Jones-Lowe Co. v. Southern Land & Exploration Co.

18 So. 3d 362, 2009 Ala. LEXIS 53, 2009 WL 567036
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedMarch 6, 2009
Docket1071575
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 18 So. 3d 362 (Jones-Lowe Co. v. Southern Land & Exploration Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jones-Lowe Co. v. Southern Land & Exploration Co., 18 So. 3d 362, 2009 Ala. LEXIS 53, 2009 WL 567036 (Ala. 2009).

Opinion

WOODALL, Justice.

Jones-Lowe Company, a general partnership composed of Raymond B. Jones, Peter L. Lowe, and others; G.W. Jones & Sons, a former partnership composed of Raymond B. Jones and Carl T. Jones, deceased; Peter L. Lowe; and Raymond B. Jones (all collectively referred to hereinafter as “Jones-Lowe”) 1 appeal from a summary judgment for Southern Land and Exploration Company, Inc. (“SOLEXCO”), in SOLEXCO’s action against Jones-Lowe to quiet title to mineral rights in real estate located in DeKalb County (“the property”). We reverse and remand.

I. Factual and Procedural Background

This property dispute involves several complex chains of title that allegedly diverged from a common source late in the 19th century. Most recently, in 1958, the interest of A.F. Kralik Point Realty Company was purchased by the State Land Commissioner (“the Commissioner”) at a tax sale resulting from unpaid ad valorem taxes. On October 26, 1966, G.W. Jones & Sons purchased the State’s interest in the property, which was defined in the deed from the Commissioner as “mineral rights only.” Through a series of transactions, Jones-Lowe Company eventually acquired that interest. Jones-Lowe Company or its predecessors have paid taxes on the mineral interests in the property since 1966.

Ten years later, on June 23, 1976, the Commissioner executed a deed purporting to sell “the minerals and mineral interests” in the property to SOLEXCO. SOLEX-CO has also paid taxes on the mineral interests in the property since 1976.

On July 8, 2007, SOLEXCO commenced this action to quiet title to the mineral rights. Jones-Lowe answered the complaint and filed a counterclaim, seeking a judgment quieting title in Jones-Lowe Company. On January 17, 2008, SOLEX-CO filed a single document, namely, a motion for a summary judgment. The “Statement of Material Undisputed Facts” section of that motion contained, in pertinent part, the following averments, hereinafter referred to collectively as “the motion averments”:

“6. [SOLEXCO] acquired title to the minerals and mineral interests in the said property from the State of Alabama by deed from the [Commissioner] of June 23, 1976, Deed Book 255, Page 276, Judge of Probate, DeKalb County, Alabama.
“7. The chain of title into [SOLEX-CO] is as follows:
“(a) Instrument: Grantor: Grantee: Date: Recorded: Entries USA Certificate Holders Unknown Tract Book
“(b) Instrument: Grantor: Grantee: Date: Recorded: 112 Deeds Certificate Holders O.T. Holmes 1887-1888 Deed Book S, Pages 141-349
“(c) Instrument: Warranty Deed Grantor: Owen T. Holmes and Wife Grantee: Noble Smithson Date: 2-8-1890 Recorded: Deed Book X, Page 110 Conveyed: ‘all bituminous, anthracite and other coals, petroleum, natural gas, and other products of coal and petroleum and also all iron, iron ores, *365 and other metal ores and minerals of every kind and description’
“(d) Instrument: Grantor: Grantee: Date: Recorded: Interest Conveyed: Warranty Deed Noble Smithson and Wife Joseph A. Jacobs 2-27-1890 Deed Book X, Page 120 (same as conveyed in foregoing Instrument)
“(e) Instrument: Grantor: Grantee: Date: Recorded: Interest Conveyed: Warranty Deed Joseph A. Jacobs and wife Alabama Coal & Iron, Inc. 3-14-1890 Deed Book X, page 130 (same as conveyed in foregoing Instrument)
“(f) Instrument: Grantor: Grantee: Date: Recorded: Interest Conveyed: Tax Sale Judge of Probate State of Alabama 7-10-1922 Tax Sale Record J, Page 216 ‘Mineral Interest Only’
“(g) Instrument: Grantor: Grantee: Date: Recorded: Interest Conveyed: Deed State of Alabama, by [Commissioner] Plaintiff (SOLEXCO) 6-23-1976 Deed Book 256, Page 276 Mineral Interest Only
“8. [SOLEXCO] also makes claim to the disputed acreage through the following chain of title: (a) Alabama Coal & Iron Co. December 7, 1926, deed to Cherokee Mining Co., Inc., Deed Book 60, Page 484; (b) Cherokee Mining Co., Inc., April 9, 1974, deed to J.S. Cullinan, II, and Craig F. Cullinan, Jr., Deed Book 246, Page 497; (c) J.S. Cullinan, II, April 25, 1975, deed to Sue Woodall Cullinan, Deed Book 250, Page 189; (d) Sue Woodall Cullinan, Joseph S. Culli-nan, II, and Craig F. Cullinan, Jr., May 6, 1988, deed to plaintiff [SOLEXCO], Deed Book 287, Page 781-82; (e) Sue Woodall Cullinan and Craig F. Cullinan, Jr., May 16, 1983, deed to plaintiff [SO-LEXCO], Deed [Book] 287, Page 783-85; and (f) Joseph S. Cullinan, II, and wife Sue Woodall Cullinan and Craig F. Cullinan, Jr., May 6, 1983, deed conveying mineral rights only to plaintiff [SO-LEXCO], Deed [Book] 287, Page 777-80.
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“16. It is undisputed that [Jones-Lowe Company’s] claimed title descends from a deed from Margaret Hall to a grantee named Rainer or Rayner in 1919. Ms. Hall attempted to convey to Rainer or Rayner all the mineral acreage owned by one O.T. Holmes as follows: ‘... Margaret Hall ... grant, bargain, sell and convey to [Rainer or Rayner] ... the mineral interests ... at any time owned by Owen T. Holmes ... [in the disputed real estate].’
“17. It is further undisputed that O.T. Holmes had conveyed his mineral interests in the disputed acreage by deed dated February 8, 1890, Deed Book X, page 110, prior to any conveyance to Margaret Hall.
“18. In short, [Jones-Lowe Company] claims title through the referenced deeds, including the deeds from the State of Alabama. However, the ultimate source of title into either source is Margaret Hall, who had no mineral' interests to convey.”

(Emphasis in original.) SOLEXCO did not support its motion with copies of any of the above-referenced instruments or with any other evidence.

Jones-Lowe filed a cross-motion for a summary judgment. SOLEXCO filed an opposition to the cross-motion, supported only by the affidavit of Woodrow Hobson, Jr., president of SOLEXCO. On July 8, 2008, the circuit court granted SOLEX-CO’s summary-judgment motion and denied Jones-Lowe’s cross-motion. In so doing, the court stated, in pertinent part:

“[SOLEXCO] obtained a tax deed to ‘the minerals and mineral interests’ in *366 the subject lands from the [Commissioner] on June 28, 1976. The deed is recorded at Deed Book 255, Page 276, in the DeKalb County, Alabama, Probate Office. [SOLEXCO’s] chain of title extends back to 1890, when Owen T. Holmes and wife conveyed the mineral interests in the subject lands to Noble Smithson. The State of. Alabama obtained title to the mineral interests at a tax sale on July 10, 1922, when the owner at that time, Alabama Coal and Iron Company, became delinquent in the payment of taxes.
“[SOLEXCO] also makes claim to the mineral interests through a chain of title commencing with a conveyance from Alabama Coal & Iron Company in 1926 to Cherokee Mining Co., Inc., recorded at Deed Book 60, Page 484; Cherokee Mining Co., Inc., to J.S. Cullinan, II, and Craig F.

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Bluebook (online)
18 So. 3d 362, 2009 Ala. LEXIS 53, 2009 WL 567036, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-lowe-co-v-southern-land-exploration-co-ala-2009.