Dockter v. Crawford

65 N.W.2d 691, 3 Oil & Gas Rep. 2023, 1954 N.D. LEXIS 100
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 2, 1954
Docket7447
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 65 N.W.2d 691 (Dockter v. Crawford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dockter v. Crawford, 65 N.W.2d 691, 3 Oil & Gas Rep. 2023, 1954 N.D. LEXIS 100 (N.D. 1954).

Opinion

JOHNSON, Judge.

On May 28, 1952, the plaintiffs commenced an action against the defendants to determine adverse claims and quiet title to 1,280 acres of land described as:

the Northwest Quarter (NW^,) of Section Fifteen (15); all of Section Nine (9); the Southwest Quarter (SW ¼) of Section Ten (10); and the South One-half (SV2) of Section Four (4), *692 all in Township One Hundred Thirty-eight (138), Range Sixty-nine (69).

The actual purpose of the action is to set aside and have declared void a mineral deed given by the plaintiffs to the defendant, D. W. Crawford, to an undivided one-half interest in and to all of the oil, gas, and other minerals in and under the above described land and that may be produced therefrom. The transaction resulting in the mineral deed to D. W. Crawford took place in the home of the plaintiffs on their farm on June 13, 1950. On the same day the plaintiffs executed an oil, gas, and mineral lease to B. E. Winder of Ft. Worth, Texas, covering the same real property described in the mineral deed. The oil, gas, and mineral lease is not involved in this action.

The defendants are the grantees of D. W. Crawford or James H. White and W. C. Duncan, who purchased an undivided three-sevenths interest of the minerals granted to D. W. Crawford and in turn sold them to other parties defendant, except Abe Apple-baum, who is a grantee of D. W. Crawford. The plaintiffs claim that the mineral deed covering the 1,280 acres was obtained by fraud. D. W. Crawford answers and denies the allegation of fraud and states that he obtained the minerals for value; that thereafter he transferred a one-fourteenth interest to Abe Applebaum and a three-sevenths interest to James H. White and W, C. Duncan. Abe Applebaum and the other defendants answer that they are innocent purchasers for value.

The case was tried to the court and resulted in judgment for the plaintiffs. The defendants appealed and demanded a trial de novo.

There are two issues for determination. The first and primary issue is whether or not the mineral deed covering the 1,280 acres was obtained from plaintiffs by fraud and misrepresentation so as to render it void, and second, whether or not Abe Apple-baum, James H. White, and W. C. Duncan and their grantees are innocent purchasers for value, and take the minerals deeded to them free from fraud, if any was involved.

D. W. Crawford of Gainesville, Texas, was in the business of obtaining oil, gas, and mineral leases and buying minerals in North Dakota in 1950. He was assisted in his operations by his two sons, D. B. Crawford and P. E. Crawford. On the thirteenth day of June, 1950, they went to the home of the plaintiff in Stutsman County, met Mrs. Dockter, and were told that her husband was in the field working. They located him and he accompanied them to his farm home. As a result of the meeting and negotiations between D. B. and P. E. Crawford and the plaintiffs an oil, gas, and mineral lease was executed to B. E. Winder and a mineral deed was executed to D. W. Crawford.

The oil, gas, and mineral lease given by the plaintiffs and running to B. E. Winder was filed for record in Stutsman County on the twenty-sixth day of June, 1950. The mineral deed given by the plaintiffs and running to D. W. Crawford was filed for record in Stutsman County on the twenty-eighth day of July, 1950. .

After acquiring oné-half of the minerals in the 1,280 acre tract from the plaintiffs, on June 19, 1950, D. W. Crawford made, executed, and delivered a mineral deed for an undivided three-sevenths interest in the minerals in the same tract ,of land to James H. White and W. C. Duncan. On July 22, 1950, he made, executed, and delivered a mineral deed to Abe Applebaum for an undivided one-fourteenth interest in and to all the oil, gas, and .minerals in said tract.

The mineral deed to Abe Applebaum was filed for record in Stutsman County on the twenty-sixth day of July, 1950, and the mineral deed to White and Duncan on the seventh day of August, 1950.

It thus appears that by July 22, 1950, D. W. Crawford had conveyed his entire one-half interest in the oil, gas, and minerals that he obtained from the plaintiffs.

D. W. Crawford bought the minerals for himself. He was not acting as an agent for anyone.

*693 On July 26, 1951, James H. White and W. C. Duncan made and executed a mineral deed conveying' an undivided one-twenty-eighth interest in and to all the oil, gas, and other minerals in and under the land conveyed by the original mineral deed from the plaintiffs to D. W. Crawford to Louis E. Nohl and Margaret Elliott Nohl; on September 11, 1951, they executed a deed to a one-sixty-fourth interest in the minerals covering the same property to A. R. Ging-ras; on October 1, 1951, they executed another mineral deed to an undivided one-thirty-second interest in the same property to Charles I. Francis; on October 20, 1951, they executed another mineral deed to an undivided five-sixty-fourths interest in the same property to O. R. Burden; on January 10, 1952, they executed another mineral deed to an undivided one-thirty-second interest in the same property to William H. Rouzer. The deeds made, executed, and delivered by James H. White and W. C. Duncan to the grantees mentioned were all filed and recorded in Stutsman County within a short time after they were executed and delivered and long prior to the institution of this action.

It is admitted that the plaintiffs did not appear before a notary public. The mineral deed conveying the 1,280 acres tract was notarized by L. Spitzer, a notary public, at Streeter, North Dakota. He is a banker and knew the signatures of the plaintiffs and attached his acknowledgment to the mineral deed. The certificate of acknowledgment is in proper form.

The home of the plaintiffs is located on the Northwest -Quarter (NW%.) of Section Fifteen (-15), Township One Hundred Thirty-eight (138), Range Sixty-nine (69). It is homestead-property of the plaintiffs. It is conceded by the appellants that the mineral deed describing the 1,280 acres obtained by D. W. Crawford from the plaintiffs is not effective as to the homestead property. Section 47-1805, NDRC 1943; .Dixon v. Kaufman, N.D., 58 N.W.2d 797, The mineral deed to the homestead was void. No title to the minerals in or under the homestead passed to D. W. Crawford or any of his grantees or the grantees of his grantees.

The oil, gas, and mineral lease is dated June .13, 19.50, and the mineral deed is dated June 14, 1950, and the check in payment is dated June 14, 1950. There is no question that all these documents were signed on the same date, June 13, 1950. It is evident from the testimony of D. B. Crawford that he was under the impression that the deed should be dated subsequent to the mineral lease to make the mineral deed subject thereto.

The plaintiffs assert that the Crawford brothers offered twenty-five cents an acre for an oil, gas, and mineral lease. The Crawfords claim they offered the plaintiffs twenty-five cents an acre for an oil, gas, and mineral lease and a deed to one-half of the minerals. The plaintiffs deny that they told the Crawford brothers that they owned one hundred per cent of the minerals under their land.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
65 N.W.2d 691, 3 Oil & Gas Rep. 2023, 1954 N.D. LEXIS 100, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dockter-v-crawford-nd-1954.