Birmingham v. McCoy

1960 OK 183, 358 P.2d 824, 15 Oil & Gas Rep. 486, 1960 Okla. LEXIS 522
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedAugust 2, 1960
Docket37983
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 1960 OK 183 (Birmingham v. McCoy) 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
Birmingham v. McCoy, 1960 OK 183, 358 P.2d 824, 15 Oil & Gas Rep. 486, 1960 Okla. LEXIS 522 (Okla. 1960).

Opinion

BERRY, Justice.

In this action, plaintiff in error, George G. Birmingham, Jr., as the owner of an undivided interest in an oil and gas lease pur *826 portedly covering the E/2, NE/4, Sec. 18, T. 14N, R. 9E, Creek County, Oklahoma, sought‘judgment decreeing that (1) neither I. N. Johnson nor his heirs had any right, title or interest in the minerals underlying a certain portion of the above described real estate; that (2) neither Mittie Lee Tomlin nor her heirs had any right, title or interest in the minerals underlying another portion of said 80 acres; that (3) his title be quieted as to persons named in the petition as defendants. Plaintiffs in error, George Birmingham, George Asthalter, William Wagner, Samuel Lasky, Walter Toaspern, Edson J. Tegler, Joseph R. Fersch and Clifford Poley, as the owners of the remaining undivided interest in said oil and gas lease, filed a petition in intervention in which they adopted the allegations of George G. Birmingham, Jr.’s petition and sought the same relief that the latter sought. The referred-to plaintiffs in error will be referred to herein as “lessees”.

The pleadings and evidence develop and show that the issues presented by this action are these:

First, did a warranty deed, hereafter referred to as “Johnson deed” in which L. L. Wilson .and Verdalee Wilson, his wife, and Alice Wilson were grantors and I. N. Johnson was the grantee, serve to convey 30, 20, 3 or approximately 4.5 acres of land, and did said grantors reserve one-half the minerals underlying the land conveyed? Prior to institution of this action L. L. Wilson and I. N. Johnson died. Wilson’s heirs are Verdalee Wilson, now Taylor, and Alice Wilson. They are plaintiffs in error. Johnson’s heirs are Pearlie McCoy, Ernest Jackson, Fessie Pink, Opal Phillips and O. D. Jackson. They are defendants in error.

Second, did a warranty deed, hereafter referred to as “Tomlin deed” in which L. L. Wilson and Verdalee Wilson were grantors and Mittie Lee Tomlin was grantee, serve to convey title to the surface only of the land intended to be conveyed or did same serve to convey to grantee grantor’s remaining undivided one-fourth interest in the minerals underlying said land? Mittie Lee Tomlin died prior to the institution of this action. At the time of trial Mittie Lee Tomlin’s heirs were defendants in error, Ophelia Fuller, Alonzo Fuller, Arthur Fuller, Ruth Lewis, Boyree Morris, Marie Morris and June Morris.

The oil and gas lease in controversy was not executed by either I. N. Johnson nor Mittie Lee Tomlin nor their heirs.

Prior to the institution of this action, a test well for oil and gas was completed as a producer on the land covered by the oil and gas lease.

The land first herein described was allotted to L. L. Wilson. Prior to execution of the deeds heretofore referred to, plaintiffs in error, William S. Bailey, Jr., and S. E. Vance acquired one-half of the minerals underlying the land conveyed by the Johnson deed and three-fourths of the minerals underlying the land conveyed by the Tomlin deed. No controversy in fact exists between Bailey and Vance and the other parties to this action.

The trial court found and held that the Johnson deed conveyed all of the land therein described .and minerals underlying same that were owned by Wilson as of date of conveyance, or 20 acres of land and one-half of the minerals, and that Johnson’s heirs owned said land and minerals; that the Tomlin deed conveyed the land that was intended to be conveyed by said deed and one-fourth of the minerals underlying same, and that Tomlin’s heirs owned said land and minerals; that a test well for oil or gas had been completed as a producer on the E/2 of the NE/4; that the heirs of Johnson and Tomlin were entitled to share in the production from said well; that lessees’ oil and gas lease was “null and void” in so far as same purported to cover the interest of the heirs of Johnson and Tomlin. From order denying their motion for new trial, plaintiffs in error perfected this appeal.

We will first consider the Johnson deed which is under date of June 19, 1942. The pertinent portions of said deed read as follows :

*827 “Grant, bargain, sell and convey unto the said parties of the second part, the following described real property situate in Creek County, Oklahoma, to-wit: Beginning at the Southeast corner of the NE14 of the NE]4 going North 40 rods, thence due West 120 rods, thence due South 40 rods thence due East 120 rods to point of beginning, containing 3 acres, more or less. Section 18, Township 14 North, Range 9 East.
“Said Grantors expressly reserving to themselves, an undivided one-half interest in and to the mineral rights herein. To have and to hold the same together with all and singular the tenements, hereditaments and appurtenances thereunto belonging, or in any wise appertaining forever.”

A general warranty provision follows the above quoted language.

The questions posed in connection with said deed are (1) the number of acres that the parties contended should be conveyed thereby and (2) did the grantor reserve one-half of the minerals underlying the land which was in fact conveyed.

The area described by metes and bounds is 30 acres and embraces 10 acres in the W/2 of the NE/4 that was not owned by Wilson. The metes-and-bounds description is followed by the statement that said description contains “3 acres, more or less”. In view of the fact that the metes- and-bounds description embraces 10 acres not owned by Wilson, and the further fact that said description is stated to contain 3 acres more or less, it is apparent that a mistake was made in describing the property and that the description is in fact ambiguous. 76 C.J.S. Reformation of Instruments § 42 c. (2), p. 390. The identity of the property intended to be conveyed must therefore be gathered from the deed and surrounding circumstances. Lowery v. Westheimer, 58 Okl. 560, 160 P. 496; Trumbla et al. v. State, etc., 191 Okl. 119, 126 P.2d 1015; 26 C.J.S. Deeds § 100 d, p. 871.

The facts bearing upon the intention of the parties to the Johnson deed are these: A witness testified that he was present when Wilson and Johnson were negotiating and that it was understood that Wilson was selling .and Johnson was buying only 3 acres. Another witness testified that Johnson stated that he only purchased 3 acres from Wilson but wished to purchase more. Witnesses testified that the land sold was measured by “stepping off” same; that Johnson subsequently fenced the land so measured which was a tract 291 feet wide and 670 feet long (approximately 4½ acres); that Johnson built a residence on the land so fenced and that he at no time exercised dominion over any of the land lying outside the fenced area. In Pearlie McCoy’s petition for letters of administration of the estate of I. N. Johnson she stated that Johnson’s property included “3 acres in the Southeast corner of” the section heretofore described. In assessing the land for ad valorem taxes in 1943 Johnson stated that the number of acres in the tract that Wilson conveyed to him was 3 acres and stated that the value of the land was $60.00. There was evidence to the effect that this was the amount that Johnson paid Wilson for the land.

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Bluebook (online)
1960 OK 183, 358 P.2d 824, 15 Oil & Gas Rep. 486, 1960 Okla. LEXIS 522, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/birmingham-v-mccoy-okla-1960.