Love v. McDonald

148 S.W.2d 170, 201 Ark. 882, 1941 Ark. LEXIS 53
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJanuary 27, 1941
Docket4-6259
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 148 S.W.2d 170 (Love v. McDonald) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Love v. McDonald, 148 S.W.2d 170, 201 Ark. 882, 1941 Ark. LEXIS 53 (Ark. 1941).

Opinion

GkieeiN Smith, C. J.

This is a suit for specific performance. J. W. Love agreed in writing, for a consideration of $2,500, to convey to J. C. McDonald an oil and gas lease on 73.49 acres of land in Lafayette county. When the lease was tendered McDonald refused it on the ground, as he alleged, that the title was not merchantable.

In 1905 Howard Whitfield and others conveyed the property to Polly Knott and her bodily heirs. In June, 1940, Mrs. Knott, pursuant to act 76, approved March 2, 1929, 1 petitioned for authority to execute an oil and gas lease in favor of Love. The court found that Mrs. Knott owned a life estate and that Love proposed to pay $2,204.70 for a ten-year term, and one dollar per acre per annum as delay rentals. It was decreed that the life tenant should be paid the cash consideration of $2,204.70, together with one-eighth of the oil and gas royalties, constituting one sixty-fourth of the oil or gas produced. 2 The children and such other persons who might subsequently acquire an interest were awarded the delay rentals and seven-eighths of the oil and gas royalties.

The question is whether act 76 is violative of any constitutional rights of the defendants or children of Polly Knott who may yet be born, the presumption being that .there is possibility of issue. 3

Provisions of act 76 essential to a discussion of its validity are shown in the fourth footnote. 4

The insistence is that § 6 of the act is void (a) because it authorizes the life tenant to pursue a course of conduct resulting in waste; (b) because it is an attempt to vary the terms of a written contract in violation of art. 2, § 17, 5 of the state constitution; (c) that it is viola-tive of the Fourteenth Amendment to the constitution of the United States 6 and of art. 2, § 8, of the constitution of Arkansas. 7

Section 6 of act 76 provides that “The order of the court fixing the proportionate part of the minerals allowed to the life tenant as compensation for damages, and the order confirming the execution of the lease, shall operate to work a divestiture of title of the contingent remaindermen, and each of them, in and to the proportionate part of the minerals allowed to such life tenant, absolutely, and in and to tbe leasehold estate in so far as said- interest is conveyed by said lease, and free said respective interests of any limitations, restrictions, or conditions imposed by the original will or deed.”

For any temporary injury to the property of which the life tenant might complain there is the right of redress, and this is true even though it may be said that the surface injury and inconvenience occasioned by operations under the lease were in consequence of the life tenant’s petition that such activities be engaged in, and would not have ensued but for the petition. The reason is that if conservation were the motive, benefits would necessarily inure to the remainderman if the expectant estates should vest.

Due process for determining the extent of such damage and the method of payment are' provided by the legislative act. It is the life tenantes duty to conserve the estate. 8

Glassrnire, in his “Law of Oil and Gas Leases and Royalties,” (1935), calls attention to the rule announced in 1900 by the Supreme Court of the United States in Ohio Oil Co. v. Indiana, 177 U. S. 190, 20 S. Ct. 576, 44 L. Ed. 729, wherein the principle was announced that provision might be made for an equitable extraction of oil by the several operators engaged in- taking from a common reservoir or source of supply. That case expressly decided that the co-relative rights of such owners must be maintained, and that the taking by one might be regulated to protect the common interests of all. The Indiana statute under consideration was a waste statute, but Mr. Chief Justice White, in announcing the far-reaching decision, held that the state, under its police power, could regulate the taking for the purpose of protecting all of the collective owners, by obtaining a just distribution arising from the enjoyment by them of the privilege of reducing to possession. [See act 105, approved February 20, 1939; Lion Oil Company v. Bailey, 200 Ark. 436, 139 S. W. 2d 683.]

It is a fact of which courts take judicial knowledge that oil and gas wells drain areas extending beyond the immediate point of operation, and, unless offsets are drilled, deposits pertaining to lands undeveloped may be partially if not wholly lost. It may be prudent, therefore, for the owner of a life estate, who recognizes that production from adjacent territory may diminish reserves which normally would come into the possession of remaindermen, to execute leases in order to conserve the contingent estate.

We do not find that a similar statute has been enacted in another state, and the decision here is one of first impression insofar as it relates to the legislative right to take from remaindermen a part of the expectant fee and vest it in the life tenant.

The federal constitution does not contain an express guarantee that vested rights shall be protected. However, they are fully secured. The provision of the federal constitution prohibiting states from passing laws impairing obligation of contracts has been interpreted generally to embrace only those contracts wherein the subject-matter is property or some object of value; that is, contracts which confer rights that may be asserted in courts of justice. Only those contracts which create in a person or corporation a vested beneficial interest are the objects afforded protection by the prohibition against impairment expressed in art. I, § 10 of the Constitution. As was said in Douglas v. Kentucky, 168 U. S. 488, 42 L. ed. 553, 18 S. Ct. 199, the provisions of the federal constitution in reference to contracts' only inhibit the states from passing laws impairing the obligations of such contracts as relate to property rights, but not to subjects that are purely governmental.

In the chapter on Constitutional Law, 6 R. C. L., § 303, there is this statement: “In regard to the validity of retroactive legislation, so far as it may affect only expectant or contingent interests, the law seems to be well settled that the power thus to deal with such interests resides in the legislature. Laws enacted for the betterment of judicial procedure and the unfettering of estates so as to bring them into market for sale are usually valid unless they actually impair rights which are vested. It has been said that most civil rights are derived from public laws, and if at any time before the rights become vested in particular individuals, the convenience of the state requires amendments to or the repeal of such laws, individuals have no cause of complaint.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

VanAlstine v. Swanson
417 N.W.2d 516 (Michigan Court of Appeals, 1987)
Alexander v. Alexander
561 S.W.2d 59 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1978)
Metropolitan Life Ins. v. Gardner
434 S.W.2d 266 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1968)
Anderson v. Webb
406 S.W.2d 871 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1966)
Wise v. Craig
226 S.W.2d 347 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1949)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
148 S.W.2d 170, 201 Ark. 882, 1941 Ark. LEXIS 53, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/love-v-mcdonald-ark-1941.