Burdette v. Bruen

191 S.E. 360, 118 W. Va. 624, 1937 W. Va. LEXIS 59
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 11, 1937
Docket8449
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 191 S.E. 360 (Burdette v. Bruen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burdette v. Bruen, 191 S.E. 360, 118 W. Va. 624, 1937 W. Va. LEXIS 59 (W. Va. 1937).

Opinion

Fox, Judge:

On December 30, 1867, Alexander M. Bruen, being the owner of a large tract of land, situated in Kanawha and adjoining counties, locally known as the “Sheba Tract”, conveyed to Jane Botkin 250 acres thereof. The deed conveying the same contains the following provision:

“Excepting and reserving from this grant all coal iron and minerals & the right to use and work the same for the use and benefit of the party of the first part, with all rights of way and other matters, necessary to the full enjoyment of said reserved rights, no conveyance of the same being hereby intended. This reservation however shall not prevent the use of the coal for private and family use of the said Jane Botkin.”

Title to tracts of 72 acres and 50 acres, parts of the 250 acres so granted, passed by mesne conveyances from Jane Botkin to plaintiff, Samuel M. Burdette. By writing dated January 31, 1907, the heirs at law of Alexander M. Bruen leased to the United Fuel Gas Company, for oil and gas purposes, a large boundary of land in Kanawha County, containing some forty thousand acres, excluding interfering claims, but which includes the Bot-kin tract of 250 acres, which lease was afterwards transferred to the United Fuel Gas Company, a company having the same name as the original lessee, but a different *626 corporate entity. The interests of other parties are involved, but they are determined by the principal issue between the plaintiff and the United Fuel Gas Company. The plaintiff contends that the exception in the deed executed by Alexander M. Bruen does not apply to the oil and gas in the land conveyed thereby, and prays for the cancellation of the lease of such oil and gas made by the Bruen heirs, which includes said tract, as a cloud upon his title to the 72 acres and 50 acres owned by him. The defendant, United Fuel Gas Company, insists that the exception embraces all minerals, including oil and gas. From a final decree denying relief to the plaintiff, he prosecutes this appeal.

It is undisputed that a provision in a deed conveying minerals, or excepting and reserving the same, not limited or qualified as to intention by any other clause of the deed, includes not only solid mineral but oil and gas as well. Suit v. Hochstetter Oil Company, 63 W. Va. 317, 61 S. E. 307; Horse Creek Land and Mining Co. v. Midkiff, 81 W. Va. 616, 95 S. E. 26; Rock House Fork Land Co. v. Raleigh Brick and Tile Co., 83 W. Va. 20, 97 S. E. 684, 17 A. L. R. 144; Murphy v. Vanvoorhis, 94 W. Va. 475, 119 S. E. 297; Norman v. Lewis, 100 W. Va. 429, 130 S. E. 913; Waugh v. Land & Coal Co., 103 W. Va. 567, 137 S. E. 895; Jeffrey v. Spruce-Boone Land Co., 112 W. Va. 360, 164 S. E. 292, 86 A. L. R. 966. Therefore, the only question involved herein is whether or not the use of the words “coal iron”, in the exception contained in the deed' under consideration, serves to limit the same to the two minerals specifically mentioned. In view of the uniformity of the holding of this court,, giving to the word “mineral” the broad application as to the character of minerals it covers, courts are loath to limit the application thereof, except in cases where it is clearly apparent, from the face of the instrument being construed, that the minerals conveyed, excepted or reserved are intended to be restricted; or in cases where the meaning is not clear from the language used, the surrounding circumstances and actions of the parties suggest such limitation.

*627 While the rule above announced is well settled in this jurisdiction, there has grown up the doctrine that the effect of the use of the word “mineral” or “minerals” may be restricted where it is apparent from the instrument being construed, or from surrounding circumstances, properly shown, where the writing is ambiguous, that the word was intended to be used in a more restricted sense. This doctrine has been applied, by this court, where the mining rights and privileges have been held to apply to a particular class of mineral, from which the court drew the conclusion that only the mineral to which the mining rights could reasonably apply was intended to be conveyed, excepted or reserved. Rock House Fork Land Co. v. Raleigh Brick and Tile Co., supra. And in Horse Creek Land and Mining Co. v. Midkiff, supra, where it was held that the use of the words “all the minerals, coals” reserved only the coals, the reasoning being that the use of the word “coals” was intended to restrict and limit the meaning of the word “minerals”, as used in the deed then under consideration. But in no other case, decided by this court, has there been a departure from the rule announced in the cases first above cited.

The fact that the case of Horse Creek Land and Mining Co. v. Midkiff, supra, is so strongly relied on by the plaintiff calls for some discussion of the application of the holding therein to subsequent cases before this court. Murphy v. Vanvoorhis, supra, interprets the case as holding only, that the use of the word “coals” limited the ordinary meaning of the word “minerals” under the circumstances of that case, where, as the court said, it was apparent that it was the intention of the grantor to reserve only the coal. In the case of Norman v. Lewis, supra, it was held that “a reservation in a conveyance of land of ‘all mineral, coal, iron etc.’ includes oil and gas”, and the holding of the Midkiff case is passed over with little discussion, although some effort is made to distinguish the two cases. In Waugh v. Land & Coal Co., supra, the use of the words “all veines of coal & mineral”, “the coal and mineral”, and “mineral” are held to include oil and gas, although the situation of the parties, and *628 their subsequent acts, are given some weight in arriving at the decision; and in the case of Jeffrey v. Land Co., supra, the words “all the coal and mineral” were held to embrace all minerals in the land. So we conclude, in the light of the cases subsequent to the Midkiff case, that the application of that case to the present controversy, to the extent contended for by the appellant, cannot be conceded.

The language of the exception in the Bruen deed seems clear and unambiguous. It is “all coal iron and minerals & the right to use and work the same”. If we are to give the words their plain and ordinary meaning, and no safer method of construction can be used, the grantor meant to except the coal and iron in the land conveyed. As to that there can be no question. But he did . not stop there. Evidently, he meant to except something more.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
191 S.E. 360, 118 W. Va. 624, 1937 W. Va. LEXIS 59, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burdette-v-bruen-wva-1937.