Milliron Oil Co. v. Connaghan

302 P.2d 256, 76 Wyo. 330, 7 Oil & Gas Rep. 910, 1956 Wyo. LEXIS 45
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 16, 1956
Docket2706
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 302 P.2d 256 (Milliron Oil Co. v. Connaghan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Milliron Oil Co. v. Connaghan, 302 P.2d 256, 76 Wyo. 330, 7 Oil & Gas Rep. 910, 1956 Wyo. LEXIS 45 (Wyo. 1956).

Opinion

*335 OPINION

HARNSBERGER, Justice.

The Milliron Oil Company, plaintiff, brought its action against a large number of defendants among whom was the appellant Hillberry. The object of the suit was to quiet plaintiff’s alleged title both to the surface and to the oil, gas and other minerals on and under a considerable acreage, and to quiet its alleged title to oil, gas and other minerals only, on and under certain other acres. Hillberry denied plaintiff’s claim of title to the oil, gas and other minerals on and under 120 acres of the lands wherein plaintiff was claiming only the oil, gas and other minerals, asserting he, Hill-berry, was the owner thereof, and by a cross-petition *336 Hillberry also sought to quiet his own title, not only to the oil, gas and other minerals on and under that 120 acres, but also to the surface of those lands. To support its claim of ownership of the mineral interest in the tract, plaintiff relied in part upon a deed from the Mill Iron Cattle Company, a corporation, bearing date September 18, 1916, and also upon a prescriptive title acquired through its constructive adverse possession of the minerals under color of that same deed. Appellant Hillberry contended he acquired title to the minerals by virtue of an agreement and deed from one George Merrill, by purchase of a tax title and through adverse possession of both the surface and the minerals dating from a period of “more than fifteen years last past and prior to the commencement of this action.” Judgment was rendered quieting plaintiff’s title to the oil, gas and other minerals on and under the 120 acres. It is from that judgment that appellant Hillberry appeals, thus bringing to this court the single question as to which of the parties has the better title to those mineral rights.

It may be noticed that in making reference to the parties and to the names of grantors and grantees in conveyances referred to, there will appear to be some discrepancy. This is because the names as used are identical with such names as they are shown in the particular entry appearing in the abstract of title.

All the evidence in the case was submitted by stipulation and it consisted in part of an abstract of title covering the lands involved, it being agreed however that any statement or representation contained in the abstract indicating a separate assessment or tax on minerals as distinguished from surface rights, was erroneous and did not correctly reflect the records in the office of the county clerk with respect to the lands concerned or the taxes or assessments thereon, and *337 that such records show in fact that there had never been a separate assessment or tax against the minerals or against the surface of the property. It was also stipulated that all the property had been assessed and taxed to Hillberry since 1939; that Hillberry was in sole, exclusive and unquestioned possession of all of the property from October 1913 to January 1917, and of the surface continuously from January 1917 to the spring of 1927 and continuously from the spring of 1938 to and including the date of the stipulation; that no entry had been made upon the surface for the purpose of working or producing minerals in or under the property at any time since 1913; that oil, gas or other minerals had never been produced from the property, no drilling done, and no wells begun or completed thereon; that Hillberry had attempted to lease the lands for mineral development and in 1946 had in fact executed an oil and gas lease to Continental Oil Company which was later cancelled; that again in 1953 he had executed an oil and gas lease to Carter Oil Company, which lease was also cancelled, after which Hillberry executed a further lease in 1953 to Sacony-Vacuum Oil Company, Inc., and agreed to commit the property to unit agreement. There was also a supplemental stipulation that an affidavit of Hillberry was to be considered as “facts and evidence” in the case. The affidavit states that in October 1913 Hillberry contracted to buy the lands from one George Merrill for §14 an acre; that Merrill turned over to Hillberry possession of the lands at that time; that Hillberry assumed he was buying the minerals along with the land; that either in December 1916 or January 1917, Hillberry paid Merrill the agreed purchase price together with interest thereon and received a deed from Merrill; that Hillberry had used the land until he sold the property to his son in 1927; that (as *338 is also shown by the abstract) the land in question was sold on July 11, 1932 to Hot Springs County for unpaid 1931 taxes; that Washakie Livestock Company bought the property from the County in 1936 and in 1938 Hillberry obtained a deed for the lands from the Washakie Livestock Company and later leased the lands for oil, gas and mineral development.

The abstract further shows that in 1903 a patent had been granted for forty acres of the tract and that through Mesne conveyances it was transferred in 1905 to The Rocky Mountain Cattle Company, a corporation. The abstract fails to show that The Rocky Mountain Cattle Company ever subsequently transferred its title to that forty acres, thus leaving the apparent title to that part of the tract in that company. The abstract also shows that in December 1905 a patent for the remaining eighty acres was granted to one John Find-lay, but it does not show that John Findlay made any subsequent conveyance of that eighty acres. It does, however, appear that prior to the issuance of the Findlay patent to the eighty acres ,and in 1904, Find-lay received a quitclaim deed for the same eighty from one Edson A. Earle but immediately quitclaimed the lands to one William L. Simpson who on June 1, 1905, quitclaimed the same to The Rocky Mountain Cattle Company. So it seems The Rocky Mountain Cattle Company never divested itself of its title traced from patent to forty acres of the tract and that John Findlay never divested himself of his title traced from patent to the remaining eighty acres. It also seems, that The Rocky Mountain Cattle Company, a corporation, never made or attempted to make any conveyance of what, if any, title it received by the quitclaim from Simpson. Of course we are not concerned in this appeal with the rights or title of either John Findlay or The Rocky Mountain Cattle Company as these were finally adju *339 dicated in this same action and no appeal has been taken by them. The above recitation of the abstract record is given merely to make clear what follows.

Notwithstanding the condition of the record title to the disputed lands, the abstract further discloses that on December 20, 1913, George Merrilll, G. J. Guthrie Nicholson, George Pennoyer and Mary Merrill and Sallie E. Nicholson, all of whom were complete strangers to title, gave their warranty deed which purported to convey all rights in the 120 acres unto The Mill Iron Cattle Company, a corporation. On September 18, 1916, this grantee gave its warranty deed to the oil, gas and minerals only, unto the plaintiff, Mill Iron Oil Company, and thereafter on December 8, 1916, by its further warranty deed, the Mill Iron Cattle Company conveyed the surface rights only unto George Merrill who, in turn, on December 19, 1916, conveyed such surface only to the defendant Hillberry.

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Bluebook (online)
302 P.2d 256, 76 Wyo. 330, 7 Oil & Gas Rep. 910, 1956 Wyo. LEXIS 45, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/milliron-oil-co-v-connaghan-wyo-1956.