Florman v. MEBCO Ltd. Partnership

207 S.W.3d 593, 2006 WL 1656167
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedDecember 13, 2006
Docket2004-CA-001908-MR, 2004-CA-002072-MR, 2004-CA-002074-MR
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 207 S.W.3d 593 (Florman v. MEBCO Ltd. Partnership) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Florman v. MEBCO Ltd. Partnership, 207 S.W.3d 593, 2006 WL 1656167 (Ky. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

OPINION

JOHNSON, Judge.

William Florman, Frank Boyce Moodie, III, (i.e. Boyce Moodie), Kathleen Moodie, Berrian Minerals, Inc., and Larry Glass (collectively the “Moodie defendants”); MEBCO Limited Partnership, a Kentucky Limited Partnership (MEBCO); and Lawrence L. Pedley, John C. Pedley, David Pedley (collectively the “Pedley heirs”) have appealed 2 separately from the orders *595 entered by the Livingston Circuit Court on September 3, 2004, which adopted the recommendations of Special Commissioner Marvin Wilson submitted on August 5, 2004. The Moodie defendants have appealed that portion of the circuit court’s order which awarded the clay on the land to MEBCO, the surface owner, and seek a determination that the ancillary language in the Shelby/Watkins deeds prohibits surface mining of the minerals and substances such as limestone and clay. MEBCO has appealed that portion of the circuit court’s order which awarded the limestone on the land to the Moodie defendants as the mineral rights owner, arguing that Kentucky law provides that limestone is not a mineral. The Pedley heirs have appealed that portion of the circuit court’s order which upheld the trust formerly set up in another civil action into which their portion of the royalties is placed. Having concluded under Kentucky law that limestone and clay are not minerals and thus were retained by the surface owners, we affirm in part and reverse in part. While the circuit court failed to make a determination as to whether the Moodie defendants were granted the right to surface mine the land, we also hold that they were not conveyed such rights. Having further concluded that the Pedley heirs failed to preserve any of the issues raised in their appeal, we dismiss their claims without addressing them on the merits.

HISTORY OF THE LAND

This case involves the ownership of “all the minerals on and under” 200 acres of land in Livingston County, Kentucky on the Cumberland River (the land). The land is a portion of a much larger tract of land owned by MEBCO, 3 whose principals are Firmón Cook, III and his wife, Betty Cook (collectively the “Cooks”). The Cooks acquired the land on April 25, 1991, and they later conveyed it to their company, MEBCO.

At the time the Cooks obtained title to the land, they received an interest in the surface only, not the minerals. The minerals had been previously severed from the surface estate in 1873, by two deeds. 4 On July 15, 1873, C.C. Shelby conveyed to Geo. W. Norton, Wm. F. Norton, John S. Long, F. Berrian Moody and J.C. Waller (the grantees) “all the minerals” in a portion of the land consisting of 185 acres (the Shelby Deed). Also on July 15, 1873, James Watkins conveyed to the grantees “all the minerals” in a portion of the land containing 12.41 acres (the Watkins Deed). 5 Those mineral rights were subsequently acquired by Salem Fluorspar Corporation (Salem Fluorspar) in 1942, which is now defunct. 6 The defendants claiming *596 rights through Salem Fluorspar include the Moodie defendants 7 and the Pedley heirs.

In addition to a conveyance of the minerals, the Shelby/Watkins deeds contain certain surface-related rights that may be utilized by the mineral owner in the removal of such minerals. The ancillary rights set out in the Watkins deed are as follows:

Together with sufficient surface land on the bank of the river for ware rooms for storing away the minerals and mining material with right of way over said land to and from the mines with as much timber and surface land as may be necessary for buildings and cribbing of shafts for developing such minerals as may be sought for on and under said land [descriptions of the land omitted]. But it is clearly understood that the surface land on the bank of the river for ware rooms is not to exceed one acre to be in a square, and the right of way over said land not to exceed forty feet in width and to run direct from the mines to the nearest line of said survey [and] thence with said line to the ware house.

The ancillary rights in the Shelby deed are the same as the ancillary rights in the Watkins deed, except there was added to the last sentence quoted above “[and] not to interfere with the hill selected [sic] by me for a building site.” 8

LEASES ON THE LAND

Jim Smith Contracting Company, LLC, and its wholly-owned company, Cumberland River Resources, LLC, (collectively CRR) 9 have been developing a limestone quarry on three adjacent properties in Livingston County. 10 In 1998 Rex Smith, a general partner of CRR, became interested in the possibility of acquiring a mineral lease on the land for the acquisition of the limestone, clay, and other substances. 11 Smith understood that the ownership of the limestone and clay located on the land was contested between MEBCO and the Moodie defendants; and therefore, in order to ensure that the limestone, clay, and aggregates were under lease regardless of who was determined to own the substances, CRR 12 obtained leases from both sides. On November 16, 1999, Smith, through his companies, entered into a mineral lease with Boyce Moodie (the Moodie lease), 13 and thereafter on December 21, *597 1999, he entered into a separate lease with the Cooks on the MEBCO property (Cook/MEBCO lease). 14 At trial the parties stipulated, without objection, as to the validity of CRR’s leases with MEBCO and the Moodie defendants.

PROCEDURAL HISTORY

It is undisputed that MEBCO owns the surface of the land set out in the Shelby/Watkins deeds. However, following the execution of the above-referenced leases, MEBCO filed the present action on May 30, 2002, as a Petition to Quiet Title and for Declaration of Rights regarding ownership of certain substances on the Shelby/Watkins tracts. In Count I of its petition, as amended, MEBCO sought to quiet its title to the limestone, clay, sand, and gravel in and underlying the two parcels of land in the Shelby/Watkins deeds. 15 MEBCO claimed that although it did not own the minerals on the land, it did own the limestone and clay as part of the surface estate. In Count II of its petition, MEBCO sought a declaration of rights of the mineral owners to surface mine the land of the Shelby/Watkins deeds in the recovery of minerals.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
207 S.W.3d 593, 2006 WL 1656167, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/florman-v-mebco-ltd-partnership-kyctapp-2006.