McDonald v. Antelope Land & Cattle Co.

294 N.W.2d 391, 67 Oil & Gas Rep. 550, 1980 N.D. LEXIS 258
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJune 20, 1980
DocketCiv. 9715
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 294 N.W.2d 391 (McDonald v. Antelope Land & Cattle Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McDonald v. Antelope Land & Cattle Co., 294 N.W.2d 391, 67 Oil & Gas Rep. 550, 1980 N.D. LEXIS 258 (N.D. 1980).

Opinion

SAND, Justice.

Gertrude Griffith McDonald, the personal representative of the estate of J. B. Barlow, appealed from the judgment of the Stark County district court which declared null and void the mineral reservations in the deed issued by the Antelope Land and Cattle Co. and quieted title to the real estate in question, including oil, gas, coal, clay, uranium, and all other minerals, in the various intervenors.

The property involved in this lawsuit was originally conveyed to the Northern Pacific Railroad in a land grant authorized in 1864 by the Thirty-eighth Congress of the United States in return for the construction of a railroad from Lake Superior to the Puget Sound. Shortly after the turn of this century, the railroad or its companion corporation, Northwestern Improvement Company, sold the land in question to the Antelope Land and Cattle Co. [ALC], a Wisconsin corporation. The conveyances issued to ALC contained no mineral exceptions or reservations.

Between 1906 and 1925 ALC conveyed the approximately eleven sections of Stark County land involved in this lawsuit to the intervenors or their predecessors in interest using 37 separate conveyances, each of which contained the following reservation and exception in favor of ALC:

“Reserving and excepting from the same, coal and mineral rights in such lands as are now known or shall hereafter be ascertained to contain coal or iron and also the use of such surface ground as may be necessary for mining operations and the right of access to such reserved and excepted coal and iron lands for the purpose of exploring, developing and working the same, said exceptions and reservations to be for the use and benefit of the party of the first part, its successors and assigns.”

In 1939 ALC became insolvent and the corporation was dissolved. In its resolution of dissolution ALC gave J.B. Barlow, the president and major stockholder of the corporation, a “warranty deed to all of the lands of the company” in return for Barlow’s assumption of ALC’s debts. However, the warranty deed inadvertently omitted and failed to convey the interest contained in the above-quoted mineral reservation, which therefore remained in the name of ALC.

On 4 May 1977 the estate of J.B. Barlow commenced this action against ALC and its former officers, directors, and stockholders to quiet title in the estate to all the minerals which were reserved by the 37 conveyances. The present surface owners were not named as defendants in the lawsuit because there was no issue concerning ownership of the surface. Nevertheless, two sets of intervenors who are the present title holders of portions of the land claimed by the estate were permitted by the district court to intervene in the case.

*393 On 24 April 1979 the J.B. Barlow estate moved the district court for a default judgment against ALC and for summary judgment against both sets of intervenors.

A hearing was held on these motions, after which the district court granted the motion for default judgment against ALC holding that the warranty deed obtained by J.B. Barlow from ALC included that interest described in the reservation set out earlier herein even though it was not specifically referred to in the deed. In substance, the court reformed the deed to comply with the existing circumstances and intention at the time of the conveyance. This resulted in giving J.B. Barlow whatever minerals were reserved in the approximately eleven sections of Stark County land involved in this case, together with the use of the surface ground as may be necessary for mining operations and access. The default judgment, however, did not resolve the meaning of the language in the reservation. This issue was part of the action in which the summary judgment was sought. The district court denied the summary judgment motion against the intervenors leaving as an issue for trial only the meaning and effect of the ALC mineral reservation.

At the trial, the intervenors submitted abstracts of title which covered the property involved in this case. The intervenors also presented three witnesses who testified that they had no personal knowledge of any coal or iron under the land that they owned. The estate rebutted the testimony of these witnesses by presenting three government documents which indicated the presence of coal under the land in question. All this evidence was admitted by the trial court over objection.

At the conclusion of the trial, the Stark County district court determined that the mineral reservation contained in the numerous deeds from ALC to the intervenors or their predecessors in interest was “ineffective and void because of its own provisions.” The court fund that the reservation was clear and unambiguous on its face and that it was never intended to reserve any interest in minerals other than coal and iron. The court concluded that because no coal or iron was known to exist anywhere in, on, or under the property involved in this litigation at the time of the various conveyances from ALC and because no coal or iron had at any time in the more than fifty years thereafter been ascertained to exist in, on, or under any of the property, the reservation was indefinite and therefore ineffective and void. The district court then quieted title in the intervenors to all the surface, and all oil, gas, coal, clay, uranium, and all other minerals in the various tracts of land, and ruled that the estate of J.B. Barlow had no interest or estate in any of the property, or any part thereof, including oil, gas, coal, clay, uranium and all other minerals.

The J.B. Barlow estate appealed the district court ruling. The default judgment was not appealed. The question before us on appeal is whether or not the court below correctly interpreted the mineral reservation contained in the deeds from ALC to the intervenors or their predecessors in interest. This issue involves a question of law and is therefore fully reviewable by this court.

We note initially that although the North Dakota legislature has recently enacted two statutes which directly address the interpretation and construction of mineral leases and mineral reservations in deeds, grants, or conveyances of real property, the reservations in the instant case were made long before the statutes became effective and the statutes are, therefore, not controlling here. See, § 47-10-24, NDCC; § 47-10-25, NDCC.

Section 47-09-11, NDCC, provides that grants of real property are to be interpreted in like manner with contracts in general. Therefore, in order to accurately determine the meaning of the reservation language in the deeds from ALC, we refer to Ch. 9-07, NDCC, the statutory guidelines of contract interpretation in North Dakota.

Section 9-07-02, NDCC, provides that the language of a contract is to govern its interpretation if the language is clear and explicit and does not involve an absurd *394 ity. The district court in this case determined that the reservation in the ALC deed was clear and unambiguous on its face and was an attempt to reserve only coal and iron. We agree with the trial court that the reservation applied only to coal and iron but we disagree that the reservation language is clear and unambiguous.

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Bluebook (online)
294 N.W.2d 391, 67 Oil & Gas Rep. 550, 1980 N.D. LEXIS 258, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcdonald-v-antelope-land-cattle-co-nd-1980.