Devlin v. Bowden

641 P.2d 1094, 97 N.M. 547
CourtNew Mexico Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 16, 1982
Docket5226
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 641 P.2d 1094 (Devlin v. Bowden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Devlin v. Bowden, 641 P.2d 1094, 97 N.M. 547 (N.M. Ct. App. 1982).

Opinion

OPINION

WALTERS, Chief Judge.

Bowden, appellant, listed for sale through the Devlins (who are not parties to this appeal) a 3,180-acre ranch in Taos County. The listing indicated that ownership of the property included 60% of all mineral rights. The Devlins obtained a purchaser who allegedly refused to consummate the sale either because Bowden was unable to convey 60% of the mineral rights or because some of the mineral rights on the ranch were owned by Johns-Manville Corporation. Bowden thereafter found another purchaser himself. The Devlins sued Bowden for a real estate commission on the first uncompleted sale, or for other alternative relief; Bowden filed a third-party claim against First American Title Company, which had prepared a title policy at the time of Bow-den’s purchase from his grantor, asking indemnification and damages for misrepresentation of the title status and negligence in searching the title, alleging coverage under the title insurance policy. o Schedule B of the title policy excepted from coverage “Reservations contained in patents from the United States of America.” The trial court granted summary judgment to First American, and Bowden appeals. We affirm.

The issues framed on this appeal are (1) the duty of a title company to search the public records to include a search into the status of mineral rights, and (2) the extent of coverage provided by the title policy sued on. The answer to these issues, on the facts of this case, must necessarily overlap; our discussion will not attempt to treat them separately.

The evidence before the trial court, in the form of documents, depositions, admissions, answers to interrogatories, and other pleadings, disclosed (and appellant seems to concede) that with the exception of a portion of one-half of § 18 and the entirety of § 19, T29N, R10E, Bowden’s predecessors in title obtained patents from the federal government in which the mineral rights were reserved to the United States. Copies of the patents were not included in the record; we must rely on a title opinion rendered in 1952 as evidence of the reservations of mineral rights in all but the two sections mentioned above. That acreage, upon which appellant does not concede existence of a mineral reservation by the Government, was at the most 960 acres.

There is no dispute that the mineral rights on some 400 of the acres patented to Bowden’s predecessors were obtained by Schundler & Co., later transferred to JohnsManville Corp., by patent directly from the United States Government, to Schundler, in 1958. Schundler had earlier obtained from a previous surface owner in Bowden’s chain of title a right of entry upon the same land, within the boundaries of the ranch, for the purpose of prospecting, mining, and removing minerals. Johns-Manville’s patented mineral interest is not located on any portions of §§ 18 or 19, but is entirely within other sections shown by the title opinion to have been patented, with mineral reservations in the United States, to Bowden’s predecessors.

In his Brief-in-Chief, Bowden claims that the “ownership [by Johns-Manville] of the mineral interests on a portion of the ranch eonstitute[d] a title defect for which Bow-den was insured” by First American. In a footnote to that contention he points out:

No claim is being made by Bowden for any loss because of the reservation of a portion of the mineral interests by the United States because of the exception contained in the title insurance policy and because of the lack of interest in the minerals on the part of Bowden * * *.

That language, and our careful reading of appellant’s briefs, confirm our conviction that appellant’s entire case rests upon the failure of the title company to show the Johns-Manville mineral interest as a “defect” in Bowden’s title; and whether the original patents to the 960 acres in §§ 18 and 19 contained mineral reservations is not a real bone of contention, nor is it material to this appeal.

The mineral interest of Johns-Manville and its predecessors by reason of its patent and the right to enter were filed of public record, and were discoverable by First American if it had searched the records of Taos County.

Bowden’s analysis of a title company’s duty to search has been clouded, we believe, by his discussion of New Mexico cases which have dealt with the nature of mineral interests. We have no disagreement with those cases, beginning with Terry v. Humphreys, 27 N.M. 564, 203 P. 539 (1922), and running through Sachs v. Board of Trustees, 89 N.M. 712, 557 P.2d 209 (1976), which reflect that a grant or reservation of oil, gas, or mineral interests is a grant or reservation of real property; and that unless those interests are reserved in the instrument of conveyance, they pass with the title to the land. We acknowledge, too, that the documents of title through Bowden’s prior grantors made no reservation of mineral interests and there is the presumption then, that the minerals were conveyed with the surface interests.

But overlooked in this analysis is the fact that all of the cases discussing the transfer of title to both surface and minerals by an instrument which lacked the necessary reservation, at least tacitly concerned grantors who had both interests to convey. The record and the concessions in this case are capable of no other conclusion than that all of the minerals now owned by Johns-Man-ville originally were reserved to the United States in the Government’s patents to Bow-den’s predecessors, as they were required to be under the federal Stockraising Homestead Act of 1916, specifically 43 U.S.C. 299.

Section 299 provided also that a stranger might enter on patented lands to prospect for minerals upon (1) obtaining permission from the homestead patentee and paying to him damages to crops or improvements, or (2) executing a bond to the United States to secure such damages for the benefit of the patentee. See McMullin v. Magnuson, 102 Colo. 230, 78 P.2d 964 (1938).

Consequently, the patent of the mineral interests on a portion of the land to JohnsManville’s predecessor in 1958, and the permit granted by the landowner to enter on those lands, have no bearing on the status of Bowden’s title through the patentees of the surface interests. The patentees and their successors could convey only what they owned; the statute prohibited the federal government from issuing a patent that did not contain a reservation “of all the coal and other minerals” in the lands so patented; ergo, Bowden’s grantor and those ahead of him in the chain of title had no mineral rights to convey.

A stream can rise no higher than its source, nor can one grant what he has not, nor grant to others rights in the property of a stranger which he does not himself possess.

Miller v. State, 174 Md. 362, 198 A. 710 (1938).

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Bluebook (online)
641 P.2d 1094, 97 N.M. 547, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/devlin-v-bowden-nmctapp-1982.