Horse Creek Royalty Corp. v. Southland Royalty Co.

489 P.2d 214
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 5, 1971
DocketNo. 3936
StatusPublished

This text of 489 P.2d 214 (Horse Creek Royalty Corp. v. Southland Royalty Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Horse Creek Royalty Corp. v. Southland Royalty Co., 489 P.2d 214 (Wyo. 1971).

Opinion

Mr. Justice PARKER

delivered the opinion of the court.

The parties agree that this appeal from a summary judgment turns on legal principles and that no issue of material fact was raised below. W. S. Cale in 1925 received a homestead patent for Sec. 19, T. 54 N., R. 72 W., Campbell County, Wyoming, with mineral rights in the south half of the section (except coal in portion thereof). A few months later he and his wife, Emma, executed a warranty deed for Section 19 to his wife, Emma, who retained the property until her death in 1942, although she on two occasions leased the south half of the section for oil and gas.

Mrs. Cale left a will which stated inter alia, “The mineral rights which I have in Section 19, Township 54 North, Range 72 West shall be divided equally between by children, Lola B. Haveron, George Cale, Frank Cale and James Cale.” She made no specific disposition of the surface rights to Section 19, but provided that all other property, real and personal, possessed by her should be divided between Lola B. Haveron, George Cale, and Frank Cale. Letters testamentary were issued to James M. Cale. The petition for the probate of the will recited that deceased owned the oil rights to the south half of Section 19 and that petitioner was unable to allege the value of the oil rights as the same were unknown for the reason that the property had not been developed for oil, but that it [216]*216had been previously leased for oil purposes and was thought by deceased to possibly contain oil and for that reason mention thereof was made in her last will and ■testament.1 Thereafter, no mention of oil or gas rights was made in the probate proceedings. The estate inventory and ap-praisement merely listed and valued the section without reference to mineral interests. In the process of the probate the executor petitioned the court for the sale of Section 19, alleging that there were certain debts, that it was for the best interest of the estate, and that he had a prospective buyer. Order to Show Cause was published four times, the record disclosing no personal service of the notice having been made on any person. The court authorized the private sale of Section 19 by the executor and his deliverance to the purchaser upon payment of an executor’s deed in the manner and form as provided by law;2 and later confirmed the sale of the real property for $2,560.00, authorizing delivery to the purchaser, Twiford Land and Livestock Company, of a good and sufficient deed to Section 19. The executor’s deed conveyed to the company “all of the right, title, and interest of said deceased at the timé of his [sic] death and all of the right, title and interest of the Estate of said deceased” to Section 19 together with all improvements thereon and with all appurtenances thereunto appertaining or belonging.3

In 1968 drilling rigs were set up on the south half of Section 19 by parties authorized by defendants, whereupon plaintiffs4 unsuccessfully brought an ejectment suit in federal court. Later they failed in an attempt to reopen the estate, and then brought the present suit to quiet title. The trial court after review of the probate file and abstracts of title covering the real property interests, which were before the court, and hearing of arguments from the parties, both of whom had sought summary judgment, held for the defendants, and this appeal has resulted.

Plaintiffs urge error, arguing that full legal title to the mineral rights vested in the named Cale devisees upon the death of Emma Cale and that the probate record showed no order or document divesting these devisees but in fact disclosed the sale of the mineral estate could not have been authorized. Alternatively plaintiffs contend that the probate court lacked jurisdiction to make any sale of the real property and that the sale was a nullity and void. They also maintain that no statutes of limitation apply in the controversy.

Conversely defendants rely upon the title which their predecessors in interest received by the executor’s deed, asserting that under § 2-248, W.S. 1957, all property of deceased was chargeable with the debts and might be sold; all proceedings in the probate court were regular; the description of the property was sufficient to include the mineral estate; the statutes of limitation, §§ 2-293, W.S. 1957, and 1-13, W.S. 1957, have run; and the title to mineral rights in the south half of Section 19 is good in them.

Addressing ourselves to plaintiffs’ discussion of § 88-3201, R.S. 1931 (identical to § 2-248 5), and its impact, we can accept [217]*217their quotation from SA Thompson, Real Property, § 2610 (1957) to the effect that the liability of devised property to sale for debts of deceased and expenses of administration is in essence a lien on the land. We can likewise agree with plaintiffs that just as any other lien it must be foreclosed by statutory procedures to divest the devisees of any title, and we find nothing unusual in this court’s holding6 that its authority does not extend in the confirmation of sales to divesting heirs of title in property which they have received by inheritance from deceased unless necessary to pay claims of creditors and costs of administration. However, none of the contentions so made by plaintiffs come to grips with the basic question before us, i. e., whether or not under the probate proceedings the property in question was validly sold for the payment of the deceased’s debts.

One of the basic principles on which defendants rely, citing 38 Am.Jur.2d Gas and Oil § 14, is the general rule that a grantor’s legal interest in the oil and gas is accessory to his legal interest in the land so as to pass by a grant of the land unless he expresses an intention to retain that interest. While this is conceded by the plaintiffs as well as the fact that a majority of mineral estates are created by reservations from deeds, they discuss at some length both reservations and exceptions, emphasizing that an essential element of a reservation is that it must be in favor of the grantor. We think such distinctions are here unimportant. In discussing a matter somewhat similar, the California court in Blankenship v. Whaley, 124 Gal. 300, 57 P. 79, 81, said the administratrix could not by any reservation or exception in her deed, whether made in pursuance of a court order or not, grant a new right or interest in the land conveyed but if at the time of the deed there was any such existing right it was perfectly proper for the administratrix under the court’s order to have noted such rights and to have excepted them from the conveyance of the interest of the decedent. In the present case where the petition alleged the necessity of the sale of all of Section 19 for the payment of the debts of the deceased and the conveyance did not indicate a transfer of the surface rights only, we see no reason why the general rule as to the passing of mineral rights with the grant of the land should not be applied.

Importance is also attached to the statute, § 88-3237, R.S. 1931 (now § 2-297, W.S. 1957), which provided that specific devises were exempt from liability for debts and expenses of administration if it appeared to the court necessary to carry into the effect the intention of the testator and there was other sufficient estate.

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Related

In Re Potter's Estate
396 P.2d 438 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1964)
Estate of Roach
72 P. 393 (California Supreme Court, 1903)
Blankenship v. Whaley
57 P. 79 (California Supreme Court, 1899)
Lethbridge v. Lauder
76 P. 682 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1904)

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Bluebook (online)
489 P.2d 214, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/horse-creek-royalty-corp-v-southland-royalty-co-wyo-1971.