Donnell v. Otts

230 S.W. 864, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 282
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 12, 1921
DocketNo. 9525.
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 230 S.W. 864 (Donnell v. Otts) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Donnell v. Otts, 230 S.W. 864, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 282 (Tex. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

CONNER, O. J.

[1] This is a consolidated suit in which the appellees are claiming the mineral rights in a survey of 160 acres of land in Stephens county, as heirs of D. H. Pruitt, Sr. The survey was patented by the state of Texas to D. H. Pruitt, Sr., on the 10th day of January, 1883. On March 14, 1888, D. H. Pruitt, joined by his wife, Lucinda Pruitt, for a recited consideration of $125, duly executed and delivered to Robert L. Pruitt, their son, a general warranty deed conveying the 160 acres of land so patented. The deed, however, contained the following exception or reservation:

“But it is agreed upon and stipulated by and between all parties that I, D. H. Pruitt, Sr., do reserve and hold all minerals of all and any kind (except stone coal) that may be on the aforesaid land for my own use and benefit.”

Thereafter, on December 29, 1891, R. L. Pruitt executed and delivered to his brother, M. V. Pruitt, a general warranty deed without exception or reservation, conveying the land so patented and so conveyed to him by his father, D. H. Pruitt, Sr. By mesne conveyances from and under M. V. Pruitt, all without exception or reservation of any kind, the land appears to have been finally acquired by G. L. Donnell, who, joined by his wife, on August 19, 1916, executed and delivered to the appellant Texas Pacific Goal & Oil Company an oil and gas lease in the ordinary form, under which the said company and the -Sun Company, an assignee, are now claiming.

D. H. Pruitt, Sr., died between the years 1890 and 1894, and his wife died in March, 1899. A consideration of the record makes it evident that the court below proceeded upon the theory that the exception or reservation in the deed from D. H. Pruitt, Sr., to his son, R. L. Pruitt, had the effect of wholly withdrawing from the operation of the conveyance the oil and minerals in the land, and that therefore, upon the death of D. H. Pruitt, Sr., in 1893, the mineral interest so excepted from the operation of the deed passed by inheritance to his heirs, the ap-pellees in this case.

[2] The contentions of appellants are that the provision referred to is' not an exception, but a mere personal reservation or license in favor of the said -D. H. Pruitt, Sr., *865 .which ended at his death, and that hence the right to the minerals in the land set forth passed by estoppel to the vendees of R. L. Pruitt and M. Y. Pruitt by virtue of their general warranty deeds. These contentions present material questions for our determination.

We will restate the provision in the deed of D. H. Pruitt, Sr., upon which the questions depend. It is:

“But it is agreed upon and stipulated by and between all parties that I, D. H. Pruitt, Sr., do reserve and hold all minerals of all and any kind (except stone coal) that may be on the aforesaid land for my own use and benefit.”

In 7 Words and Phrases, p. 6140, under the title of “Reservation,” it is said:

“A reservation is a clause in a deed creating or reserving something out of the thing granted that was not in existence before” — citing numerous authorities.

Again it is said:

“A reservation in a deed is something created out of the granted premises by force and effect of the reservation itself, as an easement out of land granted, or rent out of premises devised.”

It is further said:

"A reservation is a proviso in a deed which reserves to the grantor some new right or interest in the thing granted, not before existing in him, operating by way of an implied grant. If it does not contain words of inheritance, it will only give an estate for the life of the grantor.”

Numerous other definitions of the term “reservation” are given in the authorities cited, but those quoted are sufficient, we think, for our purposes.

The term “exception,” as used in grants or contracts, has been frequently defined. In 3 Words and Phrases, p. 2538 et seq., the following is given:

“An ‘exception,’ as the term is used with reference to contracts, is the taking some part of the subject-matter of the contract out of it.”

Again:

“An exception in a deed or other instrument is something existing before as a part of the thing granted, and which is excepted from the operation of the conveyance.”

The definitions quoted fairly present the view of the great weight of decided cases. See 8 R. C. L. p. 1089, § 147, and following; 2 Devlin on Deeds, § 979 et seq. In the latter authority, in section 980, it is said:

“The terms ‘exception’ and ‘reservation’ are often used indiscriminately, and sometimes in a deed what purports to be a reservation has the force of an exception. Mr. Justice Woodward, after reviewing some authorities, says: ‘Thus it appears upon sufficient authority that words of reservation may operate by way of exception, and to have any effect must do so when the subject of the reservation is not something newly created, as a rent or other interest strictly incorporeal, but is a thing corporate and in esse when the grant is made.’ * * * Where a grantor conveys land, ‘saving and reserving, nevertheless, for his own use the coal contained in the said piece or parcel of land, together with free ingress and egress by wagon road to haul the coal therefrom as wanted,’ the clause operates as an exception, and the grantor retains the entire and perpetual property in the coal.”

In the case of Barrett v. Kansas & T. Coal Co., 70 Kan. 649, 79 Pac. 150, the deed under consideration contained the following provision:

“This deed is made subject to the following exceptions, reservations and conditions, to wit: * * * The said party of the first part hereby reserves the coal and other minerals underlying said land.”

It was said by the Supreme Court of Kansas that the provision constituted an exception, and not a reservation, and that the title to the coal remained in the grantor, and not a mere easement to go upon the land to claim it.

In Preston v. White, 57 W. Va. 278, 50 S. E. 236, it was held by the Supreme Court of Appeals of West Virginia that petroleum oil and natural gas are minerals, and, in their places, are real estate and part of the land, and that a deed conveying a tract of land containing the clause, “But it is expressly understood and agreed that there is reserved from and not included in the above sale or conveyance seven-eighths of all and any oil and gas that may be on, in, or under said land, with full right and privilege to said Bennett, his heirs and assigns, to develop and operate the same,” did not pass the oil and gas in place in the land to the grantee, but that, on the contrary, these minerals remained vested in thq grantor as an actual, vested estate and property, and not an incorporeal hereditament in him, nor a mere license to produce oil and gas, and that a subsequent conveyance by such grantor of such oil and gas vested in the grantee like estate and property in the oil and gas as was vested in such grantor.

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Bluebook (online)
230 S.W. 864, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 282, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/donnell-v-otts-texapp-1921.