McGinty v. Hoosier

239 P.3d 843, 291 Kan. 224, 2010 Kan. LEXIS 627
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedSeptember 24, 2010
Docket101,674
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 239 P.3d 843 (McGinty v. Hoosier) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McGinty v. Hoosier, 239 P.3d 843, 291 Kan. 224, 2010 Kan. LEXIS 627 (kan 2010).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Johnson, J.:

The defendants in this quiet title action, Theresa M. Hoosier, et al. (collectively referred to as defendants), appeal the district court’s granting of summary judgment in favor of the plaintiffs, Letha McGinty and Michael McGinty (collectively referred to as the McGiniys). The district court judgment declared that, by virtue of a sheriff s deed in partition dated April 8, 1974, the McGintys acquired ownership of 100% of the surface interest and 50% of the minerals interest in and to the South Half of the Northeast Quarter (S/2 NE/4) of Section Thirty-six (36), Township Twenty-one South (21S), Range Fourteen West (14W), Stafford County, Kansas (hereafter referred to as the subject tract). Defendants only challenge the McGintys’ ownership of the minerals interest. We affirm the district court judgment, quieting title in the McGintys.

Factual and Procedural Overview

The defendants’ claims in this case are founded upon a challenge to an action commenced in 1973 in which one of the issues involved the partitioning of the subject real estate. A recitation of the chain of title on the subject property and the procedural history of the prior partition action is likely to become confusing and difficult to follow. Accordingly, we will try to summarize wherever possible and avoid a detailed description of any fact or procedural anomaly that is not essential for this decision, while assuring the parties that we are intimately familiar with all the nuances of the case.

In 1890 and for some 50 years thereafter, the subject real estate was owned by W.L. Curtis. Upon W.L.’s death, his widow, Margaret C. Curtis, acquired title and deeded a remainder interest to five people: Donald C. Hutchinson, Lester A. Curtis, General Curtis, William L. Curtis, and Harry W. Curtis. In 1953, Donald, General, William, and the children of Harry — Ruth Curtis and Donna Curtis — deeded their respective interests in the surface property rights to Lester, but each reserved their respective interests in the *226 oil, gas, and minerals rights. At that point, Lester owned 100% of the surface and 20% of the mineral interests; Donald, General, and William each owned 20% of the mineral interests; and Ruth and Donna each owned 10% of the mineral interests.

Lester quitclaimed one-half of his interest to his wife, Opal. Upon his death in 1964, Lester’s children — Beverly Hipp, Lester A. Curtis, Jr., and Donald Curtis — and five grandchildren — Billie Hipp, Cheri Curtis, L.J. Curtis, Vickie Curtis, and Tammy Curtis— acquired fractional interests in the other one-half of Lester’s interest. In 1972, Opal transferred her interest to her son, Lester A. Curtis, Jr.

A year later, Opal’s daughter, Beverly Hipp, acting as Opal’s conservator, filed suit to set aside Opal’s deed to Lester, Jr. At the same time, Beverly (acting individually and as Opal’s conservator), together with Helen Stout (the daughter of General Curtis and his widow, Martha Curtis), filed a partition action on a different tract of real estate owned by the Curtis family (hereafter referred to as “other tract”). The named defendants were: Donald, William L., Lester, Jr., Cheri, L.J., Vickie, and Tammy. The two actions were consolidated.

Included with Lester, Jr.’s, answer to the partition action on the other tract was a cross-petition, praying for the partition of additional real estate coowned by members of the Curtis family. The ultimate amended cross-petition included the subject tract, which was simply described by the legal description without any mention of mineral interests. Only the successors to Lester’s interest, i.e., those who owned 100% of the surface interest and 20% of the mineral interest, were identified in the cross-petition as owners of the subject tract.

Helen Stout, who had at least á remainder interest in 20% of the mineral interest of the subject tract, filed an answer to the amended cross-petition in which she declared that she had no ownership interest in the subject tract. Likewise, William L. Curtis, Jr., who owned at least a remainder interest in one-half of William’s interest, i.e., 10% of the total mineral interest, was named and served in the consolidated partition action. The owners of the remaining 50% of the mineral interest were not personally served in *227 the action, were apparently not served by publication notice, and did not participate in the action partitioning the subject tract. From the title information in the record, it appears that the owners of that remaining 50% interest are the successors in interest to Harry’s 20% interest (previously identified as passing 10% each to Ruth and Donna); the successors in interest to Donald’s 20% interest (identified as the Testamentary Trust of Donald C. Hutchinson); and the successors in interest to one-half of William’s interest, i.e., 10% (identified as having passed to'Paul Dallas Curtis).

Ultimately, the district court determined that it possessed both personal and subject matter jurisdiction to partition the subject tract and ordered that the land be sold. In describing the ownership of the property, the court only listed Lester’s successors, i.e., the persons who collectively owned all of the surface interest and 20% of the mineral interest. After the applicable statutory procedures and notifications, the sheriff conducted a public sale at which the property was sold to Michael and James McGinty. The recorded sheriff s deed, dated April 8, 1974, describes the property by its legal description, without any mention of severed mineral interests, and recites that the sheriff had been directed by the court to convey to the purchaser “all of the right, title and interest which the plaintiffs and the defendants have or claim to have in and to said real estate.” Apparently, all of the net sale proceeds were distributed to a trustee for Opal Curtis.

Some 32 years later, the McGintys filed this quiet title action, claiming to own all the surface interest and one-half of the mineral interest. Eventually, both sides filed a motion for summary judgment. The defendants claimed that the McGintys did not own any of the mineral interest because the sheriffs sale of the mineral interests was void. They argued that the court was without personal or subject matter jurisdiction to partition the mineral estate because only 20% of the mineral interest owners were ever properly served with notice, violating the “unity of partition rule”; that any sale of those mineral interests without proper notice violated due process; and that the sheriff s. deed was defective because it made no mention of the mineral reservation. Alternatively, defendants *228 claimed that only 20% of the mineral interest could pass with the sheriff s deed.

The McGintys countered that the only persons who could attack the partition judgment were those owners who were never properly served with notice of the partition action and had not participated in that action, i.e., the owners of or successors to the 50% of the mineral interest which the McGintys were not claiming.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
239 P.3d 843, 291 Kan. 224, 2010 Kan. LEXIS 627, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcginty-v-hoosier-kan-2010.