Hyde Park Investment Co. v. Glenwood Coal Co.

170 Iowa 593
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJune 21, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 170 Iowa 593 (Hyde Park Investment Co. v. Glenwood Coal Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hyde Park Investment Co. v. Glenwood Coal Co., 170 Iowa 593 (iowa 1915).

Opinion

Weaver, J.

1. Deeds : deed without reservation following town plat dedication with reservation : construction. On September 22, 1888, John Lyon and Ella M. Lyon, his wife, then being the owners of a tract of 100 acres of land in Polk county, conveyed it to the Hyde Park Investment Company, plaintiff herein, at the agreed price of $35,000. Of this price, $5,000 was paid in cash, the payment of the remaining $30,000 being secured by mortgage on the land. On December 21,1888, the deed and mortgage were recorded, and on the same day, the investment company filed a map or plat of the land divided into 1,000 town lots. In the dedicatory statement accompanying the plat is the following expression of reservation: ‘ The coal and mineral of all kinds underlying the entire tract embraced by this plat with the right to mine and remove the same is expressly reserved.” We draw the inference from the record that the investment company was organized and incorporated for the purpose of handling this particular enterprise. ' The time did not prove ripe for the quick or easy disposal of the lots at a satisfactory profit. Some of the lots were sold and conveyed from time to time; but the title to a large portion of them remained in the plaintiff until lost by tax sale, or until the conveyance thereof to Mrs. Lyon by quitclaim, as hereinafter shown. Soon after the acquirement of the property, plaintiff made lease of the mining rights in the land, describing it as a part of the government survey without mention of the town plat, but no work was done under the lease and it was abandoned or canceled.- The city of Des Moines seems to have raised some question about accepting or recognizing streets under which there was a reservation of mining [595]*595rights, and the company thereupon, in 1892, executed and filed with the county recorder a waiver or relinquishment to the public of all mining rights under the streets of Hyde Park. Little thereafter appears to have been done or accomplished by the company with reference to the property. John ' Lyon died, after reacquiring title to some of the lots from or through the grantees of the investment company and by tax deeds and sheriff’s sales; and ultimately his widow, Ella M. Lyon (now Eunkle), became vested in her own right and as guardian with all the rights or interests of which her husband died seized or possessed in the property which they had together formerly conveyed to the investment company. She also acquired a tax title to a large part of the lots. As owner, she applied to the court and obtained an order or decree vacating about one-half of the plat, and through tax deeds and otherwise, she acquired the ownership of all the property in controversy, unless we are to hold that all these conveyances vested her with title to the surface only, and that title to the coal under the surface remained in the investment company. It should also be said that the mortgage indebtedness had not been paid off or its lien discharged until the transaction of which we are about to speak.

With the title in the condition stated, Mrs. Lyon, for herself and as guardian, undertook, in the year 1902, to convey all the property which had been acquired by herself and John Lyon in the Hyde Park property to A. J. Gray. Gray also acquired title to other parts of the property, and later conveyed all his interests therein to Henry Gray, who is a defendant herein. The conveyance describes the property in part hy reference to the government survey, in part by metes and bounds and in other part, by reference to the lots and blocks of the Hyde Park plat. In making the deal with A. J. Gray, objection was raised by him to Mrs. Lyon’s title, and especially that it rested to a very considerable extent on tax deeds, it being feared that, as she held a mortgage lien on the property, her tax purchase and* deed might be held [596]*596not-sufficient to bar the right of the investment company to redeem therefrom. Negotiations were thereupon opened between Mrs. Lyon and the investment company to secure an adjustment which would remove this objection and thereby perfect or protect the title made to Gray. It was proposed, on behalf of Mrs. Lyon, to effect that purpose by foreclosure of her mortgage lien and sale of the property, and such proceedings having been begun, the investment company, desiring to avoid the possibility of a deficiency judgment upon which the holders of shares of unpaid stock might be held to individual liability, as well as to avoid liability for taxes which it had left unpaid, proposed or consented to quitclaim to Mrs. Lyon, and this arrangement was agreed upon. Pursuant thereto, the investment company made and delivered to Mrs. Lyon a deed, the body of which is in words as follows:

“KNOW ALL MEN BY THESE PRESENTS: That the Hyde Park Investment Company in consideration of the release of all personal obligations upon the notes or mortgages heretofore executed by said corporation to John Lyon upon property in Hyde Parle, cm Addition to the City of Des Moines, Iowa, do hereby quit-claim unto Ella Lyon Runkle, formerly Ella Lyon, widow and sole heir of said John Lyon, deceased, all interest of every kind and nature m said Hyde Parle; it being understood however that as to any purchasers of lots in said Addition who have assumed payment of any portions of any such mortgage or have bought subject to the same, that the said mortgage or mortgages shall remain a lien as against said purchasers upon their covenant or undertaking to pay same, or as a lien against the land purchased by them until so paid and may remain in full force and effect, as a lien or demand against any part of the said addition prior' to any claim or demand of any lien holder against the said Hyde Park Investment Company, but no personal judgment shall be taken nor personal decree had in any event against the said Hyde Park Investment Company upon any such note or mortgage or any part thereof.
[597]*597“This quit-claim being duly made in pursuance of the resolution of the Board of Directors of said Hyde Park Investment Company by its President and Secretary duly thereunto authorized.”

About this time, A. J. Gray, the purchaser from Mrs. Lyon, entered into a written agreement with the Glenwood Coal Company, defendant herein, giving that company the exclusive right to mine coal under the land “previously known as the John Lyon farm or Hyde Park Addition,” the consideration therefor to be paid in the form of royalty upon the product of such mine. Under this lease or agreement the coal company began at once to drill and prospect for coal, and in July or August, 1903, began to sink a shaft for 'the opening of a mine. In about three months, the shaft was completed, at which time the mine was equipped with engine, fan and other things necessary to be used in removing the coal. This preliminary work was done at an expense of nearly $20,000. The mine continued to be operated by the coal company from its opening in 1903 until this action was begun November 18, 1909, such operation being also continued pending this litigation. Neither Mrs. Lyon nor the Grays nor the coal company had any knowledge that the investment company had or claimed to have any rights in the property or in the coal under the surface after the making of the quit-claim deed until several years after the lease of the mining rights to the coal company in 1903, and after a very large amount of money had been expended in developing and operating the mine.

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Bluebook (online)
170 Iowa 593, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hyde-park-investment-co-v-glenwood-coal-co-iowa-1915.