Harrell v. Nash

1942 OK 369, 133 P.2d 748, 192 Okla. 95, 1942 Okla. LEXIS 202
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 10, 1942
DocketNo. 30249.
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 1942 OK 369 (Harrell v. Nash) 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
Harrell v. Nash, 1942 OK 369, 133 P.2d 748, 192 Okla. 95, 1942 Okla. LEXIS 202 (Okla. 1942).

Opinion

HURST, J.

G. R. Nash and others, heirs of Joseph Nash, deceased, sued for the reformation of a contract made between them and defendants, F. O. Harrell and Smiley Harrell, and a mineral deed made by the Harrells to them. The trial court reformed the contract and deed in accordance with the prayer of the petition, and defendants appeal.

The material facts are these; On October 8, 1909, Anna B. Johnson, the then owner, conveyed to the public and Oklahoma City & Suburban Ry. Company a strip of land off the east side of a five-acre tract of land in Oklahoma City. Part of the strip was for railroad right of way, and the remainder was to the public for street, parking and sidewalks. Thereafter she conveyed the entire tract to Joseph Nash. On September 25, 1911, Joseph Nash and wife mortgaged the tract to Lee Harned. Immediately following the description in the mortgage the following language appears: “containing five acres, more or less, streets and alleys being reserved to the grantor.” This mortgage was foreclosed and the property sold at sheriff’s sale, and the title of the purchaser at such sale, by mesne conveyances, vested in the Harrells, who platted the land as Harrell’s Addition to Oklahoma City. The addition was divided into two blocks. In December, 1935, the Harrells leased the land for oil and gas to Phillips Petroleum Company, making two leases, each lease covering *97 one block, and calling for a royalty of one-fourth the oil and gas. These leases were recorded January 9, 1936. At the time the leases were recorded, the land, which lay just north of 23rd street, was not zoned for drilling. Each block of the addition was communitized with other property leased by Phillips Petroleum Company.

In February, 1936, F. O. Harrell and his attorney made a trip to Texas, where all but two of the heirs of Joseph Nash lived, and procured a quitclaim deed from the Texas heirs, paying $5 to each heir. The other two heirs, G. R. Nash, who lived in California, and G. B. Nash, who lived in Oregon, refused to execute deeds which were mailed to them by Harrell’s attorney. Subsequently one of the Texas heirs, Mrs. Minnie Cruz, consulted an attorney in Oklahoma City, who advised her that the strip was still the property of the Nash heirs if she could prove that the quitclaim deeds were obtained by misrepresentation. She asserted that they were, and said attorney prepared to bring an action for the Nash heirs to recover the strip. Negotiations looking to a settlement of the claims of the Nash heirs resulted in the execution of the contract and deed sought to be reformed in this action.

The contract was executed April 16, 1936, by Mrs. Cruz, as attorney in fact for the Texas heirs, and G. R. Nash for himself and G. B. Nash. It recited the controversy over the title; that in settlement of the controversy the quitclaim deed made by the Texas heirs was ratified and confirmed, and that quitclaim deeds were also to be made to the Har-rells by G. R. Nash and G. B. Nash. It further provided that the Harrells would attempt to vacate the street, which was a part of the'strip claimed by the Nash heirs, and if successful would include it in the drilling blocks in which the two blocks of Harrell’s Addition were communitized, and that the Harrells would transfer to the Nash heirs a 1/16 interest in all the minerals produced from the strip. The heirs were to receive no part of the bonus or rentals, and were not to join in the leases. It was further provided that the strip would be communitized with other drilling areas, and that the interest of the Nash heirs would be the equivalent of one-half of the usual 1/8 royalty accruing to the owner of the strip, and that in consideration of the transfer of such interest and the sum of $675 paid by the Harrells, the Nash heirs relinquished all other claims to or interest in the strip. The contract did not recite that the land had been leased to Phillips Petroleum Company for a royalty of one-fourth of the oil and gas produced therefrom.

The contract was executed by the Nash heirs in the office of the attorney for the Harrells, and turned over to the attorney for the Nash heirs. Either that evening or the following evening it was taken to the Harrell home by G. R. Nash and the attorney for the heirs, where it was executed by the Harrells. Thereafter the quitclaim deeds by G. R. Nash and G. B. Nash were made and delivered, and the street was vacated in a proceeding brought by the attorney for the Harrells. On May 21, 1936, after the vacating of the street, the Harrells executed and delivered to the attorney for the heirs a mineral deed conveying to the heirs a 1/16 royalty interest in the oil and gas produced from the strip. This deed recited that Phillips Petroleum Company held an oil and gas lease on the property, but did not state the amount of royalty reserved in the lease. At the time the deed was delivered the cash consideration of $675 was paid.

The Nash heirs .claim that they first learned that the Phillips Petroleum Company leases provided for a royalty of one-fourth of the oil and gas, in March, 1937. On June 15, 1937, they commenced this action alleging that the agreement with the Harrells was that they were to receive one-half of the royalty from the strip, and that the Harrells and their attorney falsely represented to them and to their attorney that the leases provided for a one- *98 eighth royalty, and that they relied upon such false representation, and were deceived thereby.

The Harrells by answer and cross-petition denied that the agreement was for one-half the royalty, and alleged that they made no representation that the Phillips Petroleum Company leases provided for a one-eighth royalty; that by the exercise of reasonable diligence, the heirs could have ascertained what royalty was provided in the leases, and that their failure to do so was due to their carelessness and neglect; that the heirs had no title to the strip, and that therefore there was no consideration received by the Harrells for the mineral deed, and prayed that it be canceled.

The contentions made by the Harrells on appeal, while argued under numerous heads, may be reduced to three, (1) that the Nash heirs had no title to or interest in the strip, and that therefore they were not entitled to reformation of the contract and deed, but that the trial court should have canceled both for failure of consideration, (2) that the heirs were guilty of gross and culpable negligence, which barred the right of reformation, and (3) that the evidence was not sufficiently clear and convincing to establish the right of the heirs to reformation.

1. The Harrells contend (a) that the deed from Anna B. Johnson to the public conveyed a fee-simple title to the part of the strip conveyed for street purposes, (b) that the reservation in the Joseph Nash mortgage, if Joseph Nash had any title to the street, did not reserve the fee to him, (c) that the reservation of the street by Joseph Nash was personal to him, and did not survive to his heirs, and (d) that upon the street being vacated the title reverted to the adjoining owner. Numerous authorities are cited in support of each of these contentions.

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Bluebook (online)
1942 OK 369, 133 P.2d 748, 192 Okla. 95, 1942 Okla. LEXIS 202, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harrell-v-nash-okla-1942.