Gill v. Colton

12 F.2d 531, 1926 U.S. App. LEXIS 3289
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedApril 14, 1926
Docket2395
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 12 F.2d 531 (Gill v. Colton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gill v. Colton, 12 F.2d 531, 1926 U.S. App. LEXIS 3289 (4th Cir. 1926).

Opinion

PARKER, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from a'decree in equity, establishing a lost deed and decreeing the plaintiffs to be the owners of mineral rights reserved thereby in 150 acres of land in Cabell county, W. Va. The appellants were defendants in the District Court, and the appellees were plaintiffs. They will be referred to Rere in accordance with their respective positions in that court.

Plaintiffs are trustees of the Guyandot Land Association. They claim title 'to the mineral rights in controversy as successors in title to Abiel A. Low and others, who, in turn, claimed under grants from the commonwealth of Virginia to one Samuel Smith, and who in the year 1874 instituted an action in ejectment in the United States District Court for the District of West Virginia, against Winchester Adkins and others to recover approximately 300,000 acres of land in West Virginia embracing the 150 acres in controversy in this suit. C. L. Rolfe and P. H. McCullough, who claimed title adversely to plaintiffs, were duly made parties to said action; and on June 7, 1879, and November 17, 1880, jury trials were had as to the interests claimed by them respectively, and at the same time judgments were entered in favor of the plaintiffs and against them, and writs of possession were awarded to the plaintiffs.

In March, 1883, the • defendant Nelson Holton bought the land in controversy in connection with T. J. and H. A. Gill from B. J. MeComas; the arrangement being that the Gills should have the timber, and that the land including the minerals should be deeded to .Holton, This was on or about the 6th day of March, 1883. Deed of McCullough of that date was executed conveying to the Gills the one-half interest which he claimed in the land, and MeComas transferred to them his rights as the purchaser of the one-half interest of Rolfe which had been sold under a decree of the circuit court of Cabell county. Deed was subsequently made to them covering the Rolfe interest by the commissioner in that suit. In October, 1884, T. J. and H. A. Gill executed to Nelson Holton a deed embracing the land in controversy for the recited consideration of $153.26; but the undisputed evidence is that Holton went into possession of the land at the time the contract was made for its purchase in March, 1883, and has' since been continuously in possession of same, claiming it as his own. All of the deeds herein-before referred to were duly recorded in Cabell county at or about thé time of their execution.

The claim of plaintiffs to equitable relief arises in connection with a lost and unrecorded deed by which they contend that their predecessors in title conveyed to H. A. and T. J. Gill the 150-aere tract of land with a reservation of the oil and mineral rights from the terms of the conveyance. The contention of plaintiffs is that this deed severed the mineral rights in the land from the surface rights and prevented the statute of limitations from running in favor of Nelson Holton as to the mineral rights and from giving him title thereto by adverse possession. The facts with regard to this unrecorded deed are that on March 23, 1883, after Nelson Holton had contracted to buy the land, one Kuhn, as agent and attorney in fact of Low and others, predecessors in title of plaintiffs, executed a quitclaim deed conveying to H A. and T. J. Gill the 150 acres in controversy, but reserving the oil and mineral interest in the land to the grantors. Kuhn went to the home of T. J. Gill and left this deed with Gill’s mother. When the attention.of Gill was called to the deed by his mother, he refused to accept it or to have anything to do with it. There is no evidence that the attention of H. A. Gill was1 called to the deed or that Nelson Holton ever heard of it.

The defendant Nelson Holton remained in the undisturbed possession of the land *533 from March, 1883, until June, 1911, a period of 28 years prior to the institution of this suit; and the plaintiffs asserted no claim to the oil or mineral rights, and made no effort to establish the lost deed, notwithstanding the fact that on August 2, 1899, Holton executed a lease granting the oil and gas rights in the land to the Buffalo Oil & Gas Company, which lease was duly recorded in the office of the clerk of Cabell county on November 21, 1899. It further appears from the record that after instituting this suit in June, 1911, plaintiffs allowed it to pend in court without bringing it to trial or even taking evidence in the cause until the year 1925. Kuhn, who executed the deed, died in 1910 prior to the bringing of the suit, and H. A. Gill and his mother died some time prior to the hearing.

Erom the foregoing statement of facts, it appears that the Gills are claiming no interest in the mineral rights in controversy. On the contrary, all of their interest therein has been vested in Nelson Holton. He had been in adverse possession of the land under color of title, claiming it as his own for more than twice the statutory period prior to the institution of this suit, and consequently his possession had ripened into title, unless there was something which prevented the statute from running in his favor. Barnes’ Code (W. Ya.) c. 104, § 1; Riffle v. Skinner, 67 W. Va. 75, 67 S. E. 1075; Summerfield v. White, 54 W. Va. 311, 46 S. E. 159. In the case last cited it is said:

“Under our statute, such possession for 10 years gives perfect title, not a mere right to continue the possession, not a title to be lost by mere temporary abandonment of actual possession. It is not only a defensive title, but one which will sustain an action of ejectment as effectually as a deed or a grant.”

Holton was not a party to the ejectment suit in which judgment was entered in favor of the predecessors of title of plaintiffs, nor was he a pendente lite purchaser. On the contrary, he purchased and paid for the land and obtained a deed of conveyance embracing same three years after the litigation had been terminated by final judgment. There is nothing in connection with that action which prevented his possession ripening into title, as there was in the ease of Midkiff v. Colton, 252 F. 420, 164 C. C. A. 344, relied on by plaintiffs.

The plaintiffs contend, however, that there was a severance of the mineral rights from the surface of the land by reason of the deed executed by Kuhn on March 23, 1883, reserving the mineral rights to the predecessors in title of plaintiffs, and that as a result thereof the adverse possession of Holton did not extend to the mineral rights. It is well settled that possession of the surface after there has been a severance of the minerals is not possession of the minerals, and can give the surface owner no title thereto. Wallace v. Elm Grove Coal Co., 58 W. Va. 449, 52 S. E. 485, 6 Ann. Cas. 140; Midkiff v. Colton, supra. But, unless there has been such severance, it is a general presumption that one who has possession of the surface has possession of the subsoil also. 2 C. J. 71; Wallace v. Elm Grove Coal Co., supra. The contention of plaintiffs that there was a severance cannot be sustained (1) because there was no acceptance of the deed relied upon to create the severance even by the Gills who were named as grantees therein; (2) because Holton had contracted for the purchase of the land prior to the attempted delivery to the Gills; and (3) because Holton had no notice of the deed, which was unrecorded, or of the attempted reservation of the mineral interests therein.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
12 F.2d 531, 1926 U.S. App. LEXIS 3289, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gill-v-colton-ca4-1926.