Jones v. Alpine Investments, Inc.

1987 OK 113, 764 P.2d 513, 102 Oil & Gas Rep. 339, 1987 Okla. LEXIS 261, 1987 WL 1670
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 10, 1987
Docket63752
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 1987 OK 113 (Jones v. Alpine Investments, Inc.) 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
Jones v. Alpine Investments, Inc., 1987 OK 113, 764 P.2d 513, 102 Oil & Gas Rep. 339, 1987 Okla. LEXIS 261, 1987 WL 1670 (Okla. 1987).

Opinion

SUMMERS, Justice.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL POSTURE OF THE CASE

The record owner of certain real property deeded it to five grantees in equal undivided shares. In 1926 two of those grantees deeded their interest in the oil, gas and other minerals to the Union Royalty Company, which later deeded an undivided two-fifths (⅜) mineral interest to Alpine Investments, Inc., the defendant and appellee herein. In 1952 Hugh Jones, plaintiff and appellant, took title to the subject property and other land by warranty deed “subject to an undivided one-half (½) of the mineral rights heretofore sold.”

In 1972 Jones filed a quiet title action against the Union Royalty Company, a corporation. An Oklahoma corporation by that name had previously existed. Default judgment was rendered for Jones. In 1975, Alpine filed a “Notice of Interest in Real Property” as to the two-fifths (⅜) *514 mineral interest. In 1980 Jones again sued to quiet title, this time against Alpine by reason of the “notice” it had filed.

In 1982 Jones’ motion for summary judgment was sustained. The trial court entered a judgment for Jones, finding that Alpine’s predecessor in title, Union Royalty Company, an unincorporated association, was the same party sued by the plaintiff by publication in the 1972 quiet title action. Alpine appealed. The Court of Appeals then reversed and remanded, finding the unincorporated Union Royalty Company not to have been the same entity as the corporate defendant in the 1972 quiet title action. The Court of Appeals stated:

“The sole basis for [the trial court’s] sustaining plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment was a finding that the 1972 judgment was a final judgment and settled the issue between the parties. By holding that Alpine’s predecessor was not a party to the 1972 proceeding, we must overturn the order granting summary judgment. The order of the trial court granting summary judgment is vacated and the case is remanded to the trial court for further proceedings.”

We denied Jones’ petition for certiorari.

On remand the trial court quieted title in Alpine as to the two-fifths (%) mineral interest. It acknowledged a problem regarding unincorporated associations and their doubtful capacity to hold title to real property, but the trial judge appeared to conclude that since that issue had been before the Court of Appeals, and since it did not rule in Jones’ favor, the appellate court must have implied that the rule of law as to the incapacity of an unincorporated association to hold title to real property was not dispositive of the case.

Jones appealed the trial court’s decision and the Court of Appeals affirmed.

Jones’ petitioned this court for certiorari stating (correctly) that neither in its first or second opinion has the Court of Appeals addressed or ruled on his claim that Alpine’s grantor, being an unincorporated association, was unable to hold or pass title to the minerals in question. We have previously granted his petition.

A reading of the first Court of Appeals opinion reveals that the question as to whether or not an unincorporated association could hold title to real property in Oklahoma was neither expressly decided nor impliedly determined. Nor did it direct the trial court to quiet title in either of the parties. In Fickel v. Webb, 146 Okl. 16, 293 P. 206 (1930) we said:

“A decision on the prior appeal of a cause is the law of the case, for the retrial and on a second appeal, as to those questions which were considered and decided. But where a cause is reversed it is frequently unnecessary to pass upon all the questions raised, and courts do not customarily consider all questions presented if the cause must be reversed because of any one of them, and the decision so rendered is not the law of the case as to those questions not considered and determined in the first opinion.”

Thus we have no “law of the case” to preclude us from considering what has been appellant’s primary contention all the way through the trial and appellate proceedings.

CAN AN UNINCORPORATED ASSOCIATION HOLD TITLE TO REAL PROPERTY UNDER OKLAHOMA LAW?

Jones has consistently argued that the Union Royalty Company as an unincorporated association was incapable of holding or transferring title to real property. He cites Patton on Titles, 2nd Edition, (1957) as authority for this proposition:

“The capacity to take and hold title is general, even though the capacity to convey is restricted. But because at common law a grantee had to be one to whom livery of seisin could be made, and because under our present system of transferring title there can be no conveyance without someone to take title, a grantee of any present legal estate must be in existence at the time of the grant. A deed is, therefore, void if the grantee named is not a legal entity.” Id at § 337.
*515 “... [A] deed or other conveyance in favor of an unincorporated association or club, or society which has no partnership nor corporate existence, either de jure or de facto, will not pass title. Neither can such an entity-lacking body make a valid conveyance, whether because its incapacity prevented it from acquiring title or because, since it became vested therewith, it has lost the capacity to transfer it_” Id at § 406.

In Taxicab Drivers Local No. 889 v. Pittman, 322 P.2d 159 (Okl.1958), this court ruled that unincorporated associations generally are not legal entities, and it is only where there is legislation conferring a legal status on such groups that it enjoys rights and duties comparable to those of a corporation. In accord is J.T. Lafferty v. Elias Evans, 17 Okl. 247, 87 P. 304 (1908).

An exception exists, recognized by Oklahoma and other jurisdictions, where the grantee is an unincorporated charitable association. Richardson v. Harsha, 22 Okl. 405, 98 P. 897 (1908). Such associations, though lacking power to hold title to real property in their name, have the power to appoint trustees in whom such title may be vested. Modern Woodmen of America v. Tulsa Modern Woodmen Building Association, 264 P.2d 993 (Okl.1954). Venus Lodge No. 62, F. & A.M. v. Acme Benev Association, 231 N.C. 522, 58 S.E.2d 109 (1950); O.K.C. Corp. v. Allen, 574 S.W.2d 809 (Tex.Civ.App.1978). Or the court may appoint a trustee to take title for the unincorporated charitable association. Restatement of Trusts (2nd) § 397, comment f, cited in Estate of Anderson v. Vian Cemetery Assn., 571 P.2d 880 (Okl.App.1977). Nothing in the record, however, suggests that the Union Royalty Company was formed for charitable purposes.

Alpine suggests in its appellate brief that Union Royalty Company was in fact created by a declaration of trust and is therefore able to hold title pursuant to 60 O.S.1981 § 171. 1

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Bluebook (online)
1987 OK 113, 764 P.2d 513, 102 Oil & Gas Rep. 339, 1987 Okla. LEXIS 261, 1987 WL 1670, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-alpine-investments-inc-okla-1987.