Maloy v. Smith

1959 OK 69, 341 P.2d 912, 10 Oil & Gas Rep. 1080, 1959 Okla. LEXIS 324
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 14, 1959
Docket36556
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 1959 OK 69 (Maloy v. Smith) 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
Maloy v. Smith, 1959 OK 69, 341 P.2d 912, 10 Oil & Gas Rep. 1080, 1959 Okla. LEXIS 324 (Okla. 1959).

Opinion

JACKSON, Justice.

The trial court entered judgment against the plaintiff, Nettie J. Maloy, on her peti *914 tion to quiet title and in favor of defendants, M. M. Smith and Elder Smith, on their cross-petition to reform a deed and to quiet title. Plaintiff appeals.

The primary issue is presented by plaintiff’s contention that the statute of limitations had barred defendants’ cross-action for reformation. The action was commenced in 1953. On October 15, 1940, the defendants executed a warranty deed conveying their farm to plaintiff’s predecessors in title, J. B. Shannon and Lillian Georgia Shannon. There appeared in the granting clause the following:

“Except: An undivided one-half (½) interest in and to one-eighth (⅛) of the total production of all oil and/or gas, or other minerals, which may be produced from said land, it being specifically understood that the Grantees herein, as such joint tenants or the survivor or the heirs or successors of the survivor shall have full right to lease for oil and/or gas, or other minerals and collect all lease bonuses and lease rentals for their own use and benefit; * *

Defendants’ evidence tended to show that by the terms of the original agreement they were to reserve an undivided one-half of the minerals rather than a non-participating perpetual royalty interest; that one deed was prepared, but not executed, which properly contained a reservation of one-half the minerals; that Dr. Shannon subsequently prepared another deed, ostensibly for the purpose of inserting a survivorship clause, and advised defendants that otherwise the new deed conformed to the oral agreement; that defendants, without reading the deed and relying upon such representations, executed the deed which in fact reserved a lesser interest than agreed upon.

Dr. Shannon testified that the second deed which the Smiths executed fully conformed to the parties’ oral agreement; however in decreeing reformation and quieting title in favor of the defendants, the trial court necessarily found that the deed did not express the true agreement of the parties.

In 1942 the Shannons conveyed the farm to plaintiff and her husband, Pat Maloy, as joint tenants. Pat Maloy handled the details of this transaction. He had actual knowledge that the Smiths were claiming one-half of the minerals prior to the time he and plaintiff acquired title. The Shannon deed to the Maloys contained an exception phrased in substantially the same language as the reservation in the Smith deed to the Shannons. Pat Maloy is now deceased and plaintiff succeeded to his interest. Plaintiff brought this action to quiet title in 1953. The claim that there was a cloud on plaintiff’s title was apparently based upon defendants’ assertion that they owned one-half of the minerals in place rather than only a royalty interest as set forth in the deed.

The trial court entered judgment reforming the deed so as to vest in defendants a one-half interest in the minerals in place, and quieted their title to same.

Plaintiff contends that if the evidence was sufficient to justify reformation the right to reformation was barred by the statute of limitations.

The first question for determination is whether the statute of limitations is applicable.

We have heretofore held that the right of an owner in possession to remove a cloud from his title is a continuing right and never barred by limitations. Whitehead v. Bunch, 134 Okl. 63, 272 P. 878. This same rule generally applies in favor of both plaintiffs and defendants even though it is necessary to reform a deed regular on its face before title can be quieted, if the party seeking reformation has been in continuous, peaceable, and uninterrupted possession since the execution of the instrument. In Hoskins v. Stites, 182 Okl. 455, 78 P.2d 413, it is held in the second paragraph of the syllabus:

“The statute of limitation cannot be pleaded as a defense to an action for *915 reformation of a deed for mistake, if the party proceeding has been in continual, peaceable, and uninterrupted possession of the premises since the time of the execution of the instrument.”

However, in Easley v. Ashton, 203 Okl. 205, 219 P.2d 199, we held that the statute of limitations was applicable to an action to quiet title to a mineral interest where it was necessary to cancel a mineral deed, regular on its face, before title could be quieted. In that case the court did not discuss the question of possession, but as a matter of fact the opinion discloses that the plaintiff, Frank M. Easley, who sought to cancel the mineral deed, was the owner of the surface. Nevertheless, we held that the statute of limitations ran against his right to cancel. This was tantamount to holding that one is not in possession of minerals when the title stands in someone else’s name (absent leasing or drilling operations), at least insofar as the effect of possession or the lack thereof bears upon the applicability of the statute of limitations in an action to reform or cancel a deed. In Bruce v. Exchange Royalty Co., 177 Okl. 419, 60 P.2d 748, the plaintiffs had previously executed a mineral deed in favor of defendant. They later brought an action to cancel based upon fraud alleging in their petition that the minerals had been in their continuous possession. We affirmed the trial court’s action in sustaining a demurrer to plaintiffs’ petition, based upon limitations, despite plaintiffs’ allegation that they were in possession.

Defendants contend that they have been in the continuous and peaceable possession of the controverted mineral interest, and therefore the statute of limitations did not run against their right to reform. The controverted mineral interest is the difference between one-half of the minerals in place and a one-half nonparticipating royalty interest. This difference includes the right to lease and collect bonuses and delay rentals. Defendants have done nothing towards reducing the minerals to possession. Title to the controverted mineral interest stands in plaintiff’s name. A deed procured through fraud, inequitable conduct or mutual mistake is not void but voidable. See Skinner v. Scott, 29 Okl. 364, 118 P. 394, and Terrill v. Laney, 200 Okl. 308, 193 P.2d 296. The reservation is not ambiguous. Defendants reserved only a non-participating royalty interest, with the right in the grantees to lease and collect all bonuses and delay rentals. We do not think it can be said defendants are in possession of the controverted interest.

The rationale of the rule that the statute does not run against one in possession is that if one is asserting peaceable dominion over and obtaining the benefit from that which he claims he acquired by the conveyance in question, he is entitled to assume that the other party to the instrument is acquiescing in his claim.

In Hoskins v. Stites, supra, we quoted from Barrows v. Alford, 129 Okl. 265, 264 P. 628, wherein it is held in the first paragraph of the syllabus:

“Considering, without deciding, that section 185, subd.

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Bluebook (online)
1959 OK 69, 341 P.2d 912, 10 Oil & Gas Rep. 1080, 1959 Okla. LEXIS 324, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maloy-v-smith-okla-1959.