Dumas v. Daniels

11 S.W.2d 5, 178 Ark. 489, 1928 Ark. LEXIS 472
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 26, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 11 S.W.2d 5 (Dumas v. Daniels) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dumas v. Daniels, 11 S.W.2d 5, 178 Ark. 489, 1928 Ark. LEXIS 472 (Ark. 1928).

Opinion

Mehaffy, J.

This is a snit brought by appellee, R. B. Daniels, to reform a mineral deed so as to show a conveyance of 1/32 of the mineral rights and so as to give plaintiff the right to collect and receive % of any oil royalties and gas rentals that may be produced on the following described land: “The southwest quarter of northeast quarter, section 11, township 17 south, range 14 west, Union County, Arkansas.”

It is alleged that on October 28, 1922, appellant, Gr. C. Dumas, ag'reed with appellee, Daniels, to sell and convey to him a 1/32 interest in the oil, gas and mineral rights in, on, under and pertaining to the following described lands; then ¡follows a description of the land.

It is further alleged that it was the agreement between the parties that by said sale it was intended that Gr. O. Dumas should convey to R. B. Daniels a one-fourth interest in the 1/8 royalty reserved and to be reserved under any oil and gas lease pertaining to said property; that the said deed recited in the granting clause a conveyance of 1/32 part of the oil, gas and mineral rights, but, in designating the amount of royalty to be collected by virtue of said instrument, a mutual mistake was made, and the amount was stated in the deed as a 1/32 interest of any oil royalty or gas rentals, when it should have stated a one-fourth interest in any oil royalty or gas rentals.

Appellee states that he paid the appellant, and the appellant refused to correct the error, and that said error prohibits him from making a sale of the mineral rights owned by him, and the prayer is to reform the deed as above mentioned.

Gr. C. Dumas filed answer, denying all the material allegations of the complaint. There was thereafter an amendment to the complaint filed, making Medford Dumas a party, alleging that said Medford Dumas had purchased some interest in the land in controversy, and praying a reformation against him also.

Medford Dumas ¡answered, alleging* that he purchased without notice, and asking* that the' complaint he dismissed.

Thereafter, on the 9th day of February, E. Holt Ash-ford, Aylmer Montgomery, Kate Ward and Emma Henderson filed petition to be made parties, setting up the deed of A. E. Ashford, one of the grantees in the deed sought to be reformed, and alleging* that they were the only heirs, and they adopted the complaint of the appellee, R. B. Daniels.

The testimony of appellees tended to show that the allegations in the complaint were correct. The deeds were introduced, and defendant’s testimony tended to show that the deed was according to the intention of the parties.

It is unnecessary to set out the testimony in full. The testimony ¡as far as necessary will be referred to in the opinion.

The court entered a decree to the effect that the deed under which appellees hold title to said mineral rights provided that the grantees should, take a 1/32 part of the royalty reserved under the original lease, now expired; and that said clause is repugnant to the granting clause, which conveyed 1/32 part and interest in and to all of the oil, gas and mineral rights, and the said clause is therefore rejected. The court also held that the appellees, other than R. B. Daniels, were the sole heirs at law of A. E. Ashford, who had died in the year 1923. The court further found that Medford Dumas, one of the defendants, was not an innocent purchaser of any part of the mineral rights sued for, and that the sale under which appellees claim title is in all things legal, and that R. B. Daniels is the owner of one-half of 1/32 mineral rights, and that E. Holt Ashford, Aylmer Montgomery, Kate Ward and Emma Henderson are the joint owners of one-half of the 1/32 mineral rights, and that they are entitled to take and receive as their portion of the gas, oil and minerals of the said deed, 1/32 part of the total production from the Said described lands. It was ordered by the court that the title to 1/32 part be vested in the plaintiffs, free from all claims whatsoever of Gr. C. Dumas and Medford Dumas,.and the appellee’s title thereto was forever quieted. The appellant excepted, and prayed ¡an appeal to the Supreme Court.

It is first contended that the complaint does not state a cause of action, and that it is contradictory in its allegations, and sets out as a basis for reformation ¡an impossible agreement between the parties.

A case very similar to the instant case is that of Dumas v. Crowder, ante, p. 143. It involves the same lands; the same contentions are made, although the plaintiff in that case was different from the plaintiff in this case; but the same contention was made as to the complaint not stating a cause of action, etc. In the case decided in October of Dumas v. Crowder, ante, p. 143, this court said:

“Appellants now say that there remains only one question for this court to consider, and that is, whether the complaint states a cause of action against any or all of the defendants. Appellants cite Rowe v. Allison, 87 Ark. 206, 112 S. W. 395, and quote therefrom the following: ‘There is no oral testimony before the court, and there ¡are no recitals of evidence in the judgment, and therefore a conclusive presumption must prevail that the evidence sustains the decree of the court, so far as ■it is possible for a decree based on the complaint to be sustained by evidence. If the decree is without the issues, or the complaint does not state a cause of action, this presumption cannot ¡aid the appellee. Jones v. Mitchell, 83 Ark. 77, 102 S. W. 710. Where -the decree is not responsive to the issues, it is void. Rankin v. Schofield, 81 Ark. 440, 98 S. W. 674.’

“Appellants say that the complaint herein does not state a cause of action against any of the appellants. We cannot agree with counsel in this contention, except as to M. L. Dumas and Olive E. Dumas, who should be eliminated from the second deed of appellant Gr. O. Dumas to appellee, as reformed by the chancery court. Both parties agree that they 'should be eliminated from this deed, and we concur with this agreement. The deed referred to "is Exhibit B to the complaint.

“In this case appellants did not demur to the complaint. They filed an answer, thereby treating the allegations of the complaint as .sufficient to put them to answer. They are therefore asserting for the first time, in this court, that the complaint does not state a cause of action. As said by this court in Cohn v. Hager, 30 Ark. 25: ‘If the defendant had doubted the sufficiency of the pleadings, he should have demurred, and brought the question of its legal sufficiency before the eourt; but, instead of this, he has treated them as sufficient in law to put him to answer, and, having answered and gone to trial upon the issue formed, even if the pleadings were technically insufficient, the question cannot for the first time be raised in this court.”

It will therefore be seen that the identical question presented here wias presented to the court in the case of Dumas v. Crowder, supra, and it was there held that, since the appellant did not demur to the pleadings, but filed answer and treated the complaints as sufficient, and testimony having been introduced without objection, the pleading's must be treated as amended to conform to the testimony taken without objection. This question is ruled by the case of Dumas v. Crowder.

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Bluebook (online)
11 S.W.2d 5, 178 Ark. 489, 1928 Ark. LEXIS 472, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dumas-v-daniels-ark-1928.