale of a tract of vacant land under the 1931 Sales Act. The 011 and gas was produced and sold to pipe line companies by the fee owner, without the usual lease. The pipe line companies withheld the State's royalties for a thirteen month period ending September 30, 1944, because the Attor- ney General had attacked the validity of the opera- tor's title; and in their answer, the operators had contended that the State had no right to royalties because no vacancy had existed in the first place. Interest was first demanded on October 25, 1947. The papers furnished do not show whether the pipe line companies were parties to the litigation, The operatorswere not paid for the oil purchased during the pendency of the litigation. The State has a contract relationshipwith purchasers of land under the 1931 Sales Act with re- gard to its free royalty. It likewise has a con- tract relationshipwith any mineral lessee of a tract sold under the 1931 Sales Act: I! . * . we think that this act, when construed in the light of the policy of this State relating to public lands and minerals as expressed in certain laws, if not directly, impliedly authorizes the land- owner to actsas the agent of the State in executing mineral leases thereon, and re- serving to the State the free royalties described in Section 4 thereof." Winter- mann v. McDonald,129 Tex. 275
, 102 S. W, 2d 167,104 S.W.2d 4
. The mineral development of the tract involved, from the papers you have furnishedus, was by a grantee from the patentee, His deed and agreement recites the State's royalty interest but makes no specific provision as to when such royalties shall be paid. We have found no statute directly governing the time of payment of the State's "free royalty." Hon. C. H. Cavness - Page 6 - V-791 We will not here attempt to analyze the nature of the State's mineral interest under the 1931 Sales Act. .Certalnrights exist, both before and after the awardee or patentee has executed a lease. See Jones, Non-ParticipatingRoyalty, 26 Texas Law Review 569 (1948). In the absence of a specific provision by statute or lease requiring the payment of royalties at a particular time, how- ever, the courts have held that the lessee has the implied authority and duty to sell the royalty oil to a pipe line company, and that his contract with such company regarding the time for payment of roy- alties will bind the royalty owner. Wolfe v. Prairie Oil & Gas Co.,83 F.2d 434
(10th Cir., 1936), Whe- ther such a contract binds the State, we need not determine for reasons hereafter expressed. We have no copy of the pipe line contract In this case, but we understand that such a con- tract usually requires the seller to show good title. This provision has even been Implied In the absence of express contract. Wolfe v. Texas Co.,83 F.2d 425
(10th Cir., 1936). The effect of such a provl- slon Is that the pipe line company is not liable for interest on royalty 011 after it notifies the royalty owners that an adverse claim has been asserted. Gulf Pipe Line Co. v. Nearan,135 Tex. 50
, 138 s. w. 2d 1065 (reversingGulf Pipe Line Co. v, Mann,111 S.W. 2d
335). In the Nearan case the plaintiffs sued the pipe line company for the value of royalty oil retained for ten years during which a title controversy,to which the pipe line company was not a party, was pend- ing and for legal interest from the delivery dates of the oil. The lease was operated by the Gulf Production Company, which delivered the oil to the Gulf Pipe Line Company. The plaintiffshad executed a division order providing in one paragraph for the papent of royalty on certain dates and In another that s . s In case of any adverse claim of title to the oil run hereunder. s 0 or to the land from which It la run . D . (plaintiffs will) furnish Gulf Pipe Line Company satisfactoryevi- dence of title, or, in case of failure to do so, to furnish satisfactoryindemnity bond m . D against such Hon. C. H. Cavness - Page 7 - V-791 adverse claim or claims, and that the Gulf ,Pipe Line Company may retain the purchase price of the oil until such bond shall be furnished, or until the dispute as to ownership is settled, so as to relleve_the company from all liability for oil re- ceived," Plaintiffswere requested to, but did not, furnish this bond. The Court of Civil Appeals,111 S.W.2d 335
, construed the division order as obligating the pipe line to pay the purchase price of the royalty oil on the delivery date. The contractualright to elect to refuse to make payment was held not to excuse interest due on the amounts so withheld, citing Art. 5070,R.C.S. The Court clearly stated the problem, saying: "The division order was prepared by appellant and presented to appellees for their signatures, there was nothing in the original lease contract that required ap- pellees to join in Its execution. Had the division order stipulated on its face that appellant would have had the right to retain appellees' money . . . without paying interest, in this case for ten years, appellees might have refused to execute it; in that event appellant would have been compelled to pay for the 011 as stipulated in the lease con- tract or to refuse to receive the oil under the lease. By its constructionof the divl- sion order, appellant would read into it an extremely onerous obligationwhich was not in the contemplationof the parties when the original lease contract was executed." The Commission of Appeals, opinion adopted by the Supreme Court, reversed on the interest point, Say- ing that: "The Honorable Court of Civil Appeals. . . took the view that the purchase price for the oil received became due and payable s . . on or before the 25th day of such month. . . . If there had been no adverse claims asserted to the royalty oil, there could be no doubt but Hon. C. H. Cavness - Page 8 - V-791 that this could be a correct conclusion.How- ever, in the fourth,sectlonof the division order the defendants in error agreed In case of any adverse claim of title to the 011 run . . . to furnish to the Gulf Pipe Line Company satisfactoryevidence of title or . . . to furnish satisfactoryindemnity bond . . . and that the Gulf Pipe Line Company may retain the purchase price of the 011 until such bond shall be furnished or until the dispute as to ownership is settled so as to relieve’,the,:com- pany from all llablll.tyof oil received. “Under the fourth section it Is clear to ,ourminds that the parties Intended to provide for alternatlveprovisions in which a postpone- ment of the time when the purchaser of the 011 Would have to pay for it. . . . ,The pipe line company had no right to determine which claimant owned the oil and was not obligated under the division order to litigate the question of owner- ship for the defendants in error with adverse claimants. Assoon as the Pipe Line Company had notice of an adverse claim Ming asserted It had the right to notify defendants in error . . . When . . . (an) Indemnity bond was refused after reasonable demand, under the specific terms of the division order, the Pipe Line Company had the right to retain the purchase price of the oil. . . . It seems to us that the purchase price of the royalty oil under the division order is not due and ayable until the disputes as to ownership have een settled or until a bond ia furnished. . . . The purchase price of the oil under the facts of this case not being due and payable until the adverse claim was extinguished forces the conclusion that the defendants In error are not entitled to collect interest until the trial courtts judgmentwas entered . . . which settled and extinguishedthe dispute as to the adverse claims. . . .” The Court distinguishedKlshl v. Humble OilCompany, supra
, on the ground that no division order was there involved and that such case has no application Hon. C. H. Cavness - Page 9 - W-791 when there is a written contract between the parties. The court excused the failure of the Pipe Line Company to tender the royalty money into registry of the court on the ground that the plaintiffs'refusal to accept the principal without interest made a formal tender unnecessary and was equivalent to a valid tender. We do not doubt that Interest can accrue as against a patentee, his assignee or lessee when such a party withholds the State's royalty after it is due and payable. But when the lease is silent as to the time for royalty payments, neither the fee owner of a tract purchased under the 1931 Sales Act, his lessee nor the pipe line company is liable for legal interest on oil sold to a pipe line company under a contract which pro- vid~esthat the company can withhold payments pending determinationof adverse claims. In such a case, the company is liable for interest only if it fails to take the steps required of it by the contract. Gulf Pipe Line Co. v. Warren,45 S.W.2d 719
. It is true that the Nearan case turned on the constructionof a divi- sion order and that the Commissionerof the General Land Office, correctlywe think, refuses to execute any division orders respecting the State's royalty. This does not, however, give us grounds for distinguishing the case. For the State to claim legal interest against the pipe line company, there must be a written contract or a statute having the effect of a contract. Here, we have no statute. The mere purchase of oil from the State's lessee creates no contractualrelationshipwith the State. State v. Reagan County PurchasingCo.,186 S.W.2d 128
, error refused. If the State chooses to assert rights against the pipe line company, claiming as a beneficiary under the written contract (if any) between the producer and company, the State must also recognize the remaining terms of such contract. We find, therefore, that we cannot claim legal interest against this pipe line company, for without a contract there is no basis for legal Interest, and with a con- tract, In the usual form, there is no liability for in- terest under these circumstances. State v.Powell, supra
, has no application to Hon. C. H. Cavness - Page 10 - V-791 your case No. 2 unless the pipe line company con- tracted in writing to pay the State's royalties and unless this contract contained no withholding pro- vision. On the Informationpresented, It is our opinion that the operator in your case No. 2 is not liable for interest on the royalties withheld by the pipe lines. We do not have sufficient information to pass on the liability of the pipe line companies. Your case No. 3 is of a RelinquishmentAct lease dated December 7, 1946, and filed for record in the county February 28, 1947, but not tendered, with bonus, to the General Land Office until November 24, 1947. We are giving further study to the matter of legal interest on this transactionand will advise you by separate opinion. Your case No. 4 involves a lease of submerged lands upon which the royalty for the period of July 1, 1940 to August 31, 1947,,was underpaid by the lessee and subsequentlyrecalculatedand the principal paid in full. The documents furnished do not show the reason for the underpayment. You do not furnish a copy of the lease. As to oil and gas produced and sold and for which the lessee was paid, interest Is due upon the portion of the State's royalty which was retained by the lessee from and after the time such royalty became due and payable to the State by the terms of the lease contract and the law, Wichita Petroleum Co. v. Wlnant,295 F. 67
(5th Cir., 1924). For any portion of the underpaid royalty which'may have been based upon the value of a product in the hands of a third party, and not on the sales made by the lessee, as between the State and its lessee, we believe that the amount bore no interest until ascertained. See Phillips Petroleum Company v. Johnson,155 F.2d 185
at 191. You have asked us "Is the Commissionerof the General Land Office required to collect interest on de- linquent bonuses, rentals and royalty in the above cited and all similar cases? If so, what Interest rate should - - Hon. C. Hi Cavness - Page 11 -V-791 be paid?" Our discussion under each of your cases indicates that interest may be due the State on some items and not due the State on others. We do not think, however, that it is the duty of the Com- missioner of the General Land Office to recover or collect any item of Interest that may be due. This officer, upon ascertaining that interest is or may be due, may make demand for payment; and upon default, should certify the matter to the Attorney General. When legal interest Is due by statute on a written contract, it should be paid at the rate of six per cent for the period from and after the time when the principal sum is due and payable until pay- ment of the principal sum is made and accepted, or non-payment thereof is excused. Art. 5070, R. C, S.; Gulf Pipe Line Co. v. Nearan,135 Tex. 50
,138 S.W. 2d
1065; Gulf Pipe Line Co. v. Warren,45 S.W.2d 719
; State v. Powell,70 S.W.2d 297
; Phillips Pe- troleum Co. v. Johnson,155 F.2d 185
; Kishi v. Hum- ble Oil & Refining Co.,10 F.2d 356
; and Wichita Petroleum Co. v. Winant, 295 Fed. 67. SUMMARY 1. A RelinquishmentAct lessee who withholds the State's royalties after the statutory time for payment thereof Is liable to the State for legal interest until the withheld royalties are paid to the Commissionerof the Gen- eral Land Office. The existence of a general boundary dispute in the area does not excuse the non-payment of such royalties, the lessee not having paid the royalties into court, interpleaded the rival claimants, or paid the royal- ties to the Land Commissionerunder pro- test when due. Articles 5380-5381, R.C.S.; State v. Powell, 70 S. W, 2d 297; Opinion of July 9, 1931 to T. J. Tapp, Assistant Hon. C. H. Cavness - Page 12 - V-791 State Auditor. 2. The grantee of land sold un- der the 1931 Sales Act with reservation of free royalty to the State Is not liable for legal interest on the State's royalty payments withheld by pipe line companies,where such grantee produces the oil and there is no lease contract providing a definite time for payment of the State's royalty. Art. 5070, R. C. S. 3. Pipe line companiespurchasing 011 from the grantee of land sold under the 1931 Sales Act with reservationof free royalty to the State are not lia- ble to the State for legal interest on the royalty oil purchased under the usual form of purchase contract when there is an adverse claim of title. Gulf Pipe Line Co. v. Nearan,135 Tex. 50
,138 S.W.2d 1065
; State,v.,Reagan County Purchasing Co., 186 S, W. 2d 128, error ref'd; State v. Powell, distinguished. 4. The lessee of submerged lands IS liable to the State for legal interest on royalties which It has underpaid if the amount of such royalty is capable of as- certainmentfrom the terms of the lease contract and the law. Such a lessee is not liable for legal Interest on any por- tion of the underpaid ,royaltywhich may have been based on the value of a product in the hands of a third party until the value thereof had been ascertained. Art, 5070, R. C. S. 5. The acceptanceby the Commissioner of the General Land Office of the principal sum after It Is due and payable does not absolve the obligor from the payment of Hon. C. H. Cavness - Page 13 - V-791 legal interest theretoforeaccruing. 6. When legal Interest Is due to the State, It should be paid at the rate of six per cent per annum for the period from and after the time the principal sum Is due and payable until pay~nentof the principal sum is made and accepted. Art. 5070, R. C. S. 7. It is the duty of the Land Commissionerto ascertain when interest Is due upon delinquent bonus, rentals and royalty and to make demand there- for. If payment Is refused or default occurs, such facts should be certified to the Attorney General. Yours very truly~ BRRtbt Encls.
Kishi v. Humble Oil & Refining Co. , 10 F.2d 356 ( 1925 )
Wolfe v. Prairie Oil & Gas Co. , 83 F.2d 434 ( 1936 )
Permian Oil Co. v. State , 1942 Tex. App. LEXIS 237 ( 1942 )
Wintermann v. McDonald , 129 Tex. 275 ( 1937 )
Wolfe v. Texas Co. , 83 F.2d 425 ( 1936 )
State v. Powell , 70 S.W.2d 297 ( 1934 )