Meriwether v. Gulf Oil Corporation

1956 OK 189, 298 P.2d 758, 5 Oil & Gas Rep. 1039, 1956 Okla. LEXIS 502
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 12, 1956
Docket36997
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 1956 OK 189 (Meriwether v. Gulf Oil Corporation) 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
Meriwether v. Gulf Oil Corporation, 1956 OK 189, 298 P.2d 758, 5 Oil & Gas Rep. 1039, 1956 Okla. LEXIS 502 (Okla. 1956).

Opinion

HUNT, Justice.

By an action instituted more than twenty years ago as Cause No. 4323 in the District Court of Love County, Oklahoma, the State of Oklahoma, on the relation of the Governor, the State Board of Public Affairs, and the State Fish and Game Commission, under the authority of a law enacted as Senate Bill No. 382 of the Fourteenth Legislature, S.L.1933, pp. 112-114, condemned certain lands, including the 40 acres of Love County land here involved, for the purpose of having a State lake constructed thereon. The 40 acres in question then belonged to G. Meriwether, Sr., father of plaintiff in error, who as a defendant in said action, received the sum of $400 therefor, under order of the' court apparently entered in 1934, in accord with the ap- *759 praisál of the Commissioners theretofore appoiiited 'in said condemnation proceedings.

Apparently, at some undisclosed time after the State Board of Affairs had thus acquired title to, and had gone into possession of said tract, along with others involved in said condemnation proceedings, Mr.' Meriwether, Sr., gave plaintiff in error a deed that has never been recorded to the minerals under said tract. In September, 1954 the Oklahoma Planning and Resources Board leased said 40 acres to Gulf Oil Corporation for oil and gas exploration purposes and, in the present action, instituted a few weeks thereafter, said lessor and lessee,, as plaintiffs, recovered judgment against the plaintiff in error and other parties not necessary to name herein, as defendants,. quieting their title to said tract. G. Meriwether, Jr. has lodged the present.appeal from said judgment and he, like the defendants in error, will hereinafter be referred to by their trial court designations.

The defendant Meriwether in his answer admits that the plaintiff, State of Oklahoma, is the owner of the surface of the land involved, hut specifically denies that the plaintiff is the owner of the minerals underlying the land, or any claim thereto. In his brief he says the State acquired title to the surface of the land and that the sole, question is, did the State by such condemnation proceedings, acquire title to the mineral estate. Defendant, in support of his proposition that the judgment of the trial court is contrary to law, quotes from a number of texts on eminent domain and from decisions of this court in condemnation proceedings and concludes his argument with the statement that the-legislative act does not specify the quantum of the estate to be acquired, and that the mineral estate is not necessary for the lake project and, therefore, title to the mineral estate did not pass to plaintiff in the condemnation proceeding but is vested in the defendant, Meriwether, by virtue of the deed hereinabove referred to.

The defendants in error take the opposite view. The legislative act under which the condemnation proceeding was instituted authorized the State Board of Affairs to acquire by purchase or condemnation 16,-300 acres of land for the purpose of having constructed a State lake thereon, the same to be under the full control, supervision and jurisdiction of the State Game and Fish Commission, under rules and regulations to be promulgated thereby, governing the use of the property' and establishing of camp sites, business- houses and lodges on the lake, and to charge a license fee for hunting and fishing thereon. The Governor and State Treasurer were authorized to negotiate a loan with R. F. C. to pay the cost of the land and pledge the revenues arising therefrom. If the statute authorized the State to take fee title to the surface of the land, which title defendant concedes the State did acquire, it would logically follow that it could take a fee simple title to the whole estate in the land, there being no title restriction or qualification in the act. The words “land” or “lands” are used -several times in the act without qualification.

The word “land” is defined by statute, Title 60 O.S.1951 § 6, as follows:

“Land is the solid material of the earth, whatever may be the ingredients of which it is composed, whether soil, rock or other substance.”

The court, in Sinclair Refining Co. v. Burroughs, 10 Cir., 133 F.2d 536, 539, in construing an act relating to an assessment against land, quoted the above statute and said:

"Having defined the terms ‘land’ and ‘real property’, it. must follow that when the law making body of the state uses one or the other of these terms, it uses them in.the sense in which it had defined them.”

In Cuff v. Koslosky, 165 Okl. 135, 25 P.2d 290, 291, the court, in discussing a mineral deed said:

“The instrument in question does not appear in the record, but we think it is conceded by the briefs that this mineral deed includes all mineral rights, coal, zinc, lead, and other min-erais. * * * We are considering the instrument as dealing with oil and gas. ;
*760 “It is settled law that oil and gas in place are minerals, and that so long as they remain unsevered from the soil are a part of the realty. In this jurisdiction oil and gas, although they form a part of the corpus of the soil, the aggregate physical interest in the land, while in place are not subject to absolute ownership separate and distinct from the soil of which they form a part.”

The legislative act here in question specifically authorized the purchase or condemnation of a specified number of acres of land, which includes all minerals therein. The act, as we construe it, in view of the expressed purpose and intended use of the land, contemplated and was requisite to the acquisition of the fee simple title to such land. Title 66 O.S.1951, § 57 was in effect at the time of the institution of the condemnation proceedings and reads in part as follows:

“The provisions of this article with reference to eminent domain shall apply to * * * the State of Oklahoma and its various educational, reformatory, penal and eleemosynary institutions, including departments of state having the power to purchase real property for public purposes, and such institutions and departments shall have the right under this article to acquire fee simple title to the property taken.”

Both parties relied on parts of the language and holding in the case of Harn v. State ex rel. Williamson, 184 Okl. 306, 87 P.2d 127, as supporting their views. The legislative act there in question authorized the State Board of Affairs to purchase or condemn a 40 acre tract of land for use in connection with the State Capitol Grounds. The legislative act and the condemnation proceedings under consideration in the case at bar equally, if not more clearly, expresses the authority and intent to acquire a fee simple title to the land than does the act and proceedings in the case of Harn v. State, supra.

The petition for appointing appraisers in the condemnation proceeding involved in the present case states in part that it is necessary for petitioner to appropriate the described real estate for the purpose of constructing thereon a State lake, and the petition' ends with a prayer asking that Commissioners be appointed to assess the damages.

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Bluebook (online)
1956 OK 189, 298 P.2d 758, 5 Oil & Gas Rep. 1039, 1956 Okla. LEXIS 502, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meriwether-v-gulf-oil-corporation-okla-1956.