Campbell v. Butler

1988 OK 75, 770 P.2d 7, 1988 Okla. LEXIS 80, 1988 WL 69699
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJuly 5, 1988
Docket61685
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 1988 OK 75 (Campbell v. Butler) 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
Campbell v. Butler, 1988 OK 75, 770 P.2d 7, 1988 Okla. LEXIS 80, 1988 WL 69699 (Okla. 1988).

Opinions

HARGRAVE, Vice Chief Justice.

Appearing here on a writ of certiorari is an appeal from the District Court of Caddo County, from a judgment in a quiet title action involving 80 acres of minerals in that county. The judgment ran against plaintiffs and defendant trustees of the Wilbur J. Holleman Trust. Plaintiffs claimed a one-half interest in the minerals, asserting their predecessors in title reacquired their deeded property through the doctrine of estoppel by deed after their interest had been extinguished by the foreclosure of a prior mortgage. The case was submitted by agreement on motion for summary judgment. The evidence submitted consisted of various land transactions recorded in the office of the Caddo County Court Clerk. All witnesses to the transactions are deceased. The trial court refused to apply the doctrine mentioned and quieted title in the defendants not trustees of the Holleman Trust.

In 1926, Dee F. Hamrick, owner of the entire fee in the property, granted a mortgage to A.E. Baldwin who assigned it to George T. Andrews. In 1930 Hamrick conveyed an undivided one-half mineral interest by warranty deed to Harold F. Young, who in turn conveyed to George I. Epperly and Wilbur J. Holleman. Plaintiffs’ claim to the property is traced to this deed.

In 1932 Andrews, the mortgagee, foreclosed on the property, obtaining a sheriff’s deed to it, extinguishing the junior mineral deed last mentioned. In 1934, while a stranger to the title, Hamrick executed and filed a mortgage on the subject tract in favor of the Land Bank Commissioner. Soon thereafter Andrews deeded the property to Hamrick subject to the recently-filed mortgage. Four years later Hamrick deeded the land to the Federal Farm Mortgage Corporation, successor to the Land Bank Commissioner.

In 1944 the Federal Farm Mortgage Corporation deeded the tract to W.C. and Ellen George, reserving one-fourth of the minerals for twenty years from 1940. They, in turn, deeded a one-fourth mineral interest to their daughter, Gladys George. At this point all the mineral interest in the tract is severed from the George’s ownership of the land if Holleman and Epperly each regained their one-fourth interest through es-toppel by deed when Hamrick regained the fee after foreclosure.

In 1952, two days after the deed to Gladys George, the Georges conveyed to Fred and Wanda Butler. The conveyance covered the surface, excepted the one-fourth mineral interest of Gladys and the twenty-year term mineral interest and the reversion of that one-fourth after the term expired. The deed states it is intended to convey all the surface and one-half the minerals. The Butlers leased to Eberly, et al, who assigned to Sanguine, Ltd. At this point, applying the doctrine of estoppel by deed to the Holleman and Epperly interest, one hundred and fifty per cent of the minerals have been conveyed. Later that year Gladys conveyed her one-fourth back to her parents, the Georges. Gladys’ present claim arises from her later inheritance from W.C. George, which is traced to the reversion of the one-fourth mineral interest after the twenty-year term expired in 1960.

Three years later (1955) the Federal Farm Mortgage Corporation deeded the remaining five years of their term mineral interest to the Butlers. The following month the Georges conveyed a one-fourth mineral interest to William A. Shadid and wife. Apparent title to this one-fourth arises from the reconveyance to the Georges by Gladys. Shadid conveyed a one-sixteenth of this interest to Percy and Margaret Kern. Charles P. Kern inherited the one-sixteenth and leased to Shell Oil Company. William R. Shadid presently claims a three-sixteenth interest by descent from William A. Shadid.

[9]*9The trial court ruled that estoppel by deed should not be applied under the facts of this case, to do so would be inequitable. Additionally the trial court found that when Hamrick gave a deed on the tract to the Federal Farm Mortgage Corporation in 1938, the deed was in lieu of a mortgage foreclosure. Thus the trial court quieted title against the appellants.

Appellants, plaintiffs and defendant Trustees of the Holleman Trust contend that when Hamrick regained title after being foreclosed out, Epperly and Holleman became, at that instant, revested automatically with their respective undivided one-half mineral interests as a matter of law.

The Butler appellees contend alternately that their grantor, W.C. George and wife, had the entire mineral interest to convey and thus their one-half interest was unim-peached by record transactions, or alternately, if Holleman and Epperly regained their title through estoppel by deed, their one-half interest is satisfied in the deed record through after-acquired title. Here the Butlers state that their one-half is to be satisfied by the doctrine of after-acquired title — one-fourth being satisfied when W.C. George and wife were reconveyed Gladys’ one-fourth and the other one-fourth is supplied through the doctrine of after-acquired title by the quit claim of the one-fourth twenty-year term mineral interest and the realization of the reversionary interest.

Gladys George contends that she is the owner of a one-fourth mineral interest, stating in her brief that applying the doctrine of estoppel by deed would be unjust under the circumstances. Additionally she argues that even if the doctrine is applied here her ancestor W.C. George specifically exempted the one-fourth mineral interest reversion in the deed which passed to her on his death.

Charles Kern, Shell Oil Company and William R. Shadid defend the trial court’s judgment on the basis that applying the doctrine of estoppel by deed would be inequitable under the circumstances and additionally argue that the deed from Hamrick to the Federal Farm Mortgage Corporation was a deed in lieu of foreclosure.

Appellant advances three propositions of error, as demonstrating that the trial court’s judgment is erroneous and requires reversal. The first states that Hamrick’s mineral interest grantees became automatically revested with their mineral interest as a matter of law under the doctrine of estop-pel by deed at the time Hamrick reacquired the property.

When Dee F. Hamrick conveyed the one-half mineral interest to Harold F. Young in 1930 the deed contained a warranty of title absolute in form. The property’s entire fee was, however, mortgaged. Thereafter the mortgagee obtained the fee by sheriff's deed after a foreclosure action against the surface and mineral owners. This extinguished the one-half mineral interest to Harold F. Young. Two years later the sheriff’s deed grantee deeded the property back to Hamrick. Appellants contend that under the warranty provision of the earlier deed to Young, they became revested with their mineral interest. Four years later the property was deeded to the Land Bank Commissioner. Appellees contend valid title to the minerals is traced to them from the later deed to the Land Bank, that the minerals passed from the purchaser at the sheriff’s sale through Hamrick to the Land Bank.

In all material respects this case is analogous to Lucus v. Cowan, 357 P.2d 976 (Okl.1960). The law applied there is applicable and controlling in this appeal. This Court stated in Lucus v. Cowan, supra,

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Campbell v. Butler
1988 OK 75 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1988)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1988 OK 75, 770 P.2d 7, 1988 Okla. LEXIS 80, 1988 WL 69699, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/campbell-v-butler-okla-1988.