Arrington v. United Royalty Co.

65 S.W.2d 36, 188 Ark. 270, 90 A.L.R. 765, 1933 Ark. LEXIS 54
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 27, 1933
Docket4-3170
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 65 S.W.2d 36 (Arrington v. United Royalty Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Arrington v. United Royalty Co., 65 S.W.2d 36, 188 Ark. 270, 90 A.L.R. 765, 1933 Ark. LEXIS 54 (Ark. 1933).

Opinion

Butler, J.

This cause was submitted to the court .below on an agreed statement of facts, which, necessary for an understanding of the issue presented, may be thus stated;

On the 26th day of February, 1920, J. R. Hudson, being then the owner of the southeast, northeast, section 14, township 10 south, range 24 west, in Johnson County, to secure a note of $1,000 of that date, due one year thereafter, executed, acknowledged and delivered to the Bank of Clarksville his mortgage (his wife joining therein) covering said lands, which mortgage was duly recorded.

On June 26,1925, the said Hudson and wife, by their deed of that date, duly acknowledged, conveyed to Dan W. Johnson an undivided one-half interest in all the mineral in and under said lands. Three days later all of the parties to the above deed executed and delivered to the Empire Gas & Fuel Company a certain instrument in writing, called an “oil and gas lease,” by which the parties do “grant, lease and let unto the lessee the land hereinafter described, for the purpose of drilling, operating for and producing oil and gas.” This lease was to remain in force for ten years or as long thereafter as oil and gas was produced in paying quantities. By § 3 of the lease it was provided that “the lessee shall deliver to the credit of the lessor, free of cost, on the lease or into the pipe line with which it may connect its wells one-eighth part of the oil produced and saved,” and by § 4, that the lessee shall pay to the lessor as royalty $200 per year for gas from each well,” when gas is produced in paying quantities, while same is being sold and used off of the premises, and $75 as royalty per annum while gas is not sold or used off of the premises; and, by § 4, it was provided that the lessors were to be paid as royalty one-eighth of the market value of gas and vapors produced from any oil well and used in the manufacture of gasoline.

In July, 1925, Dan W. Johnson and wife executed a written instrument, called “royalty conveyance,” duly acknowledged to the United Royalty Company, for which they, for the express consideration of $1 and other valuable consideration, “do hereby bargain, sell, grant, convey, transfer, assign and set over to second party (United Royalty Company), his heirs and assigns, an undivided one-half interest in and to the oil and gas royalty which is, or may hereafter be, reserved by. said party of the first part (Johnson, or his assigns), exclusive of the oil and gas bonus and oil and gas rental money in and under the following described property.” It was further stipulated that the grantee should not be a necessary party in the leasing of said land, and that it authorized the grantor, his heirs and assigns, to lease the land for oil and gas purposes.

On January 21,1928, the 'Bank of Clarksville brought suit to foreclose its mortgage, naming J. R. Hudson and wife, Bessie, and Dan W. Johnson, L. H. King and Frank May (interest of the two last named is not set out) as the only defendants. The United Royalty Company was never a party to the suit, and was not represented. Judgment was duly obtained in said suit, the lands ordered sold, sale was made by virtue of said order under which appellee, Arrington, derived his claim of title.

No notations had been made of any payments on the debt dne the Bank of Clarksville on the margin of the record of the mortgage securing same, as provided in Crawford & Moses’ Digest, § 7382, and the debt and mortgage was barred by limitation.

Suit was filed by Carl Arrington in the Johnson Chancery Court to quiet his title and to cancel and remove as a cloud thereon the conveyance-by Johnson and wife to the United Royalty Company. The United Royalty Company answered, first pleading the right to redeem and making tender of the sums paid by Arrington in procuring his title. Further answering, it set up the due date of the note from Hudson to the bank, the failure of the latter to make any notations of payment on the margin of the record, and alleged that the debt was barred by limitation, and that by reason thereof its title was prior and paramount to the title of Arrington.

On the pleadings and admitted facts, the court found the interest of the United Royalty Company in and to an undivided one-half interest in and to the oil and gas royalty to be prior and paramount to the title acquired by Carl Arrington, and, by its decree, quieted and confirmed the title of the United Royalty Company. Carl Arrington has appealed, and thus states his contention relative to the point in issue: “Is the interest which is referred to as a royalty interest, which passed to appellee under the royalty conveyance from Dan W. Johnson, an interest or estate' in land, or is it personal property?” He contends that an answer to this question is necessary for the decision in the case; that this court should hold that it is personal property, and in that event he claims the statute of limitation would have no application.

On the part of the appellee, the contention is made that the question stated above was not raised, either in the pleadings or statement of facts, upon which the case was tried in the court below, but that the only defense presented in the lower court, and upon which the finding of the court and its decree was predicated, was the plea that the mortgage debt upon which appellant’s title is founded was barred by limitation because of a failure to comply with the requirements of § 7382 of the Digest.

We are of the opinion that the contention of the appellee is not well taken, because the nature of his interest was necessary for a determination of his rights, and this question was sufficiently raised by the pleadings and evidence adduced. We therefore proceed to a determination of that question.

The appellant contends that the royalty interest conveyed by Dan W. Johnson to the appellee is personal property, and, to sustain this contention, cites and relies upon the case of Curlee v. Anderson & Patterson, decided by one of the Courts of Civil Appeals of Texas and reported in 235 S. W., at page 622. That case, and others from other Courts of Civil Appeals in Texas, support the contention made, namely, that a conveyance of an interest in royalty under an oil and gas lease does not convey an interest in the land effective against a subsequent purchaser on foreclosure. O’Brien v. Jones, (Tex. Civ. App.) 239 S. W. 1013; Farmers’ & Merchants’ Bank of Ranger v. Tullos, (Tex. Civ. App.) 211 S. W. 847. We have been referred to no case announcing this rule which has been decided by the Supreme Court of Texas, and there appears to be a diversity of opinion among the Courts of Civil Appeals in that State. A later case than those which support appellant’s contention is that of Taylor v. Higgins Oil & Fuel Co., decided by the Court of Civil Appeals of Texas, January 11, 1928, reported in 2 S. W. (2d) 288. In that case it is said: “It is also well settled that such leases create a severance of the estate in the surface from the estate in the oil and minerals, which may be owned in their entirety by different parties. It is also the law of this State that the royalty interest retained by the lessor under such leases, whether owned by the original lessor or his vendees, is an estate in the land to be held and sold only under the laws regulating the sale of land.” (Citing Hager v. Stakes, 116 Tex. 453, 294 S. W. 842.

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Bluebook (online)
65 S.W.2d 36, 188 Ark. 270, 90 A.L.R. 765, 1933 Ark. LEXIS 54, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arrington-v-united-royalty-co-ark-1933.