Bostic v. Bostic

99 S.E.2d 591, 199 Va. 348, 66 A.L.R. 2d 971, 1957 Va. LEXIS 196
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedSeptember 6, 1957
DocketRecord 4690
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 99 S.E.2d 591 (Bostic v. Bostic) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bostic v. Bostic, 99 S.E.2d 591, 199 Va. 348, 66 A.L.R. 2d 971, 1957 Va. LEXIS 196 (Va. 1957).

Opinion

Eggleston, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

By deed dated February 14, 1946, James Bostic conveyed with general warranty and covenants of title to his wife, Didena Bostic, “for and during her natural life,” and to their son, Carnie Odell Bostic, “the remainder in fee simple” in, two tracts of land containing approximately 95 acres in Russell county, Virginia. The stated consideration was one dollar and “love and affection.” The deed contained this paragraph, the proper interpretation of which is the subiect of the present appeal:

“Party of the said first part hereby expressly reserves unto himself the right to mine and sell coal and other minerals underlying said tracts of land, as well as the right to cut, sell, manufacture or otherwise dispose of timbers on said premises.”

Tames Bostic died intestate in 1952, leaving surviving his widow, Didena, their son, Carnie, who was then an infant, and seven sons and daughters and the children of a deceased daughter by a former marriage.

In 1955 Didena Bostic filed her bill in the court below against Carnie Odell Bostic, her infant son, who was then nineteen years of age, and R. L. Matney and Sherman Meadows, praying that the court ratify and confirm a mining lease which she had entered into with Matnev and Meadows giving- the latter the “sole and exclusive right and privilege of mining and removing of any and all of the coal underlying” the land which her husband had conveyed to her and her son. The bill alleged that his interest in the land, acquired under the deed from his father, was the only property which the infant owned; that the property was producing no income; that the lease would be to the infant’s best interest; that if he were dead she, his mother, would be his sole heir and distributee; and that he and she were the only persons who were interested in the land and whose interests could be affected in any manner by the confirmation and approval of the lease.

*350 After the usual answers had been filed, a guardian ad litem appointed who answered, and depositions taken, the court entered a decree approving the lease and appointing a special commissioner to execute it.

In February, 1956, and while the cause was still pending, Floyd Bostic and certain of the half brothers and sisters of Carnie Odell Bostic, and the children of a deceased half sister, filed their petition alleging that they were necessary parties to the cause and had been omitted therefrom; that by the terms of the deed whereby James Bostic had conveyed the property to Didena and Carnie Odell Bostic the grantor had “expressly excepted the coal from the operation of said deed;” and that the coal was still owned by James Bostic at the time of his death and passed to his heirs at law, including the petitioners. The prayer was that the petitioners be admitted as parties to the cause, that the matter be reheard, that their rights in the coal be adjudicated and fixed, and that Matney and Meadows be enjoined from mining the coal under the land pursuant to the lease which had been approved by the court’s prior decree.

The petitioners were admitted as proper parties to the cause and after the necessary answers had been filed to the petition depositions were retaken. The lower court entered a decree holding that the deed from James Bostic “vested in the said Didena Bostic and Carnie Odell Bostic the title to the coal and timber situate upon and under the lands described therein, the said Didena Bostic taking a life estate therein and the said Carnie Odell Bostic taking the remainder therein, and that the petitioners, Floyd Bostic and others did not inherit any interest in the said coal and timber through the death of the said James Bostic.”

The decree further adjudicated that the mining lease was to the best interest of the infant, Carnie Odell Bostic, and accordingly it was again ratified and approved.

From this decree Floyd Bostic and the other petitioners who intervened in the cause have appealed. In their assignments of error they challenge the correctness of the lower court’s holding that they have no interest in the coal and minerals under and the timber on the land. They contend that it was the purpose and intent of the restrictive paragraph to effect a severance of the estate in the surface of the land from the estate in the underlying minerals and growing timber and to except from the operation of the conveyance of the land such minerals and timber, thereby retaining title to them in the *351 grantor, and that upon the death of the grantor intestate the title to the minerals and timber passed to his heirs at law, including the petitioners.

The contention of the appellees, Didena Bostic and her son, which was in effect upheld by the lower court, is that by virtue of the restrictive paragraph the grantor merely reserved unto himself the personal privilege or license to mine and sell such of the underlying coal and to cut and sell such of the timber on the land as he might choose, and that such privilege ceased upon the death of the grantor, leaving them, the appellees, the absolute owners of the land, the coal and minerals thereunder, and the timber thereon.

It is, of course, elementary that a conveyance of land without reservation or exception embraces the underlying minerals (Steinman v. Vicars, 99 Va. 595, 601, 39 S. E. 227) and the growing trees and timber thereon (Graves Notes on Real Property (1912 Ed.), §11, p. 13). And it is equally well settled that there may be a severance of the mineral estate from the surface estate (13 Mich. Jur., Mines and Minerals, § 5, pp. 9, 10) and a severance of the estate in trees and timber from the estate in the land (18 Mich. Jur., Trees and Timber, § 2, p. 512). A common method of severance is by an exception in the deed of conveyance. That is, an owner may convey the surface of the land and except from the operation of the conveyance the underlying minerals, or vice versa. 13 Mich. Jur., Mines and Minerals, §§ 6, 7, p. 11 ff. Similarly, he may convey the land and except from the operation of the conveyance the growing timber, or vice versa. 54 C. J. S., Logs and Logging, § 7, p. 679; 18 Mich. Jur., Trees and Timber, § 2, p. 512.

In Minor on Real Property, 2d Ed., § 51, p. 74, the author says:

“In construing grants of mining rights, care must be taken to distinguish between the conveyance of the minerals themselves in place (which usually confers upon the grantee the exclusive ownership and control thereof, and implies a license to dig for and remove them) and the grant of an authority, license, or profit a prendre, under which the grantee is entitled to mine the ore, stone, etc., and remove it, in which case he has no interest in the land or in any ore save that actually mined. In the latter case the grantee’s right to mine is not necessarily exclusive of the right of the owner or his assignee to do likewise. It is exclusive only in those cases where it is so agreed between the grantor and grantee.”

*352 In Graves Notes on Real Property (1912 Ed.), § 12, p. 15, we find this clear exposition of the underlying determinative principles:

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Bluebook (online)
99 S.E.2d 591, 199 Va. 348, 66 A.L.R. 2d 971, 1957 Va. LEXIS 196, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bostic-v-bostic-va-1957.