Gailey v. McFarlain

193 So. 570, 194 La. 150, 1940 La. LEXIS 968
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 9, 1940
DocketNo. 35320.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 193 So. 570 (Gailey v. McFarlain) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gailey v. McFarlain, 193 So. 570, 194 La. 150, 1940 La. LEXIS 968 (La. 1940).

Opinions

[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 152 The plaintiffs, claiming the ownership of the mineral rights in and to a certain ten acre tract of land, under a mineral deed dated July 20, 1926, executed by Robert McFarlain, the owner of the fee title to the land in question, instituted this suit against Robert McFarlain and the various royalty owners, who derived their interests from McFarlain.

The defendants, averring ownership in themselves, denied that the plaintiffs were the owners of the mineral rights in and to the ten acre tract of land. They pleaded ten years prescription, liberandi causa, under Articles 789 and 3546 of the Revised Civil Code. Plaintiffs rejoined, stating that there was an obstacle in the form of prior recorded mineral leases, which suspended prescription, as expressly stated in Article 792, Revised Civil Code. Defendants replied that the leases were not such an obstacle as contemplated by Article 792, Revised Civil Code, and further defended on the ground that the plaintiffs had acquiesced in the leases by demanding and *Page 154 accepting portions of the rentals from the mineral lessees.

There was judgment maintaining the plea of prescription of ten years, liberandi causa, and rejecting the plaintiffs' demands in toto. The plaintiffs appealed.

The facts in the case are as follows: Robert McFarlain was the owner of the ten acres of land in question, including all of the mineral rights thereunder. On September 26, 1922, he conveyed to Louis Fontenot one-half of his mineral rights in and to the land. On April 20, 1926, McFarlain granted the same Louis Fontenot an exclusive mineral lease covering his remaining one-half of the mineral rights in the ten acre tract in question. Prior to that time, Louis Fontenot had assigned a part of his mineral servitude to Dr. G.A. Lillie, who, subsequent to April 27, 1926, also granted the same Louis Fontenot a mineral lease covering the mineral interest which Dr. Lillie had previously acquired from Fontenot. On May 18, 1926, Louis Fontenot granted a mineral lease covering the mineral interest remaining in himself to J.A. Rush, and on the same day, also assigned to Rush the two mineral leases, which he had obtained from McFarlain and Dr. Lillie. All of these instruments were properly recorded and were in full force and effect when the mineral deed dated July 20, 1926, under which the plaintiffs are claiming the ownership of the mineral servitudes on the property, was executed by Robert McFarlain.

The mineral deed executed by Robert McFarlain on July 20, 1926, hereinafter referred to for convenience as the Triche *Page 155 deed, which is the key instrument in this controversy, was in favor of Charles W. Triche, Frank B. Jaenke, Mrs. Ann H. Hebert, Alfred T. Maund and W.D. DeGravelle. In this instrument, Robert McFarlain "granted, bargained, sold, assigned, conveyed, set over and delivered with all legal warranties," unto the above named grantees, for the sum of $500 cash, or $50 per acre, the following:

"All and singular, the right, title, interest and ownership of the vendor, warranted to be not less than one-sixteenth of the whole, in and to all metals and minerals and metal and mineral rights whatsoever, in, to, under, upon, and in connection with, the following land belonging to said vendor and situated in Acadia Parish: (A description of the property follows.)

"And in addition to the above, the said McFarlain grants unto the said purchasers, and their heirs, successors and assigns, the right of ingress and egress to and from said land, and the necessary possession and use thereof, in order to avail themselves freely of the right hereby granted to take and take care of the metals and minerals, which include oil, petroleum, gas, etc., hereinbefore referred to.

"To have and to hold said property unto said purchasers and their heirs and assigns forever. And the said vendor moreover transfers unto the said purchasers all rights and actions of warranty to which he is (they are) entitled against all former owners and proprietors of the said property herein conveyed, subrogating the said purchasers to the said rights and actions *Page 156 to be enjoyed and exercised as they might have been by the present vendor."

Certificates in the name of the owner showing no encumbrances were expressly waived by the parties and the deed was properly registered on July 30, 1926.

The Triche deed did not make any mention whatsoever of either the prior sale of one-half of the minerals in 1922 to Louis Fontenot, or the pre-existing exclusive mineral leases covering the mineral rights hereinabove set forth.

After the Triche deed was executed on July 20, 1926, J.A. Rush, the then owner of the pre-existing recorded mineral leases, assigned, under date of August 25, 1926, all of the mineral leases on the ten acre tract in question to the Rio Bravo Oil Company and the Marland Oil Company of Texas, which companies retained ownership of the leases until they expired by their terms in 1931. The leases were kept in effect by the payment of rental charges and not by any drilling operations on the property.

On May 24, 1935, Robert McFarlain and his wife leased, exclusively, the ten acre tract described in the Triche deed and other lands to W.B. Conover. Drilling operations on the ten acre tract described in the Triche deed were commenced by Glassell Glassell, the assignees of Conover, on April 30, 1937, and resulted in the production of oil on or about June 21, 1937.

On October 11, 1937, the plaintiffs, some of the original grantees in the Triche deed of July 20, 1926, and their successors in title, brought this action against the defendants, *Page 157 claiming title to all of the mineral rights in the property.

The first issue herein relates to the ownership of the reversionary interest to one-half of the minerals, which was outstanding at the time the Triche deed was executed on July 20, 1926. Plaintiffs contend that by virtue of the warranty and other provisions, both expressed and implied by law, in the Triche deed of July 20, 1926, there was either a sale in praesenti of McFarlain's reversionary interest in the right to one-half of the mineral interests then outstanding in Louis Fontenot and Dr. Lillie, or, at least, that the outstanding right to half of the minerals accrued to the grantees of the Triche deed or their successors in title, when the mineral rights or servitudes lapsed and reverted to Robert McFarlain on September 26, 1932, or, at the latest, when Fontenot and Dr. Lillie executed the releases thereto in 1935 and 1937.

It is clear that the reversionary mineral interest of the owner of the fee simple title is "a certain object," which can be legally sold.

In Professor Harriet Spiller Daggett's recent work, "Mineral Rights in Louisiana," on pages 42 and 43, it is stated:

"It would appear, however, from this history that an owner of mineral rights can deal with his `reversionary' hopes of servitude lapsed for non-user before their revestment; and there seems to be no good reason why he should not deal with this right under Articles 2450 and 2451 of the Civil Code, or by a converse analysis under Article 747." *Page 158

Article 2450 and 2451 of the Civil Code plainly state that the sale of a hope is valid. These Articles read as follows:

"2450.

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193 So. 570, 194 La. 150, 1940 La. LEXIS 968, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gailey-v-mcfarlain-la-1940.