Court Opinion

ID: 9388966
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-04-23 14:07:16.506353+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:18:24.235743
License: Public Domain

Supreme Court of Texas
                           ══════════
                            No. 21-0461
                           ══════════

           Point Energy Partners Permian, LLC, et al.,
                             Petitioners,

                                   v.

                      MRC Permian Company,
                             Respondent

   ═══════════════════════════════════════
               On Petition for Review from the
       Court of Appeals for the Eighth District of Texas
   ═══════════════════════════════════════

                      Argued October 25, 2022

      JUSTICE DEVINE delivered the opinion of the Court.

      This mineral-lease dispute concerns the interpretation of a force
majeure clause. Typically, a lessee invokes a force majeure clause to
avoid the harsh result of lease termination when confronted with
circumstances beyond its control that impede compliance with a lease
deadline or obligation.   But here, the lessee mistakenly scheduled
operations to drill a new well to commence after the deadline to suspend
lease termination under a continuous-drilling program. After missing
the deadline, the lessee discovered its scheduling error and only then
invoked the lease’s force majeure clause, referencing an allegedly
qualifying event that had occurred nearly a month before the drilling
deadline.   Though the event did not cause the lessee to miss the
deadline, the lessee argues the clause extended the drilling deadline and
prevented the lease from terminating. We disagree.
      As with other lease clauses, the application of a force majeure
clause depends on the terms the contracting parties freely chose. The
clause here provides that “[w]hen Lessee’s operations are delayed by an
event of force majeure, being a non-economic event beyond Lessee’s
control,” and timely notice is given, the lease shall “remain in force”
during the delay and the lessee shall have 90 days to “resume
operations.”   According to the lessee, its invocation of the clause
retroactively kept its lease “in force” through the deadline because an
earlier wellbore instability on an unrelated lease (the alleged force
majeure event) required that the lessee effectively redrill portions of
that well, setting back its rig schedule for subsequent drilling on other
leases—including the untimely scheduled operation—by 30 hours.
Before receiving notice, however, the lessors signed new leases.
Contending the force majeure clause extended the lease, the original
lessee sued the putative successor in interest and others for, among
other claims, tortious interference with its lease. The putative successor
responded that the original lease terminated when the lessee missed the
deadline and that the size of any retained interests in production units
for already-drilled wells was limited.
      On cross-motions for summary judgment, the trial court
determined that (1) the force majeure clause did not extend the lease as

                                    2
a matter of law, (2) the putative successor was entitled to a take-nothing
summary judgment on the lessee’s tortious-interference claims, and
(3) the lessee’s retained production units were not limited as a matter of
law to the smaller of two possible capped sizes.                 On permissive
interlocutory appeal, the court of appeals focused on the phrase
“Lessee’s operations are delayed” to conclude that the lease deadline and
untimely scheduled drilling date were irrelevant for invoking the force
majeure clause. Reversing the trial court’s judgment and remanding the
case, the appellate court determined that fact issues exist both as to
whether the clause applied and as to each element of the lessee’s
tortious-interference claims and that, given its holdings, the issue of the
production-unit size was not “ripe” for decision.
      We hold that, construed in context, “Lessee’s operations are
delayed by an event of force majeure” does not refer to the delay of a
necessary drilling operation already scheduled to occur after the
deadline for perpetuating the lease. We therefore (1) reverse the court
of appeals’ judgment on the force majeure and tortious-interference
issues, (2) render judgment that the force majeure clause did not save
the lease, (3) render a take-nothing judgment in part on the lessee’s
tortious-interference claims to the extent those claims are predicated on
the force majeure clause’s saving the lease, and (4) remand the case to
the court of appeals to consider two issues preserved but not reached:
the size of the production units when the lease terminated and whether
the   evidence    raised     a   fact       issue   supporting    the   lessee’s
tortious-interference claims regarding any leasehold interest in the
retained production units.

                                        3
                               I. Background
                            A. The MRC Lease
       In 2014, the Lessors 1 executed four identical leases (collectively,
the MRC Lease) granting MRC Permian Company an exclusive
leasehold estate of around 4,000 gross acres in Loving County for
exploring, developing, producing, and marketing oil and gas. The MRC
Lease’s primary term ended on February 28, 2017. During the primary
term, MRC drilled five horizontal oil wells, spudding 2 the last well—the
Totum well—on November 22, 2016.
       The lease provisions, including a retained-acreage clause, 3
provide that after the primary term, the lease “shall automatically
divide” into separate production units and terminate as to all lands and
depths not then included in a production unit. A production unit, as
defined by the lease, is the area and depths of the lease allocated to a
producing well. Within 90 days after completing a well, MRC “shall file”

       1The Lessors are (1) TJ Bar, LLC, with Holland Acquisitions, Inc., d/b/a
Holland Services as its agent; (2) Tubb Memorial, LP, with Bank of America,
N.A., as its agent; (3) The Deborah Jackson Revocable Trust, with
PlainsCapital Bank as its trustee; and (4) Janelle Jackson Marital Trust Part
M2, Janelle Jackson Marital Trust Part M1, and Family Credit Shelter Trust
Part B, with Bank of America, N.A. as their trustee.
       2  “‘Spudding-in’ is a term of art in the oil-and-gas industry that means
‘[t]he first boring of the hole in the drilling of an oil well.’” Sundown Energy
LP v. HJSA No. 3, Ltd. P’ship, 622 S.W.3d 884, 886 n.1 (Tex. 2021) (quoting
Patrick H. Martin & Bruce M. Kramer, WILLIAMS & MEYERS—MANUAL OF OIL
AND GAS TERMS 1007 (16th ed. 2015)).

       3 A retained-acreage clause “typically divides the leased acreage such
that production or development will preserve the lease only as to a specified
portion.” Endeavor Energy Res., L.P. v. Discovery Operating, Inc., 554 S.W.3d
586, 598 (Tex. 2018).

                                       4
a written designation of the production unit in the county where the well
is located. For a horizontal oil well, the production unit “shall not
exceed” either 160 or 320 acres (plus 10% tolerance) depending on
whether “more than 5000 feet of its wellbore extends horizontally in the
producing formation.”
      MRC could “temporarily suspend automatic termination” of the
lease at the end of the primary term by conducting a continuous-drilling
program, and the “lease will remain in force . . . so long as the
Continuous Drilling Program is conducted by Lessee.”         Under that
program, MRC had to spud a new well every 180 days measured from
the spud date of the last well. If not, the MRC Lease “shall terminate
as to all lands and depths” not then included in a production unit.
Because MRC spudded the Totum well on November 22, 2016, MRC had
until May 21, 2017, to spud a new well and continue “temporarily
suspend[ing]” the lease’s termination.
      In early 2017, MRC’s executive committee scheduled a May 11
spudding of a sixth well—the Toot 211 well—using Patterson Drilling
Rig 295, the same rig it had used to drill the Totum well. Rig 295,
according to MRC, is “specially equipped to handle the high pressures”
found in Loving County, and its “special equipment and crew make
Rig 295 safer and more efficient for the area than other rigs.”
      Subsequently, however, MRC’s operations team created a new
drilling schedule. By April 18, Rig 295’s schedule listed June 2 as the
spud date for the Toot 211 well and erroneously identified June 19,
rather than May 21, as the MRC Lease’s expiration date absent a timely
spudded well. Around two weeks after the correct expiration date, MRC

                                    5
discovered the scheduling mistake. MRC concedes it had mistakenly
calculated June 19 as the expiration date based on the rig-release date
from the Totum well, rather than its spud date as required by the lease.
                            B. Force Majeure
       Having missed the May 21 deadline to continue “temporarily
suspend[ing]” lease termination, and upon discovering its scheduling
mistake, MRC determined in early June that an April 21 force majeure
event provided 90 days from resolution of that event to spud the
Toot 211 well. The lease provision MRC relied on provides:
       13. Force Majeure. When Lessee’s operations are delayed
       by an event of force majeure, being a non-economic event
       beyond Lessee’s control, if Lessee shall furnish Lessor a
       reasonable written description of the problem encountered
       within 60 days after its commencement, and Lessee shall
       thereafter use its best efforts to overcome the problem, this
       lease shall remain in force during the continuance of such
       delay, and Lessee shall have 90 days after the reasonable
       removal of such majeure within which to resume
       operations; provided, however, this paragraph shall not
       extend this lease or relieve Lessee for liability for any
       breach thereof for a period in excess of 180 days, and
       Lessee’s obligation to pay sums due hereunder shall not be
       affected by an event of force majeure.
       MRC sent force majeure notices to the Lessors on June 13—
53 days after the alleged force majeure event and more than three weeks
after the MRC Lease would have terminated under the May 21
continuous-drilling deadline if no savings clause applied. 4          In the

       4Savings clauses, including force majeure clauses, are lease provisions
designed to prevent automatic termination of a lease. See BP Am. Prod. Co. v.
Red Deer Res., LLC, 526 S.W.3d 389, 394 (Tex. 2017) (“Many mineral leases
contain savings clauses designed to prevent the automatic termination of the

                                      6
notices, MRC alleged that around April 21, MRC began experiencing
“operational issues with the rig scheduled to drill the Toot 211 well” and
“wellbore stability issues that required a reaming operation for over
2,500 feet of the lateral,” which “have caused a delay in drilling the
Toot 211 well beyond MRC’s control.” 5 The notices did not mention the
erroneously scheduled June 2 spud date; in fact, the notices referenced
the earlier schedule, claiming the Toot 211 well “was scheduled to be
spud[ded] . . . on May 11, 2017.”        MRC alerted the Lessors that it
“currently anticipates that a rig will be arriving at the Lease acreage to
drill the Toot 211 well as early as next week.”
        Discovery during litigation revealed that the delay caused by the
April 21 wellbore instability lasted for only 30 hours while Rig 295 was
drilling a well—the Dorothy White well—on an unrelated lease 60 miles
away.       This wellbore instability, as MRC’s senior vice president of
operations later explained, occurred when MRC was running production
casing and the wellbore caved in. MRC overcame the problem through
a reaming operation, redrilling over 2,500 feet of the wellbore.
According to MRC, the delay on the Dorothy White well “necessarily set

lease upon a cessation of production.”); Hardin-Simmons Univ. v. Hunt
Cimarron Ltd. P’ship, No. 07-15-00303-CV, 2017 WL 3197920, at *7 (Tex.
App.—Amarillo July 25, 2017, pet. denied) (“The category of clauses that might
extend the duration of an oil and gas lease beyond a determinable condition,
generally known as ‘savings clauses,’ include, among others, the ‘drilling
operations clause,’ ‘continuous operations clause,’ or ‘reworking clause.’”);
4 Patrick H. Martin & Bruce M. Kramer, WILLIAMS & MEYERS, OIL AND GAS
LAW § 683 (LexisNexis Matthew Bender 2022) (“Another such savings clause
which has made its way into leases . . . is the so-called force majeure clause.”).
        On appeal, MRC does not allege any rig “operational issues” other than
        5

the delay due to the wellbore instability that required a reaming operation.

                                        7
back the schedule for all of the subsequent wells on [Rig 295]’s schedule
by approximately 30 hours, including the drilling of the Toot #211.”
       As noted on Rig 295’s April 18 schedule, two other wells on
another unrelated lease—the Barnett wells—were scheduled to be
drilled before the Toot 211 well.    On April 24, after completing the
Dorothy White well, MRC moved Rig 295 to drill the Barnett wells, and
as of the May 21 deadline for the MRC Lease, MRC was still drilling
those wells. MRC’s drilling superintendent and its expert admitted that
MRC would have had enough time to move Rig 295 to the Toot 211 well
and commence drilling by early May, but they explained that MRC chose
to drill the Barnett wells first.
       On June 15, Point Energy Partners Permian, LLC, instead of the
Lessors, responded to MRC’s June 13 force majeure notices.         Point
Energy explained that after reviewing publicly available drilling data,
it “questioned whether MRC’s drilling schedule was sufficient to
maintain the Continuous Development Program” and therefore had
taken “leases from the mineral owners” on June 7.          Point Energy
requested documentation regarding the force majeure event but did not
dispute that MRC is entitled to a leasehold interest in production units
for the five wells already drilled. Finally, Point Energy stated that
without additional information, it had “serious concerns that any entry
onto the land to drill the Toot 211 may constitute bad faith trespass.”

                                    8
                          C. Procedural History
       MRC sued Point Energy; the Lessors and their trustees and
agents; and certain entities affiliated with Point Energy, 6 alleging
trespass to title and that (1) some of the Lessors, trustees, and agents
had repudiated and breached the MRC Lease by signing new leases with
Point Energy; and (2) Point Energy and the affiliated defendants had
engaged in a civil conspiracy and tortiously interfered with an existing
contract in their efforts to acquire the new leases from the Lessors. MRC
also sought declaratory relief that the MRC Lease remains in full force
and effect, that MRC met all requirements to suspend its drilling
obligation, that the force majeure clause should be construed not to
include certain additional requirements to invoke the clause, 7 and that
the production-unit size should be 320 acres plus 10% tolerance if the
MRC Lease terminated.
       Point Energy and other defendants (collectively, Point Energy)
counterclaimed for breach of the MRC Lease, trespass to try title, and
an   accounting     and    constructive     trust.      As    part   of   their
trespass-to-try-title claim, the counter-plaintiffs asserted that MRC is
limited to 160 acres plus 10% tolerance for each production unit because
the wellbores do not “extend[] horizontally in the producing formation”

       6These affiliated entities are Robert Gaudin, John Sabia, Bryan Moody,
and Vortus Investment Advisors, LLC. MRC later nonsuited its claims against
Gaudin.
       7 Specifically, MRC requested declarations that (1) the force majeure
event “does not have to occur on the Leasehold Estate” or “cause MRC to miss
a deadline” and (2) MRC does not have to “try to conduct operations . . . before
the 90-day extended deadline” or “try to overcome the effects of the force
majeure.”

                                       9
“more than 5000 feet” and MRC did not satisfy the written-designation
requirement for allocating acreage to each well.
      Point Energy then moved for partial summary judgment that the
force majeure clause did not perpetuate the MRC Lease, arguing that
the alleged force majeure event was economically motivated and within
MRC’s control; the delayed operations had to be “on-lease”; the
scheduling error rather than the force majeure event caused the delay;
and the delay was foreseeable. MRC responded with a cross-motion for
partial summary judgment, requesting declarations regarding the
construction of the clause and arguing that Point Energy seeks to
impose requirements not in the clause. 8 Point Energy then moved for
traditional and no-evidence summary judgment on all claims.
      The trial court granted Point Energy’s motion for partial
summary judgment on the force majeure issue and denied MRC’s
corresponding motion; denied Point Energy’s motion to limit the
production units to 160 acres each; and granted Point Energy’s motion
for a take-nothing summary judgment on MRC’s tortious-interference
claims. Based on these rulings, the trial court declared the MRC Lease
to have terminated “as of May 22, 2017,” as to all property not included
in a production unit.   The trial court then permitted a permissive
interlocutory appeal from the order, identifying three controlling
questions of law: (1) “whether the [MRC Lease] terminated as to the
portion of the Leasehold Estate not included in a Production Unit for a
Commercial Well by May 22, 2017”; (2) “what is the size of the

      8  MRC also moved for traditional and no-evidence summary judgment
on the breach-of-contract counterclaim, which the trial court denied.

                                  10
Production Units retained under the [MRC Lease]”; and (3) “if the [MRC
Lease] did not terminate, whether the Point [Energy] Leases, and/or the
acts of Defendants related thereto, can support a claim for tortious
interference under Texas law.” 9
       The court of appeals accepted the interlocutory appeal, 10 reversed
the trial court’s judgment in part, 11 and remanded the case. As to the
force majeure dispute, the court distilled the disagreement to three
issues: (1) whether the force majeure event needed to be “on-lease”; 12
(2) whether the event must have caused MRC to miss a lease deadline
and not just delay operations; and (3) whether the event was under
MRC’s control and driven by financial considerations. 13 The court held

       9   See TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE § 51.014(d).
        624 S.W.3d 643, 650-51 (Tex. App.—El Paso 2021) (citing TEX. CIV.
       10

PRAC. & REM. CODE § 51.014(f)).
       11 Although the court of appeals reversed the trial court’s judgment on
the primary issues, the court also (1) affirmed the trial court’s denial of MRC’s
motion for summary judgment on both the force majeure issue and the
breach-of-contract counterclaims and the trial court’s “ruling that TJ Bar
cannot be held liable for tortious interference with its own lease with MRC,”
(2) did not reach the trial court’s ruling on MRC’s estoppel defense, and
(3) severed and abated the appeal as to Holland Acquisitions after it filed for
bankruptcy. Id. at 651 n.2 & n.4, 663, 670.
       12  The parties dispute the court of appeals’ characterization of this
specific issue. Point Energy claims the court “thought the issue was whether
the force majeure event had to occur on the Lease, not the delayed operations,”
but “[t]he parties agree the force majeure clause requires delayed operations
on the Lease no matter where the triggering event occurs.” MRC asserts, “The
delayed operations that matter are those on the lease, and the court of appeals
did not hold otherwise. The only disputed issue has always been the location
of the triggering event.”
       13   Id. at 658-61.

                                       11
that the MRC Lease did not require the force majeure event to be
“on-lease” or to cause MRC to miss a lease deadline; even if there were
a causation requirement, testimony from MRC’s employee raised a fact
issue; and the record “is fraught with conflicting evidence” on MRC’s
control over and economic motivation for the force majeure event. 14
Given the “uncertainty surrounding the continued existence of MRC’s
lease,” including “when the new [Point Energy] leases were negotiated
and signed,” the court concluded that the question of the production-unit
size was unripe and that “there is a genuine issue of material fact as to
each element of MRC’s tortious interference claims.” 15
       We granted Point Energy’s petition for review, which contends in
three issues: (1) the court of appeals erred in holding the force majeure
clause applied when only off-lease operations and plans were delayed,
MRC would have missed its deadline even if the alleged force majeure
event had never occurred, and this failure resulted from MRC’s
choices—not events beyond its control; (2) the production-unit question
should be decided in its favor as a matter of law; and (3) no fact issues
exist on the elements of MRC’s tortious-interference claims.

       14   Id.
       15Id. at 664-69; see id. at 670-71 (Alley, J., concurring and dissenting)
(disagreeing with the majority that a fact issue exists as to the “willful and
intentional act of interference” element of MRC’s tortious-interference claims).

                                      12
                                  II. Discussion
       We review summary judgments and construe mineral leases de
novo. 16 A traditional summary-judgment movant will prevail only by
establishing that no material fact issue exists and it is entitled to
judgment as a matter of law. 17 A lease that has a “certain and definite
meaning” is unambiguous and interpreted as a matter of law; but if it is
subject to more than one reasonable interpretation, summary judgment
is improper. 18 When both parties move for summary judgment on an
issue and the trial court grants one motion and denies the other, we
review the summary-judgment evidence and render judgment that the
trial court should have rendered. 19
       General contract-construction principles govern the construction
of an oil-and-gas lease, although special interpretation rules also apply
because the lease determines interests in real property. 20 Consistent
with the law’s “strong public policy favoring freedom of contract,”
contracting parties are generally free to determine the lease’s terms, and
those terms define their respective rights and duties. 21 Our duty is to

       16See Rosetta Res. Operating, LP v. Martin, 645 S.W.3d 212, 218 (Tex.
2022); Endeavor Energy Res., L.P. v. Discovery Operating, Inc., 554 S.W.3d 586,
595 (Tex. 2018).
       17   TEX. R. CIV. P. 166a(c); Rosetta Res., 645 S.W.3d at 218.
       18Nettye Engler Energy, LP v. BlueStone Nat. Res. II, LLC, 639 S.W.3d
682, 690 (Tex. 2022); Rosetta Res., 645 S.W.3d at 219.
       19   Rosetta Res., 645 S.W.3d at 218.
        See Discovery Operating, 554 S.W.3d at 595; XOG Operating, LLC v.
       20

Chesapeake Expl. Ltd. P’ship, 554 S.W.3d 607, 611-12 (Tex. 2018).
       21Discovery Operating, 554 S.W.3d at 595 (quoting Phila. Indem. Ins.
Co. v. White, 490 S.W.3d 468, 471 (Tex. 2016)).

                                         13
“respect and enforce” those terms by ascertaining the parties’ intent as
expressed within the lease’s four corners. 22 To that end, we examine the
entire lease, focusing on the plain language, considering the context in
which words are used, and attempting to harmonize all the lease’s parts
to “determine, objectively, what an ordinary person using those words
under the circumstances in which they are used would understand them
to mean.” 23 We also construe contracts “from a utilitarian standpoint
bearing in mind the particular business activity sought to be served, and
avoiding unreasonable constructions when possible and proper.” 24
                        A. The Force Majeure Clause
       Generally speaking, a force majeure clause is a “contractual
provision allocating the risk of loss if performance becomes impossible
or impracticable, esp[ecially] as a result of an event or effect that the
parties could not have anticipated or controlled.” 25         Force majeure
clauses, however, come in many shapes, sizes, and forms. 26                For

       22   Id. at 595 (quoting White, 490 S.W.3d at 471).
       23 Endeavor Energy Res., L.P. v. Energen Res. Corp., 615 S.W.3d 144,
148 (Tex. 2020) (quoting URI, Inc. v. Kleberg County, 543 S.W.3d 755, 764 (Tex.
2018)).
       24 Id. at 148 (quoting Plains Expl. & Prod. Co. v. Torch Energy Advisors
Inc., 473 S.W.3d 296, 305 (Tex. 2015)).
       25 Force-Majeure Clause, BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY (11th ed. 2019); see
5 Nancy Saint-Paul, SUMMERS OIL AND GAS § 57:28 (rev. 3d ed. 2018) (“The
force majeure clause protects the lessee when events that are beyond the
lessee’s control intervene to delay performance of the lease covenants.”).
       26Martin & Kramer, supra note 4, at § 683.1 (noting that “[t]he verbiage
of force majeure clauses varies from approximately fifty words to five or six
hundred words” and describing some of “the many variants of force majeure
clauses”); 4 Eugene Kuntz, A TREATISE ON THE LAW OF OIL AND GAS § 53.5

                                        14
example, in oil-and-gas leases, these clauses may vary according to
their:
         •    “force majeure” definition; 27

(1990) (noting that force majeure clauses “vary considerably” regarding “the
enumerated causes which will constitute a force majeure” and “the type of
performance that will be excused”).
         27For example, the clause may define force majeure by (1) specifying a
list of qualifying events, see, e.g., In re Nueces Petroleum Corp., No. 05-44617,
2007 WL 418889, at *2 (Bankr. S.D. Tex. Feb. 2, 2007) (“[B]y operation of force
majeure including storm, flood or other act of God, fire, war, rebellion,
insurrection, riot, or as a result of some order, requisition, or necessity of any
governmental agency having jurisdiction[.]”); (2) listing events with a catchall,
see, e.g., TEC Olmos, LLC v. ConocoPhillips Co., 555 S.W.3d 176, 179 (Tex.
App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2018, pet. denied) (listing force majeure events of
“fire, flood, storm, act of God, governmental authority, labor disputes, war or
any other cause not enumerated herein but which is beyond the reasonable
control of the Party whose performance is affected”); Roland Oil Co. v. R.R.
Comm’n, No. 03-12-00247-CV, 2015 WL 870232, at *5 (Tex. App.—Austin Feb.
27, 2015, pet. denied) (including as force majeure events those caused “by a
strike, fire, war, civil disturbance, act of god; by federal, state, or municipal
laws; by any rule, regulation, or order of a governmental agency; by inability
to secure materials; or by any other cause or causes beyond reasonable control
of the party”); Va. Power Energy Mktg., Inc. v. Apache Corp., 297 S.W.3d 397,
403 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2009, pet. denied) (“The term ‘Force
Majeure’ as employed herein means any cause not reasonably within the
control of the party claiming suspension . . . [and] shall include, but not be
limited to . . . physical events such as acts of God, landslides, lightning,
earthquakes, fires, storms or storm warnings, such as hurricanes, which result
in evacuation of the affected area, floods, washouts, explosions, breakage or
accident or necessity of repairs to machinery or equipment or lines of pipe.”);
or (3) broadly defining the event with or without carve-outs, see, e.g., El Paso
Mktg., L.P. v. Wolf Hollow I, L.P., 383 S.W.3d 138, 140 n.6 (Tex. 2012) (“[A]n
‘Event of Force Majeure’ means any act or event that prevents the affected
Party from performing its obligations (other than the payment of money) under
this Agreement if such act or event is beyond the reasonable control of and not
a result of the negligence or intentional act of the affected Party[.]”).

                                        15
       •    causal-nexus requirement; 28
       •    remedial-action requirement; 29
       •    notice requirement; 30 and

       28 Among other alternatives, the clause may require that the force
majeure event (1) caused the failure to perform, see, e.g., Va. Power, 297 S.W.3d
at 403 (“[N]either party shall be liable to the other for failure to perform a Firm
obligation, to the extent such failure was caused by Force Majeure.”);
(2) prevented or hindered compliance, see, e.g., Perlman v. Pioneer Ltd. P’ship,
918 F.2d 1244, 1246 (5th Cir. 1990) (“This lease shall not be terminated . . . if
compliance . . . is prevented or hindered by” a force majeure event.); TEC
Olmos, 555 S.W.3d at 179 (“Should either Party be prevented or hindered from
complying with any obligation . . . by reason of” force majeure events, then the
performance of the obligation is suspended.); or (3) delayed or interrupted
operations, see, e.g., Nueces Petroleum, 2007 WL 418889, at *2 (“When any of
the operations contemplated by this lease are delayed or interrupted by
operation of force majeure . . . the time of such delay or interruption shall not
be counted against Lessee.”); Sun Operating Ltd. P’ship v. Holt, 984 S.W.2d
277, 280 (Tex. App.—Amarillo 1998, pet. denied) (“When drilling or other
operations are delayed or interrupted by” force majeure events, “the time of
such delay or interruption shall not be counted against Lessee[.]”).
       29  Some options include requiring due diligence or reasonable efforts
(1) to overcome or mitigate the effects, see, e.g., El Paso Mktg., 383 S.W.3d at
140 n.6 (requiring that a party affected by force majeure “has been unable by
the exercise of due diligence to overcome or mitigate the effects of such act or
event”); (2) to remove the force majeure event, see, e.g., Perlman, 918 F.2d at
1246 (“Lessee shall use all reasonable efforts to remove such force majeure[.]”);
Kodiak 1981 Drilling P’ship v. Delhi Gas Pipeline Corp., 736 S.W.2d 715, 716
(Tex. App.—San Antonio 1987, writ ref’d n.r.e.) (requiring that force majeure
“shall so far as possible, be remedied with all reasonable dispatch”); or (3) both,
see, e.g., Va. Power, 297 S.W.3d at 403 (“Seller and Buyer shall make
reasonable efforts to avoid the adverse impacts of a Force Majeure and to
resolve the event or occurrence once it has occurred[.]”).
       30 Some clauses, for example, may require written notice within a
certain time. See, e.g., Perlman, 918 F.2d at 1246 (“Lessee shall notify Lessor
in writing . . . within fifteen days of any force majeure[.]”). Others may require
notice only “as promptly as possible.” See, e.g., Zurich Am. Ins. Co. v. Hunt
Petroleum (AEC), Inc., 157 S.W.3d 462, 464 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.]

                                        16
       •    grace period excusing           or   delaying    contractual
            performance. 31
       As with other mineral-lease clauses, the application of a
particular force majeure clause depends on the terms the contracting
parties freely chose, and each clause must be construed according to its
own terms because there is no “one size fits all” construction. 32

2004, no pet.) (“[P]arty shall give notice and details of Force Majeure in writing
to the other party as promptly as possible after its occurrence.”).
       31  As examples, force majeure clauses may suspend performance
obligations or lease termination during the period of prevention or delay. See,
e.g., TEC Olmos, 555 S.W.3d at 179 (“[T]he performance of any such obligation
is suspended during the period of, and only to the extent of, such prevention or
hindrance[.]”); Roland Oil, 2015 WL 870232, at *5 (“All obligations imposed by
this agreement . . . shall be suspended while compliance is prevented[.]”);
Zurich Am., 157 S.W.3d at 464 (suspending obligations “during the
continuance of any inability so caused”). Others may excuse performance
based on whether the failure to perform was caused or affected by the force
majeure event. See, e.g., El Paso Mktg., 383 S.W.3d at 140 n.6 (excusing party
“from whatever performance is affected by the Event of Force Majeure to the
extent so affected”); Va. Power, 297 S.W.3d at 403 (“[N]either party shall be
liable to the other for failure to perform a Firm obligation, to the extent such
failure was caused by Force Majeure.”); Kodiak 1981, 736 S.W.2d at 716
(“[N]either party hereto shall be liable for any failure to perform the terms of
this Agreement, when such failure is due to ‘force majeure[.]”).
       32  See Endeavor Energy Res., L.P. v. Discovery Operating, Inc., 554
S.W.3d 586, 598 (Tex. 2018) (describing the construction of retained-acreage
clauses in a similar manner); see also Perlman, 918 F.3d at 1248 (“[T]he
‘doctrine’ of force majeure should not supersede the specific terms bargained
for in the contract.”); Roland Oil, 2015 WL 870232, at *5 (“[W]e agree with
Roland that the scope and effect of a force majeure clause depend ultimately
on the specific language used in the contract and not on any traditional
definition of the term[.]”); Va. Power, 297 S.W.3d at 402 (“The scope and effect
of a ‘force majeure’ clause depends on the specific contract language, and not
on any traditional definition of the term.”); Allegiance Hillview, L.P. v. Range
Tex. Prod., LLC, 347 S.W.3d 855, 865 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2011, no pet.)
(“‘[W]hen the parties have themselves defined the contours of force majeure in

                                       17
       The force majeure clause in the MRC Lease addresses each of
these types of variations. The clause describes the force majeure event
as “being a non-economic event beyond Lessee’s control.” By requiring
“Lessee’s operations” to be delayed “by” a force majeure event, the clause
imposes a causal-nexus requirement that is a necessary predicate to
properly invoke the clause. 33 For remedial action, a lessee must use its
“best efforts to overcome the problem,” and, “within 60 days after its
commencement,” a lessee must provide notice and include a “reasonable
written description of the problem.” Finally, the clause provides a grace
period that maintains the lease “during the continuance of such delay”
while affording 90 days “to resume operations” after the “reasonable
removal of such majeure,” not to exceed a total of 180 days.
       Although Point Energy raises other challenges to MRC’s
invocation of the force majeure clause, we focus our discussion on
whether MRC satisfied the predicate causal-nexus requirement: “[w]hen
Lessee’s operations are delayed by an event of force majeure . . . .”
Specifically, we focus on what it means for “Lessee’s operations” to be

their agreement, those contours dictate the application, effect, and scope of
force majeure,’ and reviewing courts ‘are not at liberty to rewrite the contract
or interpret it in a manner which the parties never intended.’” (quoting Sun
Operating, 984 S.W.2d at 283)); Zurich Am., 157 S.W.3d at 466 (“Regardless of
its historical underpinnings, the scope and application of a force majeure
clause depend on the terms of the contract.”); Sun Operating, 984 S.W.2d at
283 (noting that the clause’s “scope and application, for the most part, is utterly
dependent upon the terms of the contract in which it appears”).
       33 Dictionaries define “by” as “through the means or instrumentality of”
or “[t]hrough the agency or action of.” WEBSTER’S THIRD NEW INTERNATIONAL
DICTIONARY 307 (2002); THE AMERICAN HERITAGE DICTIONARY OF THE
ENGLISH LANGUAGE 255 (5th ed. 2016).

                                        18
“delayed by” a force majeure event and whether that requirement
interacts with lease deadlines. MRC identifies the scheduled June 2
spudding of the Toot 211 well as the only “Lessee’s operation[]” allegedly
delayed for the purpose of the force majeure clause. And it is undisputed
that if there had been no delay, the operation as scheduled would not
have satisfied the May 21 continuous-drilling deadline to perpetuate the
MRC Lease.        Nevertheless, MRC argues it is irrelevant that the
operation was already scheduled to commence after the deadline
because “nothing in the [force majeure] clause here ties force majeure to
performance or compliance [with lease deadlines]—just delayed
operations.” According to MRC, “delay” means to make late as to the
operation’s scheduled date but not in relation to the lease deadline for
that operation. 34 Thus, even a slowdown of an operation erroneously
scheduled to commence after the lease deadline could trigger the force
majeure clause.
       When viewed in isolation and taking an unduly literal
interpretation, the phrase “Lessee’s operations are delayed by an event
of force majeure” could be read to support MRC’s position. But we do
not read contractual phrases in isolation, 35 and we must avoid “taking
literalism too literally and adopting a wooden construction foreclosed by

       34 See, e.g., Delay, THE AMERICAN HERITAGE DICTIONARY OF THE
ENGLISH LANGUAGE 479 (5th ed. 2016) (“To cause to be later or slower than
expected or desired[.]”).
       35Pathfinder Oil & Gas, Inc. v. Great W. Drilling, Ltd., 574 S.W.3d 882,
891 (Tex. 2019).

                                      19
[the legal text’s] context.” 36        “‘Context,’ after all, ‘is a primary
determinant of meaning.’” 37 Words “must be construed in the context in
which they are used,” and their meaning “‘turns upon use, adaptation
and context as they are employed to fit various and varying
situations.’” 38 And a “vital part” of a text’s context is “the purpose of the
text,” as gathered “from the text itself, consistently with the other
aspects of its context.” 39
       In light of the phrase’s textual context of the MRC Lease’s
operation deadlines and the force majeure clause’s grace periods and
purpose, we cannot conclude that the contemplated “delay[]” of “Lessee’s
operations” is entirely divorced from the lease deadlines. The MRC
Lease repeatedly yokes operations with lease deadlines, which, if not
met, result in lease termination, including:

       36 Ojo v. Farmers Grp., Inc., 356 S.W.3d 421, 451 (Tex. 2011) (Willett,
J., concurring); see Endeavor Energy Res., L.P. v. Energen Res. Corp., 615
S.W.3d 144, 151 (Tex. 2020) (declining to interpret a contested sentence in a
contract in a “hyper-literal fashion”); URI, Inc. v. Kleberg County, 543 S.W.3d
755, 764 (Tex. 2018) (“[W]ords are simply implements of communication, and
imperfect ones at that. Oftentimes they cannot be assigned a rigid meaning,
inherent in themselves.” (quoting Cal. Dep’t of Mental Hygiene v. Bank of Sw.
Nat’l Ass’n, 354 S.W.2d 576, 579 (Tex. 1962))).
        Brown v. City of Houston, 660 S.W.3d 749, 754 (Tex. 2023) (quoting
       37

Antonin Scalia & Bryan A. Garner, READING LAW: THE INTERPRETATION OF
LEGAL TEXTS 167 (2012)).
        URI, 543 S.W.3d at 764 (quoting Cal. Dep’t of Mental Hygiene, 354
       38

S.W.2d at 579); see Scalia & Garner, supra note 37, at 323 (“[C]ontext is as
important as sentence-level text. The entire document must be considered.”).
       39   Scalia & Garner, supra note 37, at 33.

                                        20
       •    a drilling-commitment deadline; 40
       •    a substitute-well deadline; 41
       •    a continuous-drilling deadline; 42
       •    a production-unit deadline; 43 and
       •    a review-of-production-units deadline. 44

       40 “MRC agrees to commence drilling operations on or before the
expiration of eighteen (18) months from the effective date of this lease . . . .
Failure to timely commence drilling operations on the well will result only in
termination of the lease[.]”
       41  “If, in the conducting of any of the drilling operations . . . MRC
encounters any conditions or difficulties . . . [which] make further drilling and
completion of any well impossible or impracticable, then MRC shall have the
option to commence operations for the drilling of a substitute well within sixty
(60) days after cessation of drilling operations on the well[.]”
       42“‘Continuous Drilling Program’ means the period of time during
which Lessee is timely commencing Actual Drilling of Continuous Program
Wells and ending on the calendar day upon which more than 180 consecutive
days have elapsed since the commencement of Actual Drilling of the most
recent Continuous Program Well,” and “Lessee may temporarily suspend
automatic termination of this lease at the expiration of the primary term by
conducting a Continuous Drilling Program.”
       43“[I]f production of oil and gas should cease from the Production Unit,
this lease will not terminate as to such Production Unit so long as Lessee
commences Actual Drilling of a new well or the Recompleting, Reworking or
Refracing of an existing well on the Production Unit or before the expiration of
60 days from date of the cessation of production and proceeds with such
operations with no cessation of more than 60 consecutive days until
commercial production of oil and/or gas is restored.”
       44 “At any time after the tenth anniversary date of this lease, if a
Production Unit contains more acreage than is necessary to meet regulatory
allowable and spacing requirements . . . upon request from Lessor, Lessee shall
commence and diligently pursue either a Continuous Drilling Program on the
Production Unit or Recompleting, Reworking or Refracing operations. If
Lessee fails to commence a Continuous Drilling Program, Recompleting,
Reworking or Refracing within 90 days of the request from Lessor . . . Lessee
shall release this lease as to [that unnecessary] acreage[.]”

                                       21
       The operations described in these clauses are necessary to
preserve the lease under certain circumstances and must be performed
within specified time periods. If these operations were delayed by a force
majeure event such that the lessee missed the corresponding deadline,
then a force majeure clause, to be effective, would need to keep the lease
in force during the delay and provide time for the lessee to resume the
lease-preserving operations.
       This force majeure clause does precisely that. Its expressly stated
purpose is to keep the MRC Lease “in force during the continuance of
such delay” of “Lessee’s operations” and provide the lessee with 90 days
“to resume operations.” On the other hand, there would be no need for
the clause to provide that remedy if the operation would not otherwise
keep the lease in force or the delay did not cause a missed deadline. The
textual context provides no indicia of the contracting parties’ intent to
cover a delay of an operation already scheduled to commence after a
critical contractual deadline for perpetuating the lease. Indeed, the
textual context signifies that the “delay[]” of “Lessee’s operations”
relates to lease deadlines and obligations. MRC’s complete untethering
of operations from their corresponding lease deadlines in claiming a
“delay[]” of “Lessee’s operations” is at odds with a fair reading of the
force majeure clause and embraces a wooden, isolated literalism over a
natural, contextual construction. 45

       45 Scalia & Garner, supra note 37, at 33 (endorsing a “fair reading”
interpretive approach that construes a legal text “on the basis of how a
reasonable reader, fully competent in the language, would have understood the
text at the time it was issued” and considers the text’s purpose derived “only
from the text itself, consistently with the other aspects of its context”).

                                       22
        MRC’s construction of the phrase as applied to the June 2
scheduled operation also rests on circular reasoning. To properly invoke
the force majeure clause, the delayed operation must be “Lessee’s
operations.” Had there been no delay, however, the lease would have
terminated before the June 2 scheduled operation. In that scenario and
at the time of the scheduled operation, MRC would no longer have been
the “Lessee[]” and would have been conducting the operation on
someone else’s property rather than on the lease. 46 In other words,
MRC’s June 2 operation—as scheduled and before any delay—would not
have been “Lessee’s operation[]” unless a savings clause would have
perpetuated the MRC Lease until at least the operation’s scheduled
date.    But this results in the following circularity: MRC’s June 2
scheduled operation would be “Lessee’s operation[]” only if the force
majeure clause (or some other savings clause not at issue in this appeal)
would have kept the MRC Lease in force through June 2; but MRC could
properly invoke the force majeure clause to keep the lease in force

        46 The parties agree that “Lessee’s operations” refers to on-lease
operations. See supra note 12. Although the parties do not dispute the
on-lease requirement for “Lessee’s operations,” we note that in other contexts,
depending on the lease terms and definitions, “operations” could include
off-lease operations that are related to the lease. See, e.g., Bruce M. Kramer,
Keeping Leases Alive in the Era of Horizontal Drilling and Hydraulic
Fracturing: Are the Old Workhorses (Shut-in, Continuous Operations, and
Pooling Provisions) Up to the Task?, 49 WASHBURN L. J. 283, 306 (2010) (noting
that with horizontal drilling “one needs to make sure that operations that take
place off the leasehold premises are included” in the lease’s definition because
“if the vertical portion of the well bore needs to be reworked and the horizontal
or lateral section is shut-in, the reworking operations will not necessarily be
on the leased premises”).

                                       23
beyond the May 21 drilling deadline only if the delay of the June 2
scheduled operation was a delay of “Lessee’s operations.”
       We conclude that an ordinary person using the phrase “[w]hen
Lessee’s operations are delayed by an event of force majeure,” given its
textual context, would not understand those words to encompass a
30-hour slowdown 47 of an essential operation that was already destined
to be untimely due to a scheduling error. 48 Our construction is further
buttressed by viewing the clause from a utilitarian perspective, “bearing
in mind the particular business activity sought to be served, and
avoiding unreasonable constructions when possible and proper.” 49 Force
majeure clauses like this one generally exist to allocate risk when a
lessee encounters an irresistible force beyond a party’s control that may
lead to the harsh result of lease termination. 50 Here, the language the

       47 In its briefing, MRC argued that the clause “does not require any
minimum amount of delay.” At oral argument, however, MRC’s counsel
conceded that a de minimis exception is implied within the force majeure
clause, but explained, “A day in the oil field is important. We’ve seen leases
lost by somebody missing it by a day. . . . If we’re getting into something that
addresses what I would refer to as a de minimis kind of effect, that’s for another
day, that’s for another case.” As we need not reach the issue of whether a
30-hour delay falls within a de minimis exception, we agree with MRC’s
counsel that this question is “for another day [and] for another case.”
       48 See URI, Inc. v. Kleberg County, 543 S.W.3d 755, 764 (Tex. 2018)
(“[O]ur quest is to determine, objectively, what an ordinary person using those
words under the circumstances in which they are used would understand them
to mean.”).
       49 Endeavor Energy Res., L.P. v. Energen Res. Corp., 615 S.W.3d 144,
148 (Tex. 2020) (quoting Plains Expl. & Prod. Co. v. Torch Energy Advisors
Inc., 473 S.W.3d 296, 305 (Tex. 2015)).
       50Martin & Kramer, supra note 4, at § 683 (“Another such savings
clause which has made its way into leases to protect lessees from liability or

                                       24
contracting parties chose evinces that this force majeure clause’s
purpose is the same. But if an untimely operation would not otherwise
suspend termination of the lease—even absent any delay—the alleged
force majeure event does not impose any risk of lease termination. The
risk of lease termination derives from the scheduling error, which the
parties agree the force majeure clause is not designed to remedy.
       Of course, parties are free to contract in a manner that either
allocates the risk for when a lessee erroneously schedules an untimely
operation or allows a lessee to invoke a force majeure clause based on
operational delays entirely divorced from lease deadlines, regardless of
whether such contractual language produces odd results or comports
with a utilitarian perspective. 51 But the contracting parties to the MRC

loss of leases for causes beyond their control is the so-called force majeure
clause.”); 17 WILLISTON ON CONTRACTS Particular clauses or provisions § 50:58
(4th ed. 2022) (“The purpose of a force majeure clause is to relieve an oil and
gas lessee from the harsh termination of the lease due to circumstances beyond
the lessee’s control that would make performance untenable or impossible.”);
Kuntz, supra note 26, at § 53.5 (“It is not uncommon for the oil and gas lease
to contain a force majeure clause which is designed to relieve the lessee from
the consequences of a failure to comply with the terms of the lease if such
failure is the result of certain described causes.”); RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF
CONTRACTS, introductory note to ch. 11 (1981) (“Contract liability is strict
liability. It is an accepted maxim that pacta sunt servanda, contracts are to be
kept. . . . The obligor who does not wish to undertake so extensive an obligation
may contract for a lesser one by using one of a variety of common clauses
[including] . . . a force majeure clause[.]”).
       51See Burlington Res. Oil & Gas Co. v. Tex. Crude Energy, LLC, 573
S.W.3d 198, 211 (Tex. 2019) (noting that parties are free to contract for odd
results and “that lease drafters are not always driven by logic” (quoting
Chesapeake Expl., L.L.C. v. Hyder, 483 S.W.3d 870, 874 (Tex. 2016))).

                                       25
Lease did not do that, and the textual context here forecloses such a
construction. 52
       Applying well-established contract-construction principles, we
construe “Lessee’s operations are delayed by an event of force majeure”
to have a “certain and definite meaning” 53 that would not encompass a
slowdown of MRC’s June 2 scheduled operation to spud the Toot 211
well when that operation would not have met the May 21 deadline even
if there had been no delay. We reverse the court of appeals’ judgment
as to the force majeure clause and render judgment that the clause did
not extend MRC’s drilling deadlines or perpetuate the MRC Lease. 54
Accordingly, as a matter of law, the MRC Lease terminated as to the

       52 MRC argues that the clause “uses a soft-trigger/hard-cap design,”
setting “a low threshold for lessees like MRC to declare force majeure (freeing
the lessor—or its agent, the bank—from the burden of scrutinizing each claim)”
but capping the lease extensions “at just 180 days.” The clause, however, does
not provide the lessee with unfettered discretion to declare force majeure, and
even if the “soft trigger” is construed as a relatively “low threshold,” we
conclude that, as a matter of law, MRC did not satisfy it here by alleging the
delay of an already untimely operation.
       53Nettye Engler Energy, LP v. BlueStone Nat. Res. II, LLC, 639 S.W.3d
682, 690 (Tex. 2022).
       54 The court of appeals also held that “even if there were a causal link
requirement” between the force majeure event and a missed deadline, “there
is a genuine issue of material fact regarding whether the off-lease delay caused
MRC’s missed deadline, or whether the delay resulted from a calendaring error
by an MRC employee.” 624 S.W.3d 643, 660 (Tex. App.—El Paso 2021). But
the evidence the court of appeals relied on connected the force majeure event
only with delaying the scheduled June 2 operation, not with missing the
May 21 deadline. Id. at 660-61. We cannot agree with the court of appeals
that this evidence, or any other evidence in the record, raised a fact issue on
“whether the off-lease delay caused MRC’s missed deadline[.]”

                                      26
portion of the leasehold estate not included in production units when
MRC failed to spud a new well by May 21, 2017.
                             B. Retained Acreage
      In its second issue, Point Energy complains of the court of appeals’
decision to defer disposition of the dispute over the size of the production
units MRC retained following lease termination.             Point Energy’s
summary-judgment motion asserted that MRC’s retained acreage was
limited     to   160 acres    per   production   unit   based   on   (1) the
written-designation requirement and (2) how far the “wellbore extends
horizontally in the producing formation.” After concluding that Point
Energy had not established that the lease had terminated, the court of
appeals held that determining “the amount of acreage MRC may retain
when, and if, its lease terminated” would require “imagin[ing] a scenario
in which MRC’s lease in fact terminated.” 55 Accordingly, addressing the
issue “when the lease may not terminate at all ‘would create an
impermissible advisory opinion’” and “‘eschew the ripeness doctrine.’” 56
      We disagree that such a determination would create an
impermissible advisory opinion or implicate the court of appeals’
jurisdiction under the ripeness doctrine. “[I]n evaluating ripeness, we
consider ‘whether, at the time a lawsuit is filed, the facts are sufficiently
developed so that an injury has occurred or is likely to occur, rather than

      55   Id. at 664.
      56 Id. (quoting Waco Indep. Sch. Dist. v. Gibson, 22 S.W.3d 849, 853
(Tex. 2000)).

                                      27
being contingent or remote.’” 57      An intermediate appellate court’s
answer to a predicate merits question within the same lawsuit may
make disposition of additional merits-based issues unnecessary to
resolve the appeal, but it does not affect ripeness or, in the ordinary case,
the appellate court’s jurisdiction. As we recently explained:
       It may turn out, when the dust settles, that one element or
       another of a court’s decision ended up being irrelevant to
       the ultimate outcome. That does not mean the court lacked
       jurisdiction to decide that part of the case. Even assuming
       the remaining issues were rendered superfluous by the
       court of appeals’ resolution of [a predicate] question, the
       possibility remained that this Court would take a different
       view of [that] question, as we have done. The dispute over
       the remaining issues therefore remained live, and its
       resolution still impacted the parties’ rights—even though
       the extent to which it did depended on how the case
       progressed in the future. Resolving the remaining issues
       would not have amounted to an advisory opinion by the
       court of appeals. 58
We also noted that “[t]he prudential practice of courts to decline to reach
issues not necessary to the disposition of a case should not be confused
with the constitutional prohibition on advisory opinions” and whether
the court of appeals “could have reached” or “was obligated to reach”
those issues are two distinct inquiries. 59
       Because we have reversed the court of appeals’ judgment as to the
termination of the MRC Lease, we need not address whether the court

        Robinson v. Parker, 353 S.W.3d 753, 755 (Tex. 2011) (quoting Gibson,
       57

22 S.W.3d at 851-52).
       58Tex. Comm’n on Env’t Quality v. Maverick County, 642 S.W.3d 537,
549 (Tex. 2022).
       59   Id. at 549-50.

                                     28
was obligated to determine the production-unit size. The court will have
the opportunity to address the issue in the future—assuming the parties
maintain their current positions.             When reversal necessitates
consideration of issues raised in but not decided by the court of appeals,
we ordinarily remand the case to that court for further proceedings. 60
Although we have discretion to take up those issues, we adhere to our
usual practice and remand this issue to the court of appeals. 61
                         C. Tortious Interference
      Point Energy’s final issue concerns MRC’s tortious-interference
claims. As pleaded, MRC’s claims are based on two theories of liability:
(1) a primary theory of interference with the MRC Lease; and (2) if the
MRC Lease had terminated, a secondary theory of interference with the
leasehold interest in the retained acreage. In the court of appeals, MRC
admitted that “once the trial court erroneously held that the MRC leases
expired after May 21, 2017, MRC’s primary theory of interference—
which relied on actions taken in June 2017—fell by the wayside, leaving
only the secondary ‘acreage issue.’” After disagreeing with the trial
court on the applicability of the force majeure clause, the court of
appeals held that there are fact issues about “whether there existed a
valid contract subject to interference” and as to the tortious-interference
elements. 62     The court focused only on MRC’s primary theory of
interference without considering the secondary theory.

      60   Id. at 550.
      61   See TEX. R. APP. P. 53.4; Maverick County, 642 S.W.3d at 550-51.
      62   624 S.W.3d 643, 665-68 (Tex. App.—El Paso 2021).

                                       29
      We have agreed with the trial court that the force majeure clause
did not extend the MRC Lease as a matter of law. The court of appeals’
contrary conclusion led to its erroneous determination that fact issues
exist as to each tortious-interference element under MRC’s primary
theory of liability. We therefore reverse the court’s judgment on this
issue and render judgment in part that MRC take nothing on its
tortious-interference claims to the extent they are based on the lease
perpetuating beyond May 21, 2017. The court of appeals, however, did
not consider MRC’s secondary theory of interference.        Because the
relevant evidence may relate to the question of the production-unit size,
which we have remanded, we also remand the tortious-interference
issue to the extent it relates to the retained acreage.
                            III. Conclusion
      We reverse the court of appeals’ judgment on the force majeure
and tortious-interference issues, render judgment that the force majeure
clause did not extend the lease, render a take-nothing judgment in part
on MRC’s tortious-interference claims, and remand the case to the court
of appeals to consider the remaining issues.

                                         John P. Devine
                                         Justice

OPINION DELIVERED: April 21, 2023

                                    30