MacFarland v. Walker

181 P. 248, 40 Cal. App. 508, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 156
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 1, 1919
DocketCiv. No. 2714.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 181 P. 248 (MacFarland v. Walker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
MacFarland v. Walker, 181 P. 248, 40 Cal. App. 508, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 156 (Cal. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

BRITTAIN, J.

The plaintiff appeals on the judgment-roll alone after trial of a suit to quiet title to certain minerals or mineral rights, and the right to enter upon the defendants’ lands, there to dig, bore, and mine for the subterranean substances. He maintains the findings do not support the judgment, because he claims all the elements of adverse possession on the part of the defendants do not.appear, and because a certain instrument set forth in the findings was, as he urges, merely a release of mortgage and not a conveyance of the minerals and mining rights.

In 1869 the plaintiff’s testator, by an attorney in fact, conveyed certain lands in Humboldt County to the predecessors in interest of the respondents by deed in terms a grant, reserving and excepting therefrom the subterranean oils and minerals and the right to enter upon the grantees’ lands to dig, bore, or mine for the subterranean minerals, paying to the grantees such damages as they might sustain by reason of such entry. Upon the day the grant was made, the grantees mortgaged to the grantor the land conveyed to secure the payment of a promissory note payable August 34, 1870, for $1,880, with interest at ten per cent. During the month of August, 1870, before the note became due, the instrument in question was executed. It recites the fact of the making and recordation of the mortgage, giving the book and *510 page of record, and describes the lands, making no reference to the reservation in the original deed. It further recites that “Whereas the said John Walker and Jesse Walker are desirous of having their said tract of land relieved from the-operation of said mortgage; now therefore I ... in consideration of the premises and of the sum of One Dollar, the receipt whereof is hereby acknowledged, remise, release and forever quitclaim unto the said John Walker and Jesse Walker their heirs, executors, administrators and assigns the aforesaid premises and all the right, title and interest, both in law and equity, which I have in and to the same.”

The appellant maintains that by the reservation in the-original grant the grantor created two separate and distinct, estates in the land, one being of the surface, or soil, and the other of the oil and similar substances below the surface, together with the right to remove them. (Murray v. Allred, 100 Tenn. 100, [66 Am. St. Rep. 740, 39 L. R. A. 249, 43 S. W. 355] ; Kincaid v. McGowan, 88 Ky. 91, [13 L. R. A 289, 4 S. W. 802].) He argues that the clear intent of the-instrument is indicated by the recital, “Whereas the said. John Walker and Jesse Walker are desirous of having their said tract of land relieved from the operation of said mortgage,” and that “nowhere in the instrument can be found the slightest evidence of intention to reconvey any oil lands.”

The case of Barnstable Sav. Bank v. Barrett, 122 Mass. 172, relied upon by the appellant, was a case where the operative words indorsed on the back of'the mortgage itself were: “Having received full payment and satisfaction of the within mortgage, I do hereby cancel and discharge the same,, and release and forever quitclaim unto the within named G., Ms heirs and assigns, all my right, title and interest in and to the within described premises. To have and to hold,” etc. At the time the mortgagee’s interest under the mortgage was. the only interest he had, although he theretofore had another mortgage on a portion of the land, which he had assigned to-one Flagg several months prior to the release. The mort-. gagee’s assignment to Flagg was not seasonably recorded, and. to defeat Flagg’s interest it was sought to extend the instrument beyond its clear meaning. The court properly held this could not be done.

In Donlin v. Bradley, 119 Ill. 412, [10 N. E. 11], immediately after the description of the land in the deed in ques *511 tion was the provision: “This deed is made for no other purpose except to release a certain trust deed,” describing it. The court held that the deed was limited to the purpose stated.

In Barr v. Foster, 25 Colo. 28, [52 Pac. 1101], where the quitclaim deed specifically referred to the interests of the grantors arising out of a certain contract, it was held that it did not release a deed of trust, of which the grantors were the beneficiaries. In each of these cases, the operative words of quitclaim themselves contained a limitation upon the interest conveyed.

The appellant maintains that if the language of the instrument is given its full and most stringent construction, it cannot by any means refer to the oil rights. A serious argument presented by able counsel in support of the two constructions to be given the instrument demonstrates, if not its ambiguity, at least a repugnance between the recital and the operative words. Since the appeal is upon the judgment-roll alone, this court is limited to a consideration of the facts presented by the findings and admitted by the pleadings. The court is confined to those fundamental rules of construction, which all lawyers find so easy to state, and which the reports of adjudicated cases show no two lawyers on opposite sides of a controversy can agree to apply in the same way. The first of these rules is to ascertain the intent of the parties by taking the instrument by the four corners and, if possible, giving effect to every word in it in accordance with its usual meaning. In the Civil Code are codified the rules of interpretation. Technical words are to be interpreted as usually understood by persons in the profession or business to which they relate, unless clearly used in a different sense. (Civ. Code, sec. 1645.) [1] The operative words in this instrument, “remise, release and forever quitclaim all my right, title and interest, both in law and in equity,” whether considered as technical words of conveyancing or words understood in their ordinary and popular sense, are the most apt which could have been selected to convey to the Walkers both the equitable interest of the mortgagee and the legal interest in the minerals and mining rights. These words standing alone and constituting the entire operative clause of the instrument in themselves are entirely unambiguous. If they had been written without any *512 recital having been made, there could be no question as to their legal effect. No evidence could have been introduced and no inference drawn to limit them simply to a release of the mortgage. They were not coupled in the operative clause with a limitation to the mortgage interest as were the operative clauses in the Barnstable Savings Bank case, in Donlin v. Bradley, and in Barr v. Foster, cited by the appellant.

The appellant maintains that notwithstanding the lack of ambiguity in the operative words of the instrument, the intent of the grantor was shown by the recitals in the preamble. If his contention were sound, no matter how broad was the language used, it would not be extended beyond the clear intent of the parties. (Civ. Code, sec. 1648:) It is only when the operative words of grant are doubtful that recourse may be had to its recitals to assist in the construction. (Civ. Code, sec.

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Bluebook (online)
181 P. 248, 40 Cal. App. 508, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 156, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/macfarland-v-walker-calctapp-1919.