Fourth & Central Trust Co. v. Woolley

165 N.E. 742, 31 Ohio App. 259, 1928 Ohio App. LEXIS 320
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 17, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 165 N.E. 742 (Fourth & Central Trust Co. v. Woolley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fourth & Central Trust Co. v. Woolley, 165 N.E. 742, 31 Ohio App. 259, 1928 Ohio App. LEXIS 320 (Ohio Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

Hamilton, P. J.

This case is here on appeal from the court of common pleas. It is an action brought by the Fourth & Central Trust Company of Cincinnati by way of interpleader to determine the rights of the defendants Mary E. Woolley, widow of Amos G. Woolley, deceased, and Edna W. Gardner, in a certain fund deposited with the Fourth & Central Trust Company, as trustee. The fund was derived *260 from the sale of oil rights and oil extracted from lands located in Reagan, Upton and Crockett counties, in the state of Texas.

It appears that Amos G-. Woolley died intestate in the year 1919, a resident of Cincinnati, Ohio. At the time of his death he was seized of a one-sixth interest in about 5,000 acres of land, located as above stated. At the time of his death, and until the discovery of oil on the land, the land was of very little value, being practically desert land. It was unfit for agricultural purposes, but was used somewhat for grazing. Woolley left surviving him his widow, Mary E. Woolley, and one daughter, Edna W. Gardner. ' ,

Under the laws of Texas, the widow, Mary E. Woolley, received the life estate in the undivided one-third of the one-sixth interest of her deceased husband, Amos G. Woolley. The one-third has never been set off to the widow by metes and bounds. The remainder vested in the daughter, Edna W. Gardner. The owners of the remaining five-sixths, through their agent, executed a lease of a part of the real estate to oil companies; the consideration for the lease being a certain sum in cash and one-eighth of the royalties derived from the sale of oil, if produced. After the execution of the lease by the agent representing the five-sixths interests, the consent of Mary E. Woolley, the widow, to the lease was obtained for a nominal cash consideration. Edna W. Gardner also ratified the lease.

The lessees developed and extracted oil from the land, and the fund in question, deposited with the Fourth & Central Trust Company, is the Amos G. Woolley one-sixth interest derived from the oil *261 rights and the royalties from the sale of oil taken from the land in question. The widow claims that under the law she, as the life tenant, is entitled to receive one-third of the corpus of the fund, while the contention of the daughter is that Mary E. Woolley, as life tenant, is entitled only to have one-third of the one-sixth impounded and to receive the income therefrom.

The question here for determination is: What interest has a life tenant in the profits from oil taken from the land, developed and produced after the death of the prior owner? This question has not been determined by the court of last resort in this state, but has frequently been before the courts in many of the states of the Union. It is settled law that oil before its extraction is a mineral, and a part of the land. It is also settled law that the life tenant would be punishable for waste if he or she sought to extract the minerals from the land which has not been devoted to mining purposes before the creation of the life estate.

The unbroken line of authorities in several states is to the effect that a tenant for life has no right to operate for oil on the premises in which such estate is held, or to make an oil lease thereon, when operations were not commenced before the life estate accrued. The leading cases so holding are as follows : Swayne v. Lone Acre Oil Co., 98 Tex., 597, 86 S. W., 740, 69 L. R. A., 986, 8 Ann. Cas., 1117; Wilson v. Youst, 43 W. Va., 826, 28 S. E., 781, 39 L. R. A., 292; Parker v. Riley, 250 U. S., 66, 39 S. Ct., 405, 63 L. Ed., 847; Blakley v. Marshall, 174 Pa., 425, 34 A., 564; Stewart v. Tennant, 52 W. Va., 559, 44 S. E., 223; Strawn v. Brady, 84 Okl., 66, 202 P., *262 505; Brandenburg v. Petroleum Exploration, 218 Ky., 557, 291 S. W., 757; State v. Snyder, Treas., 29 Wyo., 163, 212 P., 758.

In Ohio we have the case of Kenton Gas & Electric Co. v. Dorney, 17 C. C., 101, 9 C. D., 604, which holds that a tenant for life has no right to operate for. oil or gas on the premises in which such estate is held, or to make an oil or gas lease therein when operations for oil or gas were not commenced before the life estate accrued.

These decisions would seem to settle the question that a life tenant cannot take mineral from the land without committing enjoinable waste. The question naturally arises: If the life tenant has no interest in the mineral, since the same is a part of the land, and no right to extract the same from the land, what interest could she have in the output? Such an interest could only be on the theory that the life tenant holds possession to the center of the earth, and, if the oil is lawfully severed, she ought to get the benefit.

The other five-sixths interest, together with the remainderman, could not have proceeded with the extraction of the oil from the land without the consent of the life tenant; this for the reason that she is in possession of that part of the estate. She could sell her right of possession. She did sell her consent for the consideration therein named. Were it not for the strong line of authorities fixing the rights of the life tenant to the income from the impounded interest, a serious question might arise as to whether or not the life tenant had not disposed of all of her interest when she sold her consent to the development of the oil. In other words, she sold *263 her right of possession in so far as the operation for the extraction of oil was concerned. However that may be, the question is not presented here. It arises incidentally from the logic of the situation.

Counsel for the widow urge that there is authority for the giving of the corpus of the one-third of the one-sixth interest to the widow, and argu'e that the courts have held that the common-law rule as to waste does not apply to dower interest in this country, and that circumstances would give the right to the widow to mine, extract oil, or cut timber, where it was necessary to the sustenance of the widow, and the land was wild land and unfit for agricultural purposes; that under these circumstances the right of the widow to use and enjoy the land would carry with it the right to dispose of the minerals and oil as her interests would require. As authority for this, counsel cite the case of Crockett v. Crockett, 2 Ohio St., 181. That case was an action in chancery to enjoin a doweress from disposing of timber and cutting timber. The court made some observations in the opinion which seemed to qualify the common-law rule as to waste as affecting the doweress. However, the facts are not such as to make the decision a precedent in this action, or an authority.

In the Crockett case the widow was left a life estate in a tract of timber land. She was without funds, and taxes had accumulated.

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165 N.E. 742, 31 Ohio App. 259, 1928 Ohio App. LEXIS 320, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fourth-central-trust-co-v-woolley-ohioctapp-1928.