Flowers v. Stanley

1957 OK 237, 316 P.2d 840, 8 Oil & Gas Rep. 265, 1957 Okla. LEXIS 541
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 15, 1957
Docket37389
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 1957 OK 237 (Flowers v. Stanley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Flowers v. Stanley, 1957 OK 237, 316 P.2d 840, 8 Oil & Gas Rep. 265, 1957 Okla. LEXIS 541 (Okla. 1957).

Opinion

BLACKBIRD, Justice.

This case involves the right of defendants in error, who, as grantors, executed a deed dated August 11th, 1944, conveying to one of the plaintiffs in error, Oscar C. Flowers, two half sections of land, and reserving unto themselves an undivided one-half interest in the minerals under said land, to have the reserving part of said deed reformed. The material facts are not in serious dispute and are substantially as hereinafter related.

The defendant in error, Mrs. Era I. Cale Stanley is the remarried widow, and the other defendants in error are the surviving adult children, of Era I. Cale, who died previous to 193S, in Texas County, Oklahoma, where the land is situated. In said year, said widow and children, hereinafter referred to collectively as plaintiffs, moved from there to San Bernardino, California. In 1939, Mrs. Stanley, then Cale, discovered that said land was in danger of being sold for delinquent taxes, and, on a trip back to Oklahoma, was successful in selling an agricultural lease on it to one Oscar C. Flowers, a lawyer and farmer-stockman of Perryton, Texas, for a total rental amounting to more than enough to pay the taxes and save the land from delinquent tax sale. In December, 1943, just before this five-year agricultural lease expired, Flowers wrote Mrs. Stanley, at San Bernardino, asking her if she would be interested in selling the land to him. About three months later, Mrs. Stanley made another trip back to Oklahoma, and, while in Texas County, entered into negotiations with Flowers to sell him the land, less one-half of the minerals, for a consideration of $8,000, contingent upon the children in California approving, and joining with her, in the conveyance of their undivided interests.

Previously, one of the Cale children had died subsequent to his father’s death, and two of the other three had married. Consequently, Mrs. Stanley’s1 agreement with *842 Mr. Flowers contemplated that court proceedings would be had in order to place of record, ownership of the entire fee simple title to the land in Mrs. Stanley and her one surviving daughter and two sons. Before she left Guymon, the Texas County Seat, to return to California, she engaged Attorney L of that city to handle said proceedings, in the event the aforesaid sale proposal met the children’s approval. Accordingly, on her return to California, Mrs. Stanley took with her the original and one copy of a contract of sale, dated March 18, 1944, naming Flowers as party of the second part, or purchaser, and Mrs. Stanley and her three children and their two spouses, as parties of the first part, and purporting to embody, in a general way, the essential terms of the oral agreement she and Flowers had entered into. This contract, according to the writing introduced in evidence as Mrs. Stanley’s copy thereof, specifically provided that in the deed to be executed and delivered under the terms thereof, one-half of the “minerals and mineral rights under said land” was to be retained by parties of the first part. When the original of the contract had been executed by all the heirs in California, Mrs. Stanley mailed it to Attorney L at Guymon, in May, 1944. About three months later, Attorney L completed the court action instituted to perfect the title as aforesaid, and, at nearly the same time, said vendors and their spouses, executed (in the two California counties of their respective residences) the warranty deed that is the subject of this action. According to the undisputed testimony, when this deed was received by Mrs. Stanley for her and the other grantors’ execution, it purported to reserve to said grantors, all, instead of only óne-half, of the minerals under said land. Noticing that this did not conform to the contract with Mr. Flowers, Mrs. Stanley and her two sons conveyed this information to Mrs. Essie Bowerman, the San Bernardino Notary Public, before whom «orne of the grantors appeared to acknowledge their signatures, and had her, on her typewriter, type into the deed, by way of interlineation,’ the words “one-half of” so that, as thus corrected, the reserving provision read, in part, exactly as follows: “Grantors, (naming them) * * * hereby expressly reserve to themselves * * * one-half of all of the oil, gas, and minerals * * * and mineral rights in, to and under the above described lands * * * After making said change, and after all of the grantors had signed and acknowledged the deed, the afore-named Notary caused them to indicate their authorization of said correction by writing their respective initials opposite same on the deed’s right hand margin. As an additional precautionary measure, she typed at the bottom of the deed, over her signature and seal, the following: “October 14, 1944, the correction ‘one-half of’ all of the oil, gas, etc. was made, initialed, subscribed and sworn to before me.” Thereafter, Mrs. Stanley, apparently in accord with a previous request by Attorney L, forwarded said deed, as corrected, to the City National Bank of Guymon; and, in November, 1944, a few days after the deed was recorded in October, she received from said Bank checks for herself and children in payment of the agreed consideration for the land.

In 1950, Mrs. Stanley’s last husband died and his sister, a Mrs. Cook, also of Texas County, Oklahoma, while on a trip to San Bernardino to attend the decedent’s funeral on November 13th, of that year, stated in a conversation with Mrs. Stanley, in substance, that Mr. Flowers had told her that the reservation of minerals in the above-described deed was for a term of only 20 years. Mrs. Stanley, who testified that she was then in a “very bad” state of health and “very disturbed”, further testified that she “didn’t think much about * * * (Mrs. Cook’s statement) until probably three weeks later” and then she “went and got” the copy of the Contract with Flowers that she had kept “and read it and it didn’t state for' a period of twenty years * * * Mrs. Stanley further testified, in substance, that she made no further investigation of the matter at the time. In 1954, as a result of an oil well having been recently drilled *843 on the land, Mrs. Stanley began to receive offers to buy the family’s interest in the mineral rights thereunder, and she made a trip back to Guymon and vicinity. At least one offer of $200 per acre was communicated to her from Perryton, Texas, where Mr. Flowers lived. After its being indicated to her from expressions from at least one prospective buyer that hers and the children’s title might have to he perfected, and upon examining the deed that had been recorded, and having a Guymon lawyer examine the public record thereof, Mrs. Stanley discovered that, in addition to the hereinbefore described interlineation that had been made in California, there had been typed on the deed an additional inter-lineation which had the effect of placing a 20-year limitation on the duration of the reservation of minerals therein contained.

Within a short time thereafter, and specifically on October 13th, 1954, Mrs. Stanley and her sons and daughter commenced the present action against Mr. Flowers and his wife to obtain reformation of the above-described deed by striking the second aforesaid interlineation therefrom, and to quiet their title to an undivided one-half interest in and to the mineral rights under the involved two half-sections, or 640 acres, of land.

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Bluebook (online)
1957 OK 237, 316 P.2d 840, 8 Oil & Gas Rep. 265, 1957 Okla. LEXIS 541, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flowers-v-stanley-okla-1957.