Anderson-Prichard Oil Corp. v. Keyokla Oil Co.

1931 OK 117, 299 P. 850, 149 Okla. 262, 1931 Okla. LEXIS 238
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 7, 1931
Docket21503
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 1931 OK 117 (Anderson-Prichard Oil Corp. v. Keyokla Oil Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anderson-Prichard Oil Corp. v. Keyokla Oil Co., 1931 OK 117, 299 P. 850, 149 Okla. 262, 1931 Okla. LEXIS 238 (Okla. 1931).

Opinion

RILEY, J.

Plaintiff in error, as plaintiff below, commenced this action against defendants in error for injunctive relief, to restrain defendants from drilling an oil and .gas well on certain property which was formerly a part of what was known as Govern, lot 7, and a part of the N. W. % of the N. E. % of section 2, township 11 N., range 3 W., Oklahoma county, Okla. The east boundary line of said lot 7 was the center line of the North Canadian river. A patent covering lot 7 was issued by the United States government to William H. Holley on June 23, 1900; through mesne conveyances Mrs. D. E. Moreland acquired title thereto on February 12, 1907. On March 28, 1907, she, together with A. B. Baird, who owned land on the N. E. % of section 2, heretofore described, and lying contiguously east, platted the said lands, subdivided the same, and designated the supplemental plat as “Rosedale.” This plat included all area theretofore in lot 7.

Thereafter Mrs. Moreland conveyed lots 11 and 16, together with other lots, according to the recorded plat, and through mesne conveyances W. S. Key became the owner of lots 11 to 16, inclusive, as shown by the recorded plat thereof. W. S. Key and wife, on November 23, 192S, executed and delivered an oil and gas lease to Anderson-Prichard Oil Corporation covering lots 11 to 16, inclusive, and described in said instrument as “containing 10.81 acres more or less.”

On Februa/ry 21, 1930, Mrs. Moreland executed and delivered to the Keyokla Oil Company, the president of which is W. S. Key, an oil and gas lease described in metes and bounds and lying in the bed and banks of the North Canadian river, along Wood-lawn avenue as shown upon the plat and east of lots 11 and 16 heretofore described'.

The Keyokla Oil Company entered the last-described premises and commenced the drilling of a well for oil and gas at a point between the west line of Woodlawn avenue and the center of Canadian river and west of lot 16.

The Anderson-Prichard Oil Corporation secured a temporary restraining order preventing the said drilling, under allegations that its right to minerals in lots 11 and 16 ran to the middle of the Canadian river. Upon a hearing for temporary injunction, relief was thereby denied. The restraining order was dissolved, and Anderson-Prichard Oil Corporation has appealed.

The defendant’s theory is that the north line of lot 11 is 111 feet long, as shown by the plat, and the south line is 247 feet and so shown. The north line of lot 16 is 208.6 feet and the south 199 feet according to the plat. These lines and these distances are shown on the plat to be on the west of Woodlawn avenue and east of lots further west. Woodlawn avenue is a strip of land 30 feet wide east of said lines and yet there is land left between the east line of Woodlawn avenue and the river, which land is subject to ownership. Mrs. Moreland being the last owner of the whole area, including this land, subject to ownership, title is in her to such actual lands from the center of the river to the middle of Woodlawn avenue, and she has leased the same for oil and gas purposes to defendant Keyokla Oil Company.

The plaintiff’s theory is that the east line of lots 11 and 16 is the center of the North Canadian river, shown as a natural monument upon the plat; that it was not the intention of Mrs Moreland to reserve from her deed of conveyance to lots 11 and 16, 'by which plaintiff claims, any area; that intention of the parties governs the deed to lots 11 and 16, and such intention is evidenced by the deed and the recorded plat mentioned in the deed: (1) That the plat shows no land between Woodlawn avenue and the river; (2) that if the courses and distances described in the plat do not carry the boundary to the river, the natural monument on the plat, then such distances and courses must yield to such natural monument, the monument governs as to the location of the east boundary; (3) that in order to get the number of acres called for by the plat, the east boundary of the lots must coincide with the center line of the river; (4) that in order to get the acreage called for in all other tracts in the addition which do not touch upon the river, it is *264 necessary to go to the outer limits of government lot 7 (such as lots to the north and west) and irrespective of the highway, and therefore it was intended that lots on the east, to wit, lots 11 and 1¡6, would go to the exterior of government lot 7 regardless of the highway, and in order to secure the acreage called for in the plat; (5) that for over ■ 23 years Mrs. Moreland asserted no claim to the lands in controversy, paid no taxes thereon and so construed her intent to convey in deeds to lots 11 and 16 to the center of the river;. (6) that Rose avenue is shown by the plat as crossing the river as if it did not exist, which shows intention of the planners to plat the tracts to the center of the river. The Canadian river is a nonnavigafele stream. Government lot 7 consisted of lands west of the river, extending from the center of the river.

Eixcerpts from 'the trial court’s opinion follow:

“The patentee of this land * * * owned all of these lots on both sides of the river, and, of course, had a fee title to the bed of this stream from bank to bank. * * * His right to that land was not a riparian right, tie owned it in fee. When he conveyed lot 7 to the grantor of Mrs. Moreland, * * * he conveyed that same right as to that part of the land which lay west of the center of the channel of this stream. Now. then, where that center line was, depended upon the location of the channel and the line from time to time shifted. That center line, not the bank of the stream, fixed the boundary iof the owfaership of Mrs. Moreland. * * * Now, the question is as to whether or not., at the time this plat was filed and this land was dedicated and these lots described therein were sold, she has conveyed away that part of it which lay between the * * * center line of Moreland avenue, * * * and the center line of the stream. The plaintiff contends she did; the defendant contends she didn’t. The plaintiff contends * * * that by reason of the dedication of * * * Moreland Avenue * * * shown * * * to be bounded upon the east by the bank of the North Canadian river * * * upon conveyance of these lots west of it. there was conveyed * * * all of that land dedicated which would be to the center of the stream, subject to the right of the public to its use. They contend also that, even though their dedication doesn’t include that, by reason of their ownership of the land opposite this road they have acquired title to land which is on the other side of the road and between that and the thread of the stream. It occurs to me now for two reasons, that that’s not true. In the first place, * * *. there is no reason * * * why one could properly contend that the bed of the stream was dedicated to the street, to which it would be of no use. It couldn’t be, if this question came up' now between the public and Mrs. Moreland, the public couldn’t say that because you designated the bank of the stream as the east boundary of the public street that you intended to dedicate also the bed of this stream, which due to the winding thread of it, might be under certain conditions in places anywhere from 50 feet to 100 rods in width. Suppose that * * * instead of * * * a street * * * Mrs. Moreland had conveyed to a third party a strip of land 30 feet in width running along and being bounded on the east by the bank of the North Canadian river.

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Bluebook (online)
1931 OK 117, 299 P. 850, 149 Okla. 262, 1931 Okla. LEXIS 238, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anderson-prichard-oil-corp-v-keyokla-oil-co-okla-1931.