Opinion issued March 5, 2013




                                   In The

                            Court of Appeals
                                  For The

                        First District of Texas
                         ————————————
                            NO. 01-11-00593-CV
                         ———————————
     STROUD PRODUCTION, L.L.C., PLANTATION PETROLEUM
       CORPORATION, AND ROBERT A. STROUD, Appellants

                                     V.
     PATRICK E. HOSFORD, MORRIS L. ETHEREDGE, DAVID T.
          THREINEN, AND NELSON E. WOODS, Appellees



                  On Appeal from the 405th District Court
                         Galveston County, Texas
                     Trial Court Cause No. 07CV1461




                               OPINION

     Appellants, Stroud Production, L.L.C. (“Stroud Production”), Plantation

Petroleum Corporation (“Plantation”), and Robert A. Stroud (collectively, the
“Stroud defendants”), 1 challenge the trial court’s judgment, entered after a jury

trial, in favor of appellees, Patrick E. Hosford, Morris L. Etheredge, David T.

Threinen, and Nelson E. Woods, in appellees’ suit against the Stroud defendants

for breach of contract, “intentional termination” of overriding royalty interests,

conversion, tortious interference, and conspiracy.        In twelve issues,2 the Stroud

defendants contend that appellees’ “intentional termination claim does not exist

under Texas law” and is not supported by legally- or factually-sufficient evidence;

there is no evidence to support the “only damages” awarded by the jury; appellees’

conversion claim is “barred by the economic loss doctrine and fails for lack of

evidence;” there is no evidence that Stroud Production tortiously interfered with

appellees’ contract with Plantation; appellees’ alter ego and conspiracy claims “are

barred” and are not supported by legally- or factually-sufficient evidence; the trial

court’s award of prejudgment interest is not supported by legally- or factually-

sufficient evidence; there is no evidence that Plantation breached its obligations to

appellees regarding payments owed for overriding royalties from January 2004; the

trial court’s award of attorney’s fees was “on the wrong cause of action” and the

1
      The parties have listed ERG Resources, L.L.C. (“ERG”) as an appellant, but ERG
      is not identified as a party in the trial court’s judgment, and there are no issues
      pertaining to any judgment entered regarding ERG.
2
      The Stroud defendants identify twenty issues in the section of their appellate brief
      entitled “Issues Presented,” but the argument section of the brief does not track the
      substance or order of the twenty issues presented. We address the Stroud
      defendants’ issues as argued in their brief.
                                            2
fees were “improperly segregated;” the jury’s alter ego findings conflict with its

tortious interference and conspiracy findings; the trial court’s judgment “suggests a

quadruple recovery of attorney’s fees;” and a new trial is required in light of

appellees’ “concealment of evidence” and the trial court’s various erroneous

evidentiary rulings.

      We reverse and render in part, and we remand for a new trial on the issue of

attorney’s fees and a recalculation of prejudgment interest.

                                     Background

      In June 1978, the Houston Domestic Oil Company (“HDOC”) obtained from

two corporate lessors, Ruth M. Bowers and John B. Gordon, two oil and gas leases

(the “B&G leases”) on a 50-acre parcel of land located in the High Island area of

Galveston County, Texas. Hosford signed the leases in his capacity as president of

HDOC, and, pursuant to the terms of the B&G leases, the lessors, Bowers and

Gordon, each retained a 25% “royalty interest” and HDOC obtained a 75%

“working interest.” 3 The B&G leases had a primary term of one year, were to

3
      We note generally that an oil and gas royalty is a share of the product or profit
      from real property, reserved by the grantor of a mineral lease, in exchange for the
      lessee’s right to mine or drill on land. BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY 1445 (9th ed.
      2009). “Royalty” is commonly defined as the landowner’s share of production,
      free of expenses of production. Heritage Res., Inc. v. NationsBank, 939 S.W.2d
      118, 121–22 (Tex. 1996). An oil and gas “working interest” consists of the right
      to the mineral interest granted by an oil and gas lease, so called because the lessee
      acquires the right to work on the leased property, search, develop, and produce oil
      and gas, as well as the obligation to pay costs. BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY at
      1745.
                                            3
remain in effect thereafter for so long as oil or gas was produced in commercial

quantities, and were to terminate if production ceased for 90 continuous days

without the commencement of “additional drilling or reworking operations.”

      In September 1978, HDOC granted Hosford a 2% overriding royalty

interest 4 in any oil and gas produced from the leases. Shortly thereafter, HDOC

granted Etheredge a 2% overriding royalty interest and Threinen and Woods each a

one-half percent overriding royalty interest. Thus, appellees collectively obtained

from HDOC a 5% overriding royalty interest in production from the B&G leases.

      HDOC drilled wells that produced oil in commercial quantities, and

appellees, according to their assignments, received payments for their overriding

royalty interests. Although ownership of the B&G leases subsequently changed

hands several times, appellees retained their overriding royalty interests and

continued to receive their payments for production until the end of December

2003, when Plantation acquired the leases.

      In late 2002 and early 2003, Stroud, who held other lease interests, became

interested in acquiring the B&G leases because he had concluded that the Bowers

and Gordon properties were “capable of more production” and contained


4
      An overriding royalty interest is a non-participating interest in a mineral lease.
      Ridge Oil Co., Inc. v. Guinn Invs., Inc., 148 S.W.3d 143, 155 (Tex. 2004). An
      owner of an overriding royalty “has no right and thus no ability to go onto the
      underlying property and drill or otherwise take action to perpetuate a lease.” Id.
      Rather, such an owner is dependent on the lessee to preserve the lease. Id.
                                          4
“substantial” untapped reserves. Stroud Production, owned and managed solely by

Stroud, hired a landman to investigate the prospect. And Stroud learned that Union

Seaboard held the B&G leases, appellees possessed, collectively, their 5%

overriding royalty interest, and Bowers and Gordon (and their assigns) retained a

25% royalty interest. In August 2003, Stroud Production offered to purchase the

B&G leases from Union Seaboard for $58,000.

      Plantation, a company of which Stroud was president and the sole employee,

bought the B&G leases on December 1, 2003 for $58,000. Stroud Production

became the operator of the leases, under which there was only one producing well

operating.   Union Seaboard, the prior lessor, had been reporting the ongoing

production from the well to the Texas Railroad Commission. It is undisputed that

this well continued to produce oil in December 2003 and part of January 2004.

Although the Stroud defendants paid appellees their overriding royalty interests

from the well’s production in December 2004, they did not pay appellees for their

overriding royalty interests for the January 2004 oil production until April 2010,

shortly before the underlying trial. The Stroud defendants asserted that they did

not pay appellees for this month of production because of an oversight.

      On January 13, 2004, Stroud Production’s landman obtained copies of the

assignments of appellees’ overriding royalty interests, and he advised Stroud

Production that none of appellees’ assignments contained “renewals and

                                         5
extensions” clauses. The evidence reveals that “renewals and extensions” clauses

may be used to protect overriding royalty interests by ensuring that such interests

apply to any leases that qualify as renewals or extensions of prior leases. Stroud

admitted that it was “probably a mistake” on his part not to have included a

renewals-and-extensions clause in the instrument assigning him his overriding

royalty interest, but he had not anticipated a need for such a clause and did not

realize that his interest would be subsequently “wash[ed] out” by a lessee. On

January 20, 2004, a few days after Stroud Production received notice that appellees

did not have renewals and extensions clauses in their assignments, a “polished rod”

on the only producing well operating under the leases broke, and production

ceased.    Stroud’s lawyer advised him that he had no obligation to pay the

overriding royalty interest owners once the well had ceased production.

      In his testimony, Stroud agreed that he was the “decision maker” for both

Stroud Production and Plantation. And he knew that after the only remaining

producing well operating under the B&G leases ceased production, the Stroud

defendants had 90 days to commence work under the leases or they would

terminate. Stroud explained that he did not order repairs to the well because of the

expenses, but also because he had already offered interests in the property to other

investors, albeit under other leases, which are discussed in more detail below.

Although Stroud acknowledged that the necessary repairs for the broken well

                                         6
“weren’t out of the normal,” none of the Stroud defendants conducted repairs or

undertook “additional drilling or reworking operations” during the 90-day period

after the well had ceased production. Because nothing was done during the 90-day

period, the B&G leases terminated on April 20, 2004. Stroud admitted that he

intentionally returned the well to production in June 2004 only after the B&G

leases had terminated, new leases had been obtained, and the 90-day continuous-

operations period had passed.      He also admitted that he “did not want any

overriding royalty interest on the new leases” and appellees’ overriding royalty

interests had been “washed out.”

      Stroud further testified that even before Plantation had acquired the B&G

leases from Union Seaboard and before the polished rod on the producing well had

broken, he had been interested in obtaining new leases on the same land because he

had concerns about the validity and scope of the B&G leases. On February 19,

2004, less than one month after the polished rod on the well had broken and during

the 90-day continuous-operations period, Plantation entered into a new lease with

Bowers. The new lease applied to the same 50-acre parcel of land covered by the

old lease and provided the same royalty structure, but it included other terms that

differed from the original B&G lease, such as a different primary term. And the

new lease was not burdened by the overriding royalty interests held by appellees




                                        7
under the old B&G lease. Plantation also executed a new lease with Gordon. 5 We,

as do the parties, refer to these new leases collectively as the “McNeil leases.”

      The Stroud defendants continued to evaluate the potential production of the

well during the 90-day continuous-operations period under the B&G leases.

Shortly after the 90-day period expired, Stroud, on April 29, 2004, made a

presentation to a group of potential investors, representing that Stroud intended to

repair the broken well and conduct additional work. Concluding that the B&G

leases had expired, Stroud repaired the broken well in May 2004 at a cost of

approximately $7,500, and resumed production from the well shortly thereafter

under the McNeil leases. The Stroud defendants also conducted other new work

pursuant to the McNeil leases. Because the McNeil leases were no longer subject

to the overriding royalty interests, Plantation’s net revenue interest totaled 75%.

The McNeil leases were subsequently assigned to Stroud Production and, in 2007,

Stroud Production sold the McNeil leases to ERG for approximately $2.5 million,

and production from the leases continued. 6


5
      In their briefing, the Stroud defendants assert that in May 2004, after the B&G
      leases expired, Plantation obtained a new lease from the Gordon interest. There is
      no record citation to this new lease, but the parties appear to agree that the Stroud
      defendants acquired new leases from both Bowers and Gordon or their successors
      and assigns.
6
      The parties, in their briefing, generally agree, or at least do not dispute, that
      production continued on the parcel of land previously covered by the B&G leases.

                                            8
      Following the presentation of evidence, the trial court granted a directed

verdict in favor of the Stroud defendants on appellees’ claims for “breach of duty

of good faith and fair dealing,” fraudulent concealment, and “breach of implied

covenant to develop.” The remaining claims were submitted to the jury, which

found that Plantation failed to comply with an agreement to pay appellees

overriding royalties from the B&G leases for January 2004; Plantation

“intentionally terminate[d] the [B&G] Leases to destroy [appellees’] rights to their

overriding royalty interests”; Plantation converted appellees’ “proceeds from their

overriding royalty interests” in the B&G Leases; Stroud Production intentionally

interfered with appellees’ rights to receive their overriding royalties under the

B&G Leases; Stroud was responsible for the conduct of both Plantation and Stroud

Production; Stroud Production and Stroud were part of a conspiracy with

Plantation and acted with an “intent to deprive [appellees] of the proceeds from

their overriding royalty interests;” and Stroud and Stroud Production conspired to

damage appellees. In a single damages question pertaining to all of the above

causes of action, the trial court asked the jury to calculate an amount that would

reasonably compensate appellees for damages caused by the Stroud defendants.

The trial court instructed the jury to consider “only” the “unpaid overriding

royalties from the [B&G] Leases” and asked it to calculate such damages for three

time periods: (1) January 1, 2004 to January 20, 2004 (before production on the

                                         9
B&G leases ceased), (2) January 21, 2004 to January 1, 2007, and (3) January 1,

2007 to present. The jury awarded damages to appellees for each of the identified

time periods. The damages awarded by the jury for the time period January 1,

2004 to January 20, 2004 represented the amount to which appellees were entitled

to recover for their overriding royalty interest in the B&G leases prior to the well

ceasing production on January 20, 2004. The parties appear to agree that the

damages awarded by the jury for the other two time periods generally reflect the

amounts that appellees would have received if they had retained their overriding

royalty interests in the production that occurred under the McNeil leases.

      In its final judgment, the trial court ordered that Hosford and Etheredge each

recover from the Stroud defendants actual damages of $196,150, 7 plus pre-

judgment interest in the amount of $32,043.75, and Threinen and Woods each

recover from the Stroud defendants actual damages of $49,037.50, plus pre-

judgment interest in the amount of $8,010.94.        The trial court also awarded

appellees attorney’s fees of $359,479.10, which included appellate attorney’s fees.

                               Breach of Contract

      In their eighth issue, the Stroud defendants argue that the evidence is legally

insufficient to support the jury’s breach-of-contract finding pertaining to the


7
      The actual damages awarded by the trial court in its judgment appear to include
      the amount found by the jury to have been owed for outstanding royalties from
      January 2004.
                                         10
payment of overriding royalties for production that occurred under the B&G leases

during January 2004 because appellees were “issued checks in April 2010 for all

January 2004 production and stock tank oil.” In regard to the timing of the

payments, the Stroud defendants assert that the “jury was not asked to determine

when payments were made” and “no time period for payment was specified” in the

question submitted to the jury.

      In conducting a legal-sufficiency review of the evidence, we must consider

all of the evidence in the light most favorable to the verdict and indulge every

reasonable inference that would support it. City of Keller v. Wilson, 168 S.W.3d

802, 822 (Tex. 2005).      We will sustain a legal-sufficiency or “no evidence”

challenge if the record shows one of the following: (1) a complete absence of

evidence of a vital fact, (2) rules of law or evidence bar the court from giving

weight to the only evidence offered to prove a vital fact, (3) the evidence offered to

prove a vital fact is no more than a scintilla, or (4) the evidence establishes

conclusively the opposite of the vital fact. Id. at 810. In conducting a legal-

sufficiency review, a “court must consider evidence in the light most favorable to

the verdict, and indulge every reasonable inference that would support it.” Id. at

822. The term “inference” means,

      In the law of evidence, a truth or proposition drawn from another
      which is supposed or admitted to be true. A process of reasoning by
      which a fact or proposition sought to be established is deduced as a

                                         11
      logical consequence from other facts, or a state of facts, already
      proved. . . .

Marshall Field Stores, Inc. v. Gardiner, 859 S.W.2d 391, 400 (Tex. App.—

Houston [1st Dist.] 1993, writ dism’d w.o.j.) (citing BLACK'S LAW DICTIONARY

700 (5th ed. 1979)). For a jury to infer a fact, “it must be able to deduce that fact

as a logical consequence from other proven facts.” Id.

      If there is more than a scintilla of evidence to support the challenged finding,

we must uphold it.       Formosa Plastics Corp. USA v. Presidio Eng’rs &

Contractors, Inc., 960 S.W.2d 41, 48 (Tex. 1998). “‘[W]hen the evidence offered

to prove a vital fact is so weak as to do no more than create a mere surmise or

suspicion of its existence, the evidence is no more than a scintilla and, in legal

effect, is no evidence.’” Ford Motor Co. v. Ridgway, 135 S.W.3d 598, 601 (Tex.

2004) (quoting Kindred v. Con/Chem, Inc., 650 S.W.2d 61, 63 (Tex. 1983)). If the

evidence at trial would enable reasonable and fair-minded people to differ in their

conclusions, then jurors must be allowed to do so. City of Keller, 168 S.W.3d at

822; see also King Ranch, Inc. v. Chapman, 118 S.W.3d 742, 751 (Tex. 2003). “A

reviewing court cannot substitute its judgment for that of the trier-of-fact, so long

as the evidence falls within this zone of reasonable disagreement.” City of Keller,

168 S.W.3d at 822.

      The trial court asked the jury whether Plantation “fail[ed] to comply with the

agreement to pay [appellees] their overriding royalties on production from the

                                         12
[B&G] Leases for January 2004.” The jury answered “yes” and then awarded

Hosford and Etheredge $150 and Threinen and Woods $37.50 for damages

incurred from January 1, 2004 until January 20, 2004. And the trial court included

these amounts in the actual damages that it awarded to appellees in its judgment.

      It is undisputed that appellees did not receive these payments, which were

due and owing, until April 2010, shortly before trial.        During trial, Hosford

complained about the lateness of these payments, noting that he had not received

any interest. The jury’s breach-of-contract finding is supported by evidence that

Plantation failed to timely make the payments. See TEX. NAT. RES. CODE ANN. §

91.402 (a) (Vernon 2011) (providing, “If the lease or other agreement does not

specify the time for payment, subsequent proceeds must be paid no later than: (1)

60 days after the end of the calendar month in which subsequent oil production is

sold; or (2) 90 days after the end of the calendar month in which subsequent gas

production is sold”); id. § 91.403 (Vernon 2011) (providing for the payment of

interest on late payments). Although the Stroud defendants presented evidence

that Plantation’s failure to timely make the payments was the result of a “mistake,”

the jury could have reasonably inferred that, by making contractually required

payments over six years after they were due, Plantation breached its contract to pay

the overriding royalties to appellees. Accordingly, we hold that the evidence is

legally sufficient to support the jury’s finding that Plantation failed to comply with

                                         13
its contractual obligation to pay appellees their overriding royalties on production

from the B&G leases for January 2004 and the trial court did not err in entering

judgment in appellees’ favor on this claim.

      We overrule the Stroud defendants’ eighth issue.8

                   Duty Owed to Overriding Royalty Interests

      In their first issue, the Stroud defendants argue that the trial court erred in

entering judgment in favor of appellees on their claim for “intentional termination”

of their overriding royalty interests because the claim does not exist under Texas

law, Plantation had no contractual obligation to perpetuate the B&G leases for the

benefit of appellees, Plantation owed no fiduciary duty and had no special

relationship with appellees, there are no “public policy reasons for the creation of a

new fiduciary duty” owed to appellees, and “the retroactive application of a

fiduciary obligation” in this case “would be inequitable given Plantation’s reliance

on settled Texas law.” The Stroud defendants further argue that the evidence is

legally and factually insufficient to support the jury’s finding that Plantation

intentionally terminated the B&G leases to destroy appellees’ right to their

8
      The Stroud defendants’ eighth issue presents a challenge to the liability finding on
      the breach-of-contact claim. During trial, appellees conceded that the Stroud
      defendants, shortly before trial, had paid the outstanding royalties for January
      2004. The trial court’s judgment reflects that it included the principal amounts
      awarded by the jury for the January 2004 royalties in its award of actual damages,
      even though those amounts had already been paid. The Stroud defendants raise
      this matter in their second issue, which we address below.

                                           14
overriding royalty interests because the B&G leases expired “according to their

terms” and not as a result of an intentional act committed by Plantation. Finally,

the Stroud defendants argue that the trial court erred in submitting the “intentional

termination” question to the jury because the question “lacked sufficient

instructions to provide a standard to guide the jury in assessing the conduct of

Plantation.”

      The record contains evidence supporting the jury’s finding that the Stroud

defendants “intentionally terminated” the B&G leases to “destroy” appellees’

overriding royalty interests in the B&G leases. 9 There is no evidence that any

Stroud defendant committed any deliberate act in connection with the breaking of

the rod on the producing well that was operating under the B&G leases. However,

there is sufficient evidence to support an implied finding that, after the well ceased


9
      The parties expend considerable effort in arguing whether the record contains any
      evidence from which the jury could have reasonably inferred that the Stroud
      defendants “sabotaged” the producing well operating under the B&G leases.
      However, even accepting that there is no evidence of sabotage, there is ample
      evidence that Plantation, along with the other Stroud defendants, intentionally
      sought to terminate the B&G leases.

      We note that a party may, of course, intentionally and lawfully terminate a
      contract in accord with the contract’s terms. The Stroud defendants themselves
      asserted that, rather than continuing under the B&G leases, they sought to acquire
      new leases, necessarily giving rise to an inference that they sought to terminate the
      B&G leases. In regard to whether Plantation sought to destroy appellees’
      overriding royalty interests, Stroud himself testified that he did not want appellees’
      overriding royalty interests burdening the McNeil leases. As explained above, the
      jury could have reasonably inferred from Stroud’s own testimony that Plantation
      terminated the B&G leases, at least in part, to divest appellees of their interests.
                                            15
production, the Stroud defendants elected not to repair the well so that the B&G

leases would expire, appellees’ overriding royalty interests would be extinguished,

and the Stroud defendants would benefit financially by resuming production under

new leases that were not burdened by appellees’ interests.         Appellees also

presented evidence that, both before and after the well had ceased production, the

Stroud defendants were seeking to acquire new leases on the same property that

had been subject to the B&G leases; the Stroud defendants chose not to repair the

well even though such repairs could have been completed at reasonable cost

compared to what the Stroud defendants had already spent on the B&G leases; the

Stroud defendants chose not to repair the well during the 90-day continuous-

operations period even though they were convinced that the property held

“substantial” untapped reserves; the Stroud defendants were making plans to

market interests in the new leases during the 90-day continuous-operations period;

and shortly, after the B&G leases expired, the Stroud defendants repaired the well

and production resumed under the new McNeil leases unburdened by appellees’

overriding royalty interests. In sum, the record contains evidence that the Stroud

defendants intentionally terminated the B&G leases to, at least in part, terminate

appellees’ interests.

      However, whether the Stroud defendants’ conduct is actionable under Texas

law is a separate matter. In determining the existence and scope of what duty, if

                                        16
any, Plantation, as the lessee under the B&G leases, owed to appellees, the holders

of overriding royalty interests in production from the B&G leases, we first consider

the Texas Supreme Court opinions in Sunac Petroleum Corp. v. Parkes, 416

S.W.2d 798 (Tex. 1967), and Ridge Oil Co. v. Guinn Investments, Inc., 148 S.W.3d

143 (Tex. 2004).

      In Sunac, Parkes sold and assigned to a third party a mineral lease that was

later transferred to Sunac. 416 S.W.2d 799–800. Parkes reserved an overriding

royalty interest in production from this lease and “any extension or renewal,” but

the assignment of this lease to Sunac also included a surrender clause, relieving

Sunac of any obligation to continue the lease. Id. When the lessor questioned the

validity of the lease held by Sunac, Sunac procured a new lease on the same land,

but with different terms, and Sunac stopped paying the overriding royalties owed

to Parkes under the original lease. Id. at 800. Parkes contended that his overriding

royalty interest applied under the new lease. Id. After considering the language of

the leases, the Texas Supreme Court concluded that the original lease had

terminated and the new lease, which was executed on “substantially different

terms,” was not a renewal or extension. Id. at 802–03.

      The supreme court acknowledged that courts in other jurisdictions had, on

certain facts, recognized the existence of a “constructive trust” in favor of an

overriding royalty interest holder on the basis of “specific language in the

                                        17
assignment” or a “close relationship between the parties.”        Id. at 803.   For

example, the court explained that other courts had relied upon “relationships of

trust and confidence” in concluding that a new lease constituted a “renewal or

extension” of an original. Id. And the court noted that other courts had offered

protection to overriding royalty interest holders in a “washout transaction,” which

“generally involve[ed] some bad faith on the part of the lessee” and arose when a

new lease was taken before the expiration of the original and the original lease was

“simply permit[ted] . . . to expire.” Id. at 804 (citing Oldland v. Gray, 179 F.2d

408 (10th Cir. 1950)).

      Turning to the facts before it, the Texas Supreme Court noted that, other

than the renewals and extensions clause in the instrument granting the overriding

royalty interest, there was no evidence of a relationship of trust or confidence

between Parkes and Sunac. Id. Sunac had obtained the new lease “to protect its

interest” only after the lessor had raised concerns about the prior lease. Id. The

court recognized that renewals and extensions clauses had been cited by other

courts as creating a “fiduciary relation,” but it construed the renewals and

extensions clause in the overriding royalty instrument together with the surrender

clause in the lease and concluded that the surrender clause relieved Sunac from any

“duty to perpetuate the lease, and thus the overriding royalty.” Id. The court

explained that, “[n]ormally, when an oil and gas lease terminates, the overriding

                                        18
royalty created in an assignment of the lease is likewise extinguished” and,

“generally, . . . the assignment of an oil and gas lease reserving an overriding

royalty in the assignor does not usually create any confidential or fiduciary

relationship between the assignor and his assignee.” Id. Because no evidence

supported the existence of a “confidential or fiduciary relationship” and the

provisions of the leases and assignment were “controlling,” the court held that the

overriding royalty interest expired with the original lease and no constructive trust

was warranted. Id. at 805.

      In Ridge Oil, two lessees, Ridge and Guinn, obtained working interests in

adjoining tracts of land under a single base lease. 148 S.W.3d at 147–48. The

only two producing wells on the entire lease, which were sustaining the lease, were

located on the Ridge tract. Id. Ridge devised a plan to terminate the entire base

lease and obtain new leases on both tracts by shutting off the electricity to the two

producing wells for 90 days. Id. at 148. After Ridge effectuated his plan and

obtained new leases, Guinn sued Ridge for tortious interference and recognition of

a constructive trust, contending, in part, that Ridge could not lawfully “washout”

his interest. Id. at 148–49, 153. Guinn asserted that a lessee could not lawfully

surrender or terminate a lease “to destroy the rights of another partial assignee of

the lessee’s interest.” Id. at 155. The Texas Supreme Court denied Guinn’s

request to impose liability for this conduct, stating

                                          19
      Even if such a rule of law might be appropriate in the context of
      overriding royalty interests when the underlying lease does not
      contain an express release provision, a question we do not address,
      there is a material distinction between an overriding royalty interest
      and that of a lessee. An overriding royalty interest is a non-
      participating interest. A royalty owner has no right and thus no ability
      to go onto the underlying property and drill or otherwise take action to
      perpetuate a lease. An overriding royalty interest owner is wholly
      dependent on the lessee to keep a lease alive. That is not true of a
      lessee. A lessee in Guinn’s position could continue a lease in effect
      by drilling a well and obtaining production, or continuing operations
      until production is obtained, under lease provisions like those in the
      1937 lease.

Id. (emphasis added).

      The supreme court held that Ridge owed no duty to Guinn to continue the

original lease and, thus, the original lease terminated by its own terms. Id. at 155–

57, 160–61(“Ridge owed no duty to Guinn to perpetuate the 1937 lease or to

procure its renewal or extension for Guinn.”). The court concluded that Guinn was

not entitled to a constructive trust under any new leases on the Guinn tract because

there was no “confidential relationship” between partial assignees of leasehold

interests under a single lease. Id. at 160. And it further concluded that there was

no basis for a tortious interference claim. Id. at 160-61.

      The Texas Supreme Court’s opinions in Sunac and Ridge Oil indicate that

the existence and scope of any duty owed by a lessee to the holder of an overriding

royalty interest is an open question under Texas law. However, these opinions


                                          20
direct us to carefully consider the language of controlling documents and the

circumstances and relationships of the parties to determine whether any such duty

is owed and, thus, whether any actionable wrong has been committed by a lessee

who seeks to “intentionally terminate” a lease so as to divest the holder of an

overriding royalty interest of his interest.

      One Texas court has considered claims, similar to those presented here, that

were brought by an overriding royalty interest holder who claimed that his interest

had been washed out in “bad faith.” Sasser v. Dantex Oil & Gas, Inc., 906 S.W.2d

599, 601–02 (Tex. App.—San Antonio 1995, writ denied). In Sasser, which the

supreme court in Ridge Oil characterized as “instructive,” Sasser held an

overriding royalty interest under an original lease in which Dantex, the lessee, held

a 75% working interest. Id. at 601. Sasser’s overriding royalty interest did not

apply to renewals or extensions of the original lease, and the lease also permitted

Dantex unilaterally to surrender it at any time. Id. After Dantex and the mineral

owner subsequently entered into a new lease, Sasser argued that his overriding

royalty interest was not extinguished because there had been production in paying

quantities occurring under the original lease at the time that the new lease was

executed. Id. Sasser accused Dantex of wrongfully attempting to “eliminate or

‘washout’ [his] overriding royalty interest” in the original lease, “thereby

breaching its duty of good faith and fair dealing or other fiduciary-type duty.” Id.

                                           21
The San Antonio Court of Appeals rejected imposing any such duty, holding that

the original lease had terminated when Dantex executed the new lease “with the

intent and understanding that” the original lease was released; and the court

explained that it was “not material” whether there was production in paying

quantities at the time. Id. at 603–04.

      Sasser asserted that “‘evolving principles of Texas law’ mandate[d] the

conclusion that an oil and gas lessee owes an overriding royalty interest owner a

duty of good faith not to engage in intentional acts designed to eliminate or

‘washout’ the overriding royalty interest owner.”         Id. at 605–06. The court

disagreed, noting first that the lease contained a surrender clause and Sasser’s

assignment, which created his overriding royalty interest, did not contain a

renewals and extensions clause.      Id. at 606. Second, the court noted that there

were no facts to establish a confidential or fiduciary relationship. Id. at 606–07.

The court characterized Sasser’s bad-faith claims as being “circular”: Sasser

argued that a duty of good faith should be imposed because there was evidence of

bad faith. Id. at 607. And it explained that Dantex’s acts would have been in “bad

faith” only if its contractual right to surrender the original lease had been subject to

a duty to act in “good faith” and the “method by which a lease is terminated—so

long as it is contractually permitted—is a distinction without a difference.” Id. In




                                          22
sum, the court held that Dantex did not owe Sasser a “duty of good faith and fair

dealing or any other fiduciary-type duty.” 10 Id.

      Other Texas courts have similarly been reluctant to recognize any sort of

duty, fiduciary or otherwise, flowing from a lessee to the holder of an overriding

royalty interest.   For example, in Exploration Company v. Vega Oil & Gas

Company, the holder of overriding royalty interests in original mineral leases

contended that new leases, which were obtained over one year after the old leases

had expired and which involved different terms and parties, constituted renewals

and extensions of the original leases. 843 S.W.2d 123, 124–25 (Tex. App.—

Houston [14th Dist.] 1992, writ denied). Our sister court held that the lessee had

established as a matter of law that the leasehold estate under the old leases had

expired as a result of non-production, and, thus, the overriding royalty interests in

the old leases had also expired. Id. at 125. The court noted that there was no

authority in Texas supporting the arguments of the overriding royalty interest

holders that the lessee owed them a fiduciary obligation or a constructive trust on

the new leases was warranted. Id. at 126. The court explained that the “mere


10
      The court emphasized that the “contractual right to unilaterally terminate the
      lease, coupled with the absence of any facts justifying the imposition of a
      confidential or fiduciary relationship,” defeated Sasser’s arguments for the
      imposition of some type of duty of good faith. Sasser v. Dantex Oil & Gas, Inc.,
      906 S.W.2d 599, 607 (Tex. App.—San Antonio 1995, writ denied) (emphasis
      added).

                                         23
assignment of an oil and gas lease reserving an overriding royalty interest does not

in itself create a confidential or fiduciary relationship between the assignor and

assignee” and “[i]f such a relationship is created, it must be by the terms of the

assignment or by other acts of the parties.” Id. The court concluded that the

renewals and extensions clause, and a separate notice clause, did not impose a

fiduciary obligation on the lessee. Id. at 126–27. The court further concluded that

“merely because” the lease did not contain a surrender clause did not “mean that a

fiduciary relationship exist[ed].”   Id. at 126. Because there was no evidence of

fraud, bad faith, or the existence of a fiduciary relationship, and because there was

“no Texas case law expressly support[ing] [the] imposition of a fiduciary

relationship or constructive trust” on the facts before it, the court held that no

overriding royalty interest applied to the new leases. Id. at 127.

      In McCormick v. Krueger, the holders of overriding royalty interests in an

oil and gas lease contended that the owners of the working interest had “washed

out” their interests by allowing “the lease to expire;” they asserted that the holder

of a new lease, who had bought the leasehold equipment from the working interest

owners, was bound to honor their overriding royalty interests. 593 S.W.2d 729,

729 (Tex. Civ. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 1979, writ ref’d n.r.e.). The overriding

royalty interest holders were protected by renewals and extensions clauses in their

assignments, but this Court noted that it was undisputed that the original leases had

                                         24
expired at the time the new leaseholder had acquired the leasehold and equipment.

Id. at 731. We held that the new leaseholder was not obligated to honor the

overriding royalty interests. Id.

      In Wagner v. Sheets & Walton Drilling Company, the court considered

whether an overriding royalty interest that burdened an original lease should be

“equitably impress[ed]” on a new lease covering the same land. 359 S.W.2d 543,

544–45 (Tex. Civ. App.—Eastland 1962, writ ref’d n.r.e.). The original lease

provided that it expired in the absence of production at the end of the primary term.

Id. at 545. Moreover, the “continuation of the overriding royalty” in the original

lease “depended upon the continuation of the lease;” there was no provision

requiring that the lease be maintained beyond its primary term, and there were no

provisions in the assignments providing that the overriding royalties would be

continued in any new leases on the same property. Id. The lessee had permitted

the original lease to expire and had re-leased (almost all of) the same land, but the

court stated that the lessee had done “no more than that which [it] had the right to

do under the [original] lease and the assignments.”     Id. at 545–46. Concluding

that the original lease had expired by its own terms and the new lease was not an

“extension” of the prior lease, the court explained,

      True, it would have been greatly to the advantage of the holders of the
      overriding royalty interest for the [original] lease to be perpetuated in
      toto or that such overriding royalty be continued in effect as to all
      lands covered by such lease in any new lease agreement. The holders
                                         25
      of the [original] lease, however, had no such obligation. There was no
      fiduciary relationship between the parties which required the holders
      of that lease to maintain it or the overriding royalty interest of
      appellant in force as to all the land involved therein.

Id. at 546. Thus, the court held that there was no basis on which to impress the

new lease with the overriding royalty that burdened the original lease. Id.

      In Fain & McGaha v. Biesel, the holder of overriding royalty interests

contended that their interests should be applied to the portion of the lease that had

been voluntarily surrendered and any new leaseholders obtaining a lease from the

mineral owners should have to take the lease “burdened by the same obligation.”

331 S.W.2d 346, 347–48 (Tex. Civ. App.—Fort Worth 1960, writ ref’d n.r.e.).

Noting that the original lease permitted the lessee to surrender the lease at any

time, the court explained,

      [U]nless the instrument creating the overriding or royalty interest as
      an estate in itself makes express provision to the contrary, the interest
      continues or ceases with the leasehold estate out of which it is carved
      and cannot survive termination by surrender or release of the
      leasehold estate by the owners.

Id. at 348 (emphasis added).

      Finally, we consider two cases from the Unites States Court of Appeals for

the Fifth Circuit.   In Keese v. Continental Pipe Line Company, holders of

overriding royalty interests in an original lease that had been surrendered by the

lessee contended that their interests should be applied to a new lease. 235 F.2d

386, 387–80 (5th Cir. 1956). The court stated that “unless . . . the instrument
                                         26
creating the overriding or royalty interest makes express provision to the contrary,

the interest continues or ceases with the leasehold estate out of which it is carved

and cannot survive termination by surrender or release of the leasehold estate by

the owners.” Id. at 388. In addressing the plaintiffs’ arguments that lessee had

surrendered the lease in bad faith, the court explained,

      Assuming, without deciding, that the surrender to the mineral owners
      by the holders of the leasehold estate could, under any state of facts,
      operate to give the owners of the override an interest in oil produced
      not under the lease from which the override was carved but under a
      new one issued by the mineral owners to a different lessee, though in
      the state of the authorities affirming the right of the lessee to do just
      that, it is difficult to assume any state of facts which could do so, it is
      quite clear that no such facts or circumstances are presented or
      pointed to by plaintiffs.

Id. at 388 (emphasis added). The court concluded that the “remote assignees in the

leasehold chain of title[] were under no obligation to plaintiffs to drill or to

continue to hold on to the lease,” and the fact that the assignee “knew or might

have known that a good well could be brought in on the property, could not have

prevented them from surrendering the lease to the landowners for any reason or

for no reason at all.” Id. at 389 (emphasis added). The court explained that “[t]he

exercise by one man of a legal right cannot be a legal wrong to another” and

“whatever one has a right to do, another cannot have a right to complain.” 11 Id.



11
      The court further stated,

                                          27
(quoting Montgomery v. Phillips Petroleum Co., 49 S.W.2d 967, 971 (Tex. Civ.

App.—Amarillo 1932, writ ref’d)).

      In In re GHR Energy Corp., the court considered an overriding royalty

agreement that included a renewals or extensions clause but also provided that

preservation of the lease was “solely at the will [of the lessee].” 972 F.2d 96, 99

(5th Cir. 1992). Even though production never ceased, the lessee terminated the

lease and entered into new leases, thereby extinguishing the overriding royalty

owner’s interest in the original lease. Id. The court held that the lessee “was free

to terminate the leasehold estate” and “cut off” the overriding royalties pursuant to

the lease’s surrender clause, despite the fact that gas production never ceased. Id.

at 100. However, on rehearing, the court noted, “We might well reach a different

result if the facts here had suggested that [the lessee] surrendered its interest in the

             Ordinarily, an assignment of a lease where assignor retains an
             overriding royalty interest without further provision does not create a
             fiduciary relationship between the assignor and assignee.

             ....

             The obligations of the payor or grantor of the oil payment, unless
             otherwise modified, go no further than those contained in his
             contract with the payee, and the rights and privileges of lessee under
             the lease may be exercised without liability to the holder of the oil
             payment. Thus, he may allow the lease to terminate under its terms
             for nonpayment of delay rentals or by surrender of the lease or by
             failure to drill.

      Keese v. Cont’l Pipe Line Co., 235 F.2d 386, 388 (5th Cir. 1956) (citations
      omitted).

                                           28
lease to destroy the rights of the overriding royalty interest owner.”     In re GHR

Energy Corp., 979 F.2d at 41 (emphasis added).

      In sum, no Texas court has yet recognized that a lessee generally owes any

type of duty, whether it be an implied contractual covenant or a fiduciary-type

duty, to protect the interest of an overriding royalty interest holder so as to require

the lessee to make repairs to well equipment, perpetuate the lease, and ensure that

such overriding interests are not extinguished. As explained above, the Texas

Supreme Court’s opinions in Sunac and Ridge Oil Company, and the authority

from Texas courts of appeals, indicate that we must consider the language of

controlling documents and the circumstances and relationships of the parties to

determine whether the Stroud defendants have committed an actionable wrong

against appellees by allowing the B&G leases to expire with one of their intended

purposes being to extinguish appellees’ interests.

      Here, other than the fact that appellees held overriding royalty interests in

the B&G leases, there is no evidence of any special relationship of trust and

confidence between appellees and Plantation. See Sunac, 416 S.W.2d at 804

(stating that “generally, . . . the assignment of an oil and gas lease reserving an

overriding royalty in the assignor does not usually create any confidential or

fiduciary relationship between the assignor and his assignee”). Appellees acquired

their overriding royalty interests in the B&G leases in the late 1970s. Plantation

                                          29
did not acquire its working interest in the B&G leases until December 2003. And

appellees did not present any evidence upon which a court might find the existence

of a fiduciary or confidential relationship. See Exploration Co., 843 S.W.2d at

126–27 (“Other than the typical cases of fiduciary relationship, such as attorney-

client, partners, close family relationships, and joint adventurers, a fiduciary

relationship can arise if, over a long period of time, the parties have worked

together in the joint acquisition and development of property before entering the

agreement sought to be enforced.”).

      Turning to the specific language of the controlling documents, the

assignments granting appellees their overriding royalty interests did not contain

any renewals or extensions clauses. Texas courts have recognized that these types

of clauses may provide some evidence of a fiduciary relationship or support a

constructive-trust remedy. See Sunac, 416 S.W.2d at 804 (“The language most

often pointed to by the courts as creating a fiduciary relation in this type of

situation provides that the overriding royalty will apply to any extensions or

renewals of the lease assigned.”). However, Texas courts have also held that, even

when this “phraseology” is present, a special or confidential relationship or duty

may still be lacking.   See id. (construing renewals and extension clause and

surrender clause in lease together, and noting that lessee had no duty to continue

lease in force but rather could surrender the lease at any time without consent of

                                       30
overriding royalty interest holders); Exploration Co., 843 S.W.2d at 124, 126

(declining to impose fiduciary duty on lessee despite fact that assignment

contained renewals and extensions clause and lease did not contain surrender

clause). Here, Hosford admitted that the failure to include renewals and extensions

language in his assignment was a “mistake.”

      We recognize that the B&G leases do not contain express surrender clauses,

and many courts that have declined relief to holders of overriding royalty interests,

whether it be through a constructive trust or a claim based upon a fiduciary-type

duty, have placed significant weight upon the nonexistence of such surrender

clauses in leases and assignments. However, at least one court has stated that the

absence of a surrender clause, even when there is also a renewals and extensions

clause, does not result in the creation of a fiduciary relationship. See Exploration

Co., 843 S.W.2d at 124, 126. Based upon our review of Texas case law, we

cannot say that the absence of a surrender clause in this case indicates the existence

of some sort of special duty owed to appellees.

      It is undisputed that the B&G leases terminated following 90 days of non-

production. After production ceased, and during the 90-day continuous-operation

period, the Stroud defendants obtained a new lease from Bowers.            And they

subsequently obtained a new lease from Gordon. Although the royalty structure

remained the same, these new leases contained terms that materially differed from

                                         31
the B&G leases. And, although there were no surrender clauses in the B&G leases,

appellees have not cited anything in the assignments of the overriding royalty

interests or the B&G leases that obligated the Stroud defendants to repair the

polished rod on the broken well or take other action to perpetuate the B&G leases.

Appellees have also not cited any contractual provision that would have precluded

the lessee and the lessors from entering into new leases. 12 Moreover, appellees

have not cited any case law suggesting that any sort of implied covenant in an oil

and gas lease supports their cause of action. Finally, we note that, at the end of

trial, appellees conceded that they had not developed any claim based upon an

implied duty to develop the B&G leases, and the trial court granted a directed

verdict on this claim. Appellees have not appealed that portion of the judgment.

      We recognize that the Texas Supreme Court, in Ridge Oil, and the Fifth

Circuit, in In re GHR Energy Corp., have at least suggested the possibility that a

party that engages in conduct to intentionally wash-out an overriding royalty

interest may be subject to liability. However, based upon the evidence before us,

we cannot say the Stroud defendants committed an actionable wrong by

intentionally terminating the B&G leases to extinguish the overriding royalty

12
      The trial court granted a directed verdict on appellees’ claims arising from an
      alleged duty of good faith and fair dealing and a duty to develop the leasehold.
      Appellees have not challenged those rulings. They have also not argued to this
      Court that the Stroud defendants breached any sort of implied covenant or duty,
      which flowed to them, to develop the leasehold estate.

                                         32
interests and acquiring new leases with the lessors. See Keese, 235 F.2d at 388

(stating that “[t]he exercise by one man of a legal right cannot be a legal wrong to

another” and about “whatever one has a right to do, another cannot have a right to

complain”). Id. Because there is no evidence that the Stroud defendants violated

any express or implied contractual duty and there is no evidence of the existence of

a fiduciary or confidential relationship, we hold that the trial court erred in entering

judgment against the Stroud defendants based upon appellees’ claim that they

intentionally terminated the B&G leases to destroy appelles’ overriding royalty

interests.

       We sustain the Stroud defendants’ first issue.

                                     Conversion

       In their third issue, the Stroud defendants argue that the trial court erred in

entering judgment in favor of appellees based upon their conversion claim because

this claim was “for contract damages,” is “barred by the economic loss doctrine,”

and is based upon a “general debt satisfied by the payment of money.” The Stroud

defendants further argue that appellees’ conversion claim is not supported by

sufficient evidence because appellees received all the royalties they were due and

had no interest in production from the McNeil leases.

       The elements of a conversion claim are (1) the plaintiff owned or had

possession of the property or entitlement to possession; (2) the defendant

                                          33
unlawfully and without authorization assumed and exercised control over the

property to the exclusion of, or inconsistent with, the plaintiff’s rights as an owner;

(3) the plaintiff demanded return of the property; and (4) the defendant refused to

return the property. Khorshid, Inc. v. Christian, 257 S.W.3d 748, 759 (Tex. App.—

Dallas 2008, no pet.).

      The trial court asked the jury whether Plantation had converted appellees’

proceeds from their overriding royalty interests on the B&G leases. It instructed

the jury that Plantation could be liable for conversion if it exercised dominion or

control over the personal property of another without consent of the owner and to

the exclusion of the owner’s right of possession and use. As we have held above,

appellees were not legally entitled to recover overriding royalties after the

termination of the B&G leases. Accordingly, we hold that the trial court erred in

entering judgment in favor of appellees based upon their conversion claim for

“unpaid royalties” after the B&G leases had expired.

      As to the question of payment for overriding royalties due from January

2004, we have held that the evidence is legally sufficient to support the jury’s

finding that Plantation failed to comply with its contended obligation to pay

appellees these royalties.    Because we affirm the jury’s liability finding on

appellees’ breach-of-contract claim related to the January 2004 royalties, we need




                                          34
not address whether liability for this portion of the judgment may also be sustained

upon a conversion theory.

      We sustain the Stroud defendants’ third issue.

                               Tortious Interference

      In their fourth issue, the Stroud defendants argue that the trial court erred in

entering judgment in favor of appellees based upon their tortious-interference

claim because Plantation “never objected to the actions of its agent Stroud

Production,” “the collapse” of the existing well on the B&G leases “cannot be

attributed to Stroud Production,” and there is no evidence that the Stroud

defendants “sabotaged” the well. The Stroud defendants assert that “although

Stroud Production did not repair the well after its collapse, tortious interference

requires a willful act.”

       Appellees argue that Stroud Production “made decisions about the lease”

and interfered with its “contractual relationship” with Plantation by washing out

their overriding royalty interests. Appellees assert that the jury could have found

that the failure of the only well that was sustaining the B&G leases was not

“coincidental” and Stroud Production, as the operator, “willfully and intentionally

interfered with [their] overriding royalty interests.”

      The trial court asked the jury whether Stroud Production had intentionally

interfered with appellees’ rights, if any, to receive overriding royalties under the

                                          35
B&G leases. The jury found that it had. Again, as we have held above, appellees

were not legally entitled to recover overriding royalties once the B&G leases

terminated. At the time the B&G leases terminated, Plantation was the lessee.

Stroud admitted that he was the decision maker for both Stroud Production and

Plantation, but appellees have not cited any evidence that Stroud Production, as

operator, was actually the party that may legally be charged with allowing the

B&G leases to expire. In fact, appellees’ “intentional termination” claim was

brought against Plantation, not Stroud Production. Thus, even if such conduct was

actionable, and we have held that it was not, Plantation would be the liable party

for intentionally terminating the lease. Accordingly, we hold that the trial court

erred in entering judgment in favor of appellees based upon their tortious-

interference claim.

      We sustain the Stroud defendants’ fourth issue.

                                      Alter Ego

      In their fifth issue, the Stroud defendants argue that appellees’ “alter ego

claims are barred because the trial court granted summary judgment on all fraud

claims.” In their tenth issue, the Stroud defendants argue that the jury’s alter ego

findings “fatally conflict” with the jury’s tortious-interference and conspiracy

findings because a party “cannot interfere with its own contract” and the jury’s

alter ego findings establish that “there are no separate entities capable of tortiously

                                          36
interfering with Plantation’s contract or conspiring together to convert overriding

royalty interest payments.”

      The trial court asked the jury whether Stroud was responsible for the

conduct of Plantation, and it instructed the jury that he was if he used Plantation

“for the purpose of perpetrating and did perpetrate an actual fraud on [appellees]

primarily for the direct personal benefit” of himself. The jury found that Stroud

was responsible for the conduct of Plantation. The trial court also asked the jury

whether Stroud was responsible for the conduct of Stroud Production, and it

instructed the jury that he was responsible if Stroud Production was organized as a

mere tool or business conduit of Stroud, there was such unity of purpose between

Stroud and Stroud Production that the separateness of Stroud Production ceased,

and holding only Stroud Production liable would result in injustice. The jury also

found that Stroud was responsible for the conduct of Stroud Production.

      We have previously held that all underlying causes of action against Stroud

Production fail as a matter of law. Accordingly, there is no basis on which to hold

Stroud responsible for the conduct of Stroud Production. We have also previously

held that all underlying causes of action against Plantation, except for the breach-

of-contract claim pertaining to appellees’ overriding royalties on production from

the B&G leases for January 2004, fail a matter of law. In regard to the remaining

issues, having held that Plantation did not commit an actionable wrong under

                                        37
Texas law by intentionally terminating the B&G leases to destroy appellees’

interests, we further hold that there is no basis upon which to sustain an alter ego

finding against Stroud individually. Accordingly, we need not address the Stroud

defendants’ fifth and tenth issues.

                                      Conspiracy

      In their sixth issue, the Stroud defendants argue that the trial court erred in

entering judgment in favor of appellees based on their conspiracy claims because

appellees “other causes of action fail.” We agree and hold that appellees’ are not

entitled to judgment against the Stroud defendants based upon a conspiracy claim.

      We sustain the Stroud defendants’ sixth issue.

                               Prejudgment Interest

      In their seventh issue, the Stroud defendants argue that the trial court erred

in awarding appellees prejudgment interest because appellees’ underlying causes

of action fail and, even if there is a valid claim, appellees “calculated interest using

the wrong date.” Specifically, the Stroud defendants complain that it was error to

use July 2005 as the date to begin to calculate prejudgment interest for each

appellee because a July 2005 demand letter, upon which the award of prejudgment

interest was based, referred only to Hosford individually and not the other

appellees.




                                          38
      We have concluded that the only claim upon which appellees are entitled to

recover is their breach-of-contract claim pertaining to Plantation’s failure to timely

pay their overriding royalties on production from the B&G leases for January

2004. Accordingly, we hold that the trial court erred in its award of prejudgment

interest to appellees. In light of the fact that we are reversing the overwhelming

majority of the damages awarded to appellees, we remand the case for a

recalculation of prejudgment interest.

      We sustain the Stroud defendants’ seventh issue.

                                  Attorney’s Fees

      In their ninth issue, the Stroud defendants argue that the trial court erred in

awarding appellees their attorney’s fees because their claim for “intentional

termination” is not a claim based in contract and such a claim, if it existed, would

be a tort claim for which attorney’s fees are not recoverable.           The Stroud

defendants further argue that the trial court erred in awarding appellees their

attorney’s fees because it applied “the wrong segregation-of-fees” standard and

that award is not “sufficiently definite.”     In their eleventh issue, the Stroud

defendants argue that the trial court’s judgment is not “sufficiently definite because

it suggests a quadruple recovery of attorney’s fees.”

      The trial court’s award of attorney’s fees includes fees related to appellees’

claim for “intentional termination.” “[I]f any attorney’s fees relate solely to a

                                         39
claim for which such fees are unrecoverable, a claimant must segregate recoverable

from unrecoverable fees.” Tony Gullo Motors I, L.P. v. Chapa, 212 S .W.3d 299,

313 (Tex. 2006). Having held that the only claim on which appellees were entitled

to recover was their breach-of-contract claim, we further hold that the trial court

erred in its award of attorney’s fees to appellees, and we remand the issue of

attorney’s fees to the trial court for a new trial on the issue.

      We sustain the Stroud defendants’ ninth and eleventh issues.

                                  Evidentiary Issues

      In their twelfth issue, the Stroud defendants argue that they are entitled to a

new trial because the trial court committed a number of errors in making various

evidentiary rulings. None of these issues concern the jury findings on appellees’

claim for breach of contract pertaining to their overriding royalties on production

from the B&G leases for January 2004. In light of our other holdings, which

require a remand of this case for a recalculation of prejudgment interest and a new

trial solely on the issue of attorney’s fees, we need not address the Stroud

defendants’ twelfth issue.

                                      Conclusion

      Having overruled the Stroud defendants’ eighth issue and sustained their

first issue, we need not address their second issue concerning damages.




                                            40
      We reverse and render judgment in favor of the Stroud defendants on all

claims brought by appellees except for their breach-of-contract claim pertaining to

their overriding royalties on production from the B&G leases for January 2004.

We remand for a new trial on the issue of attorney’s fees and a recalculation of

prejudgment interest.




                                             Terry Jennings
                                             Justice

Panel consists of Chief Justice Radack and Justices Jennings and Keyes

Justice Keyes dissenting.




                                        41
