Continental Oil Company v. Walker

117 So. 2d 333, 238 Miss. 21, 11 Oil & Gas Rep. 814, 1960 Miss. LEXIS 371
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 18, 1960
Docket41285
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 117 So. 2d 333 (Continental Oil Company v. Walker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Continental Oil Company v. Walker, 117 So. 2d 333, 238 Miss. 21, 11 Oil & Gas Rep. 814, 1960 Miss. LEXIS 371 (Mich. 1960).

Opinion

*27 Holmes, J.

This is a suit to quiet title to certain lands and the minerals therein in Smith County. The suit was originally filed on January 5, 1957 by Friend B. Walker as complainant against Continental Oil Company and others as defendants. In his original bill the said Walker claimed title to one-half of the minerals in the NE% of the NW% of Section 4, Township 1 N, Range 7 E, and to the entire SE%. of SWx/4 of Section 33, Township 2 N, Range 7 E, and sought to cancel all claims of the de *28 fendants thereto. Later an amended bill was filed in which additional parties who claimed interests under and through Friend B. Walker were made parties complainant, and additional parties were brought in as defendants.

During the pendency of the litigation, settlements were effected with all parties claiming adversely to the complainants except the Continental Oil Company and Oscar F. Wilkinson and his wife, Mrs. Frances Wilkinson. On the trial of the case the chancellor granted the relief prayed for by the complainants and cancelled the adverse claims of the defendants and dismissed the cross-bills of the defendants. From a decree entered quieting the title of Friend B. Walker and those claiming under or through him, the Continental Oil Company and Oscar F. Wilkinson and his wife, Mrs. Frances Wilkinson, appealed, and the issues presented are those arising between the said appellants and appellee’s here. Numerous instruments consisting of mineral conveyances, oil and gas leases, and assignments of leasehold interests in minerals were introduced in evidence and made exhibits in the record, but we refer to those only which are pertinent to the issues arising between the parties to this appeal.

The land involved consists of two contiguous tracts, each containing 40 acres, described as the NE1/4 of the NW% of Section 4, Township 1, Range 7 E, and the SE1^ of the SW% of Section 33, Township 2, Range 7 E.

On December 29, 1936, Dr. Oscar Wilkinson, the then owner of said land, conveyed the same to his nephew, Oscar Wilkinson, one of the appellants here. On October 9, 1943, the said Oscar Wilkinson and his wife conveyed to W. O. Nelson an undivided one-half interest in the minerals in the NE14 of the NW% of said Section 4. This conveyance was filed for record on October 23,1943, and its validity is not questioned. The real controversy, therefore, is with respect to the title to one- *29 half of the minerals in the NE% of the N W14 of said Section 4 and the entire SE% of the SW% of said Section 33.

The litigation stems from an alleged forged mineral deed dated June 16, 1944, filed for record February 26, 1945, purporting to be executed by Oscar Wilkinson and his wife, Frances Wilkinson, and purporting to convey to D. A. Wilkinson, the father of Oscar, an undivided one-half interest in the minerals in all of the land here involved.

It is charged by the appellees and the appellants Oscar and Frances Wilkinson that this mineral conveyance, as well as a timber deed purporting to be executed the same day by the ’ same grantors to the same grantee, conveying the timber on said land, are forgeries and are wholly ineffective to vest any title in the purported grantee. Thereafter by instrument dated February 28, 1945, and filed for record March 3, 1945, the said I). A. Wilkinson purported to convey to E. D. Hall an undivided one-half interest in the minerals in the said NE% of the NW]4: of said Section 4, and on October 27, 1954, the said Hall executed to Constant H. Mayeaux an oil and gas lease on said mineral interest, the same being filed for record on November 4, 1954. On the same date, the said Mayeaux assigned said oil and gas lease to Continental Oil Company by written assignment dated October 27, 1954, and filed for record August 7, 1955. By virtue of this assignment Continental Oil Company claims a valid oil and gas lease on one-half of the minerals in the NE% of the NW% of said Section 4, wholly denying that the mineral conveyance dated June 16, 1944, purporting to be executed by Oscar Wilkinson and his wife to D. A. Wilkinson, is void as a forgery.

The alleged forged mineral deed dated June 16, 1944 purports to have been acknowledged by Oscar and his wife on the same date before Louise Fant, a Notary Public in Hinds County, Mississippi, and the Notary’s *30 certification appears on the back of the deed. There is no substantial dispute in the evidence that on said date Oscar was in military service and was in an Army Camp in Indiantown, Pennsylvania, and that his wife was then visiting him, and that on the date of said purported acknowledgment the said Oscar Wilkinson was not in Hinds County and therefore could not on that date have acknowledged signing the deed in said county. Both Oscar and his wife so testified and Oscar’s sister corroborated them. In addition to the testimony of Oscar and his wife and sister, a handwriting expert testified that the signatures on the mineral deed were not the signatures of Oscar and his wife. We are not unmindful of the rule that a presumption of execution arises from the certification of the acknowledgment but such presumption is rebuttable and the facts of this case rebut such presumption. chancellor found from the evidence that the mineral deed was a forgery and this finding, in our opinion, is supported by substantial evidence. The deed, therefore, did not operate to pass title, and the Continental Oil Company acquired no rights under the assignment to it of the oil and gas lease executed by Hall to Mayeaux, since Hall claimed through the void mineral deed to D. A. Wilkinson. This conclusion is in accord with the prior decisions of this Court. In the case of Lee v. Duncan, 220 Miss. 234, 70 So. 2d 615, the Court said:

“Mrs. Daisy Duncan testified that she did not sign the deed and that she did not authorize anyone to sign her name for her; and that she could not write her name, but that when she executed an instrument it would have to be by her mark. Appellants concede that Mrs. Duncan cannot write her name. The deed in question has on it in someone’s handwriting ‘Daisy Duncan’. Her testimony and this concession are ample to rebut the presumption of execution by her arising from the acknowledgment. There was substantial support in the record *31 for the chancellor’s finding that Mrs. Dnncan did not execute the deed. For that reason she is not bound by it even as against an innocent purchaser for value.”

In Prater v. Prater, 208 Miss. 59, 43 So. 2d 582, the Court said: “An altered instrument does not operate to pass title, and when Mrs. Stribling purchased on the faith of the public records she does not occupy the position of an innocent purchaser for value as to the interest of Neal Prater. 2 Am. Jur., p. 619, Sec. 31. This is true for two reasons, one reason is that the title as to his one-half interest has never passed out of Neal Prater by instrument of writing required by the statute of frauds, and secondly, a purchaser under a forgery is not exalted by law into the preferred position of innocent purchaser for value, and a thief can give no title.”

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Bluebook (online)
117 So. 2d 333, 238 Miss. 21, 11 Oil & Gas Rep. 814, 1960 Miss. LEXIS 371, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/continental-oil-company-v-walker-miss-1960.