Lyles v. Dodge

228 S.W. 316, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 724
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 23, 1921
DocketNo. 1765.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 228 S.W. 316 (Lyles v. Dodge) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lyles v. Dodge, 228 S.W. 316, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 724 (Tex. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

HAUL, J.

This is a suit in trespass to try title, filed by Mrs. Belle Z. Lyles, joined by her husband, J. D. Lyles, and G. T. Aber-crombie, against W. E. Kaufman and Percy Jones. Plaintiff sued for a section of land in Archer county, setting up the statutes of limitation of five and ten years, and alleging’ that appellees were claiming some interest to the mineral rights in said land.' Appellees Kaufman and Jones answered by general demurrer, plea of not guilty and general denial, and specially pleaded the title to the oil and gas rights and the right to enter upon the land for mining purposes. The issues were tried before the court without a jury, resulting in a judgment for the defendants. The substance of the court’s findings is that on and prior to August 1, 1903, G. M. Dodge was the owner in fee simple of the land in question; that on said date he conveyed the land to L. M. Webb, by general warranty deed, expressly reserving to the grantor, his heirs, vendees, and assigns, all of the oil and other mineral on or under said land, also expressly reserving the right to enter upon the premises to prospect for minerals and work and operate mines. That the plaintiffs Lyles and wife, by conveyance dated October 1, 1904, acquired the land in controversy through mesne conveyance from L. M. Webb; that such conveyance did not vest in them any right or interest in the land not acquired by Webb from Dodge; that appellant Abercrombie is the holder and owner of an oil and gas lease executed by Lyles and wife, February 18, 1919, conveying the mineral rights in said land; that on October, 1004, E. L. Webb conveyed to appellants Lyles and wife the land in 'controversy by a deed which did not reserve the mineral rights; that said deed was duly filed and recorded in the deed records of Archer county, December 31, 1904; that soon after Lyles and wife acquired the land they inclosed it by substantial fences and became actual occupants thereof, and have continuously occupied the same, either in person or by tenants, since October 1, 1904, claiming said land and all interest therein adversely; that they have paid the taxes thereon from the time they acquired it to the present; that they have not recognized the right, title, or interest of any one to any part of said land, including the oil and minerals thereunder; that about 60 days after October 1, 1904, and as a part of their plan of improving the land, there being no water on it, Lyles and wife procured some unknown party to bore a well thereon to the depth of about 300 feet, for the purpose of obtaining either water or oil; that the work of boring this well covered a period of about six months. Neither oil nor water having been found, the well was thereupon abandoned. None of the holders of oil or mineral leases from Lyles, nor the defendants, nor any one for them, or holding under them, have ever discovered oil or other minerals on said land or taken any further steps to bore than as is hereinbefore stated. That on September 2, 1911, Lyles and wife executed to the Pure Oil Operating Company an oil and gas lease of said land, which was filed for record in Archer county, October 17, 1911, and was duly recorded January 5, 1914; that they executed a further oil and gas lease of said land to PI. E. Head and W. M. Snyder, which was filed for record in Archer county, March 6, 1914, and duly recorded February 18, 1919;- that they executed to plaintiff Abercrombie an oil and gas lease to said land which was filed in Archer county March 18, 1919, and duly recorded; that the appellees Kaufman and Jones are the owners and holders of *317 all the right, title, interest, and claim in and to the oil and other mineral rights in said land, reserved by 6. M. Dodge, in his said conveyance to L. M. Webb of date August 1, 1903, having title to said oil and mineral ■ rights through] regular chain of title and mesne conveyances from G. M. Dodge; that neither the appellees nor any of their vendors holding and owning said mineral and oil rights, so reserved in the deed from G. M. Dodge to Webb, had any notice or knowledge of the boring of said well, nor did they have any knowledge of any claim asserted by plaintiffs to any mineral or oil rights in said land, other than such notice, or knowledge, if any, imputed to them constructively by the registration of the oil and gas leases made by J. D. Lyles and wife, as hereinbefore sét out. We find no statement of facts accompanying the record.

The first assignment of error is that the court erred in concluding as a matter of law that as to the appellants there was a severance of the mineral estate from the surface estate, since Lyles and wife purchased the whole estate, which was conveyed to them by their vendor, E. L. Webb, and that under such conveyance they were the owners of the entire estate for the purposes of limitation.

By the second assignment it is insisted that since appellants acquired the entire estate from Webb by the terms of their deed, and had ever since held peaceable and adverse possession thereof for the full period of five years, such adverse possession gave them title to both the surface estate and minerals.

It is contended under the third assignment that the court erred in concluding as a matter of law that there had been no such occupancy, claim, or adverse possession of the oil and mineral estate as would sustain the plea of limitation by plaintiffs, because the court found as a fact that the plaintiff had bought the whole estate, surface and mineral, from E. L. Webb, by deed, which had been duly recorded; that appellants had promptly paid all taxes since said date, having adverse possession thereof during said period, and had followed their claim of title by sinking a well on the land for oil, and further asserted their claim by leasing the same to various parties for oil and gas development, which leases were duly recorded.

[1-2] It seems to be settled law in this state that a grantor may, by reserving to himself the mineral rights in land and conveying to the grantee only the surface rights, effectually separate the two estates. Luse v. Farmer, 221 S. W. 1031; Luse v. Boatman, 217 S. W. 1096 (writ of error refused). This is also the holding in Wallace v. Hoyt, 225 S. W. 425, in which Judge Key further holds that, where the mineral rights have been severed from the surface rights .by a remote grantor of the possessor, the latter’s possession of the premises under a deed making no mention of the mineral rights does not make such possession adverse as to the minerals. Judge Key’s opinion, with citation of many authorities supporting it, is convincing, and we think decisive of the question. The trial court found that about 60 days after appellants acquired the land as a part of their plan of improving the tract, the said land having no water thereon, procured some unknown party to bore a well to a depth of about 300 feet for the purpose of obtaining either water or oil, does not in our opinion show such adverse possession of the mineral rights as iss necessary to set the statute of limitation in operation. However this may be, the court further found that neither water nor oil was discovered, that the well was abandoned and that no further steps or means had been taken by any one to discover oil or other minerals on the premises since. The courts in other jurisdictions have held that in the absence of actual possession of the minerals in such cases, and in the absence of the fact that the claimant has reduced such minerals to possession and held the same for the statutory period of limitations, the statute does not run.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
228 S.W. 316, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 724, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lyles-v-dodge-texapp-1921.