Atkinson v. Baden

1 Ohio Cir. Dec. 300
CourtNoble Circuit Court
DecidedJune 15, 1886
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Ohio Cir. Dec. 300 (Atkinson v. Baden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Noble Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Atkinson v. Baden, 1 Ohio Cir. Dec. 300 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1886).

Opinion

Taubie, J.

In the court below, this case was heard on a demurrer to the petition, which was sustained and the petition dismissed ; and from such j udgment plaintiff appeals ; so that the question is presented to us as it was in the court below, whether or not the demurrer was well taken to the petition. The plaintiff states in the petition, that in 1866, one Stewart Gordon was the owner in lee of the one undivided fourth of the land-; described in the petition ; that Burgess, Myers and Thompson, were the owners of the other three undivided fourths; that Burgess, Myers and Thompson conveyed to Gordon their undivided three-fourths interest in this laud, reserving and excepting therefrom certain oil privileges (petroleum or rock oil) in the lands conveyed; that subsequently thereto, Gordon conveyed certain portions of the land to the plaintiff ; that Burgess, Myers aud Thompson conveyed their rights, reserved to themselves in the deed, to the defendants ; that these defendants have entered into possession of the lands conveyed to the plaintiff b3' Gordon ; have bored wells thereon, and are taking out (at the time of the filing of the petition), large quantities of petroleum or rock oil. That the defendants claim to be the owners of the sole right to take this oil, and to the oil when severed from the land, and deny that the plaintiff has any rights therein; and they claim this right under and b3r virtue, only and solely, of the reservation specified in the deed of Burgess, Myers and Thompson to Gordon. Plaintiff claims that he is the owner, by virtue of the conveyance lrom Gordon to himself of these lands, of the undivided one-fourth interest in this oil, and seeks generally to have an account lrom the defendants as to the amount of oil taken out at the time of filing the petition ; that his and their rights be determined, and that the cloud upon his title to the undivided one-fourth interest in the oil in this land be cleared.

This brings us to the question as to the construction to be given to the reservations aud exceptions contained in the deed : — 1st, as to what was the intention of the parties in these reservations and exceptions ; 2nd, when ascertained, what is their legal effect.

■ First, then, what did these parties intend by the reservations aud exceptions in this deed?

It is claimed upon the part of the plaintiff, that the intention was to reserve and except to the grantors, Burgess, Myers aud Thompson, no greater interest than they were then lawfully possessed of; while upon the part of the defeud[302]*302ants it is claimed, that the parties intended to reserve a larger right to the oil than the grantors lawfully owned at the time of the execution of this deed.

In what manner the deed is to operate, is to be determined from the deed itself. On what it is to operate may be gathered from the whole body of the evidence, whether it be in the deed or in the facts connected therewith, and surrounding the parties at the time.

In the construction of a contract, a deed, or instrument of writing, the court may be put into possession of the facts and circumstances connected with the subject-matter and known to the parties at the time, for the purpose of enabling the court to correctly interpret it and correctly arrive at what was the intention of the parties. As respects the reservations and exceptions contained in this deed, was it the intention to reserve to the grantors a larger right than they then owned ? Being heard upon demurrer, the court has possession of none of the facts or circumstances surrounding the parties, or connected with the subject-matter of the deed, save as they are detailed in the petition; and so far as the plaintiff regarded them to be important, he has included them in the allegations of his petition. I have already substantially referred to the material parts; that is, that Gordon was the owner of one undivided fourth of this land, and that Burgess, Myers and Thompson were the owners of three undivided fourths, and that Burgess, Myers and Thompson thereupon undertook to convey and did convey to Gordon, their tenant in common, their undivided interest, reserving in the deed rights to which I have referred. The deed expresses to be one of bargain and sale, and to have a consideration in money of six thousand dollars; and by its terms the grantors transfer to Gordon all their interest in the land save what is reserved, it being what may be termed a special quit-claim deed. They do not' undertake to convey to him any indefeasible estate, or any particular estate. It is not specified in the deed that they are conveying an undivided interest. They quit-claim to him all their right, title and interest of and in the body of the lands, whatever that title, right and interest may be.

In determining whether or not parties, in a case like this, are reserving to themselves a greater right than they lawfully own or possess in the lands, it is necessary that it should clearly appear that .such is the intention; because, although this is said to be an indenture, it is, in force and legal effect, a deed-poll. It is executed by the grantors only, and is designed and intended to be executed by them alone.

A deed-poll, it is hardly necessary to say, is the deed of the grantor only, and by which the grantor undertakes to convey to the grantee certain rights and interests of his own; and the thing intended, ordinarily, in a conveyance, by way of reservation and exception, is something that would otherwise pass to the grantee. Does it clearly appear that the reservations in this deed are reservations of greater rights in the premises than the grantors, at the time of the execution of the deed, themselves possessed ?

The deed itself, after naming the parties, provides that the parties of the first part do grant, bargain, sell, alien and release, to said party of the second part, “all their right, title and claim, with the exceptions and reservations hereinafter mentioned, of and to the following described premises.” »It then describes the entire body of land — the 400 acres — -by metes and bounds.

It proceeds, “reserving and excepting, nevertheless, to the said Burgess, Myers and Thompson, the full, sole and whole privilege of prospecting for and mining petroleum or rock oil,, from and out of said land, or any part thereof,” which, here, seems to mean simply a reservation out of their own title and land.

But it will be remembered that they have not undertaken by this deed, to convey any particular estate, as for instance their undivided three-fourths interest, but all their right, title and claim to the lands described as four hundred acres, whatever that title or claim may be; and they especially provide that “they shall and do retain the full, sole, and whole privilege of prospecting, and boring [303]*303for petroleum and rock oil, from and out of said land or any part thereof;” reserving here a right in the whole land or any part thereof; to have the sole and whole privilege of thus prospecting and boring for oil, and this to be without hindrance on the part of Gordon, his heirs or assigns.

The grantors also reserve full right of going upon or over said land, or any part thereof, for the purposes aforesaid, and all the rights that are necessary and proper for carrying on the business of procuring said oil and transporting the same to market.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 Ohio Cir. Dec. 300, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/atkinson-v-baden-ohcirctnoble-1886.