Cuneo v. Champlin Refining Co.

62 P.2d 82, 178 Okla. 198
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 29, 1936
DocketNo. 25665.
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 62 P.2d 82 (Cuneo v. Champlin Refining Co.) 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
Cuneo v. Champlin Refining Co., 62 P.2d 82, 178 Okla. 198 (Okla. 1936).

Opinion

BUSBY, J.

This case involves the ownership of the oil and gas rights under a portion of the right of way of the St. Louis-San Francisco Railway Company in Oklahoma (’it.v, Okla.

The dispute is between the present owners of adjacent property and the heirs of the former owner of the entire property who originally granted the railway a right of way easement. The deeds through which (he adjacent properly owners claim did not specifically grant to them the fee under the right of way. Neither did such deeds preserve such qualified fee to the original grantor and his heirs.

We are chiefly concerned with the legal force and effect of the various conveyances in so far as the legal questions relating to such conveyances are not removed from our consideration by agreement or admission of the parties to this litigation. A proper consideration of this case requires that we deal *199 more specifically with the particular facts involved.

On April 4, 189S, Valentine F. Knoell had entered upon and was in possession of the following described property under the national homestead law: Southeast quarter of section 3, township 11 north, range 3 west of the Indian Meridian, in Oklahoma county. On the date last above mentioned he conveyed to the St. Louis & Oklahoma City Railroad Company a right of way easement 100 feet in width and extending in an easterly and westerly direction across the land. The right of way easement was subsequently conveyed to the St. Louis-San Francisco Railway Company. The right of way was so located- that it divided the land owned by Knoell into two tracts. The tract south of the railway contained about 104 acres. The north tract contained about 50 acres.

On February 19, 1903, Knoell, by warranty deed in which his wife joined, conveyed the north tract to the St. Louis-San Francisco Railway Company. The purpose of the railroad company in purchasing this property was to construct a round-house thereon and make other uses thereof incidental to the operation of the railroad. The deed described the premises conveyed as follows:

“Commencing at the northeast corner of said quarter section and running thence westerly and along the north line thereof to the northwest corner of said quarter section ; running thence southerly and along the west line of said quarter section to the right of way of the St. Louis and San Francisco Railroad; running thence easterly and along the north line of said right of way to the east line of said quarter section; running thence northerly and along the said east line to the place of beginning. It being the intention of the grantors herein to convey all that portion of said quarter section lying north of and adjoining the right-of way of the said railroad, as now located and constructed, together with all improvements thereon and the appurtenances thereunto belonging, and warrant the title to the same.” (Emphasis ours.)

Immediately after the foregoing warranty deed was executed — to be exact, on April 1. 1903 — the United States issued patents to the quarter section of land to Knoell. The foregoing deed to the railway company does not purport to limit as an easement for railway purposes the interest acquired by the railway company to the north 50-acre tract. While the question is not involved in this litigation and need not be decided, it is quite possible that that deed operated to convey a fee-simple estate to the railway company. See Marland v. Gillespie, 168 Okla. 376, 33 P. (2d) 207. A question might have been raised that the deed also operated to convey the fee in one-half of the railway right of way subject to the easement formerly conveyed. However, that question has been eliminated by the railroad company, which as a party to this litigation has filed a disclaimer to any part or portion of the fee lying in or under the right of way.

In view of this admission on the part of the railway company, the condition of the title subsequent to the execution of the above-mentioned deeds was as follows: Valentine F. Knoell was the owner of the south tract, consisting of approximately 104 acres, and the owner of the fee in the railroad right of way, subject to the right of way easement. The title remained in this condition for several years. On May 2, 1907, Valentine F. Knoell, joined by his wife, executed and delivered a warranty deed which conveyed to Mary J. McMechan all of that portion of the quarter section lying south of the right of way. The land conveyed by the deed was described therein as follows:

“All of the southeast quarter (S. E. %) of section three (3), township eleven (11) north of range three (3) west of Indian Meridian, lying south of the St. Louis and San Francisco right of way, containing one hundred and four (104) acres, more or less, together with all the improvements thereon and the appurtenances thereunto belonging, and warrant the title to the same.”

An examination of the foregoing description discloses that no mention is made therein of that portion of the fee on which the right of way easement had been granted. It is neither specifically conveyed to the grantee nor specifically reserved by the grantor. The principal question in this litigation is whether this deed operated to alienate the fee of the property held by the railway company for right of way purposes. The grantor in the instrument did not retain any part or portion of the original quarter section of land owned by him across which the right of way had formerly been granted, unless he may be said to have retained the title to the fee to the land on which the railway right of way is situated.

Since the execution of the foregoing instruments there has never been any conveyance or attempted conveyance of the fee under the right of way back to either Knoell or his heirs. Thus the right of Knoell or his heirs to claim the oil and gas rights under *200 the right of way depends primarily upon the proposition that the deed from Knoell and hiis wife to Mary J. McMechan was ineffective and did not operate as a conveyance of the fee under the right of way. The subsequent disposition of the property by Mary J. McMechan or her grantees is immaterial unless it may be said to cast some light on the pre-existing intent of the respective parties at the time the warranty deed last above mentioned was executed. However, this case cannot properly be understood without a more complete statement of the facts as hereinafter detailed.

On April 24, 1908, approximately one year after she acquired the south tract, Mary J. McMechan platted a portion thereof creating Central addition to Oklahoma City. Block 23 of that addition consists of 24 lots. It is adjacent to the railway right of way with no intervening street or alley. The 24 lots of that block are platted so that they lie north and south. The back or north end of each lot borders on the right of way. Through mesne conveyances the ownership of these lots rested at the time this litigation was commenced in a number of different individuals. Louis J. Cuneo and Amelia A. Cuneo owned lots 6 to 11, inclusive. Joseph M. Beatty owned lots 13 to 15, inclusive. Burdeau Real Estate Company, a corporation, owned lots 4 and 5'. Robert Lewis Felker and Opal G. Felker owned lots 1 to 3, inclusive, and C. E. Stout and Florence Stout owned lot 12 and lots 16 to 24, inclusive.

On January 30, 1930, the Cuneos leased their six lots to Estella F. Grace for oil and gas purposes.

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Bluebook (online)
62 P.2d 82, 178 Okla. 198, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cuneo-v-champlin-refining-co-okla-1936.