Missouri Pac. R. v. Bartlett

79 F.2d 275, 1935 U.S. App. LEXIS 4082
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedJuly 22, 1935
DocketNo. 10263
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 79 F.2d 275 (Missouri Pac. R. v. Bartlett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Missouri Pac. R. v. Bartlett, 79 F.2d 275, 1935 U.S. App. LEXIS 4082 (8th Cir. 1935).

Opinion

FARIS, Circuit Judge.

Appellee brought this action in equity to remove a cloud on his title to certain segregated mineral rights in or underlying two parcels of land situate in Johnson county, Ark. 'Hie case was begun on February 27, 1931, in a chancery court of the state; was removed thence, by appellant in the conventional way, to the District Court of the United States for the Western District of Arkansas; wherein on a trial, appellant, being cast, appealed. Pending the action in the District Court, appellant began a proceeding under the provisions of section 205, title 11, USCA, wherein L. W. Bald[276]*276-win and Guy A. Thompson were duly appointed trustees, and they thereupon caused themselves to be made parties defendant herein, and entered their appearances in the case as such.

The facts are relatively few and fairly ■simple; the law is somewhat troublesome, but only because it involves numerous local statutes. The lands, to which the mineral rights in dispute are appurtenant, were long owned by the St. Louis Iron Mountain & Southern Railway Company, which ■sold them, prior to the arising of this controversy to some third party, whose status and identity are not here pertinent. In the .above sale, the mineral rights were reserved to the grantor. Later, the appellant .acquired all of the property and assets of the St. Louis Iron Mountain & Southern Railway Company, including, as is not disputed, these reserved mineral rights. These rights were, it is alleged by appellee, separately assessed for taxes by the ■state of Arkansas from, including, and after, the year 1907. In 1911, the taxes thereon, for the year 1910, not having been paid by appellant, or by any one for it, the segregated mineral rights were forfeited to the •state of Arkansas for nonpayment of the taxes for the year 1910, or, to be more ac■curate, since there were, no bidders, the mineral rights were sold to the state, as by local statute permitted.

In November, 1921, _ the state of Arkansas sold and conveyed, through its Commissioner of State Lands, these mineral rights to appellee and one Patterson whose -.interest, it is found by the trial court, later passed to appellee. The conveyance from the Commissioner to appellee and Patterson . was put on record promptly.

In 1930, the appellant brought an action in mandamus, against the then Commissioner of State Lands of the State of Arkansas, to compel such Commissioner to •convey these mineral rights to it, on its .application to purchase them and its tender •of the purchase price. Appellant prevailed in this action, to which, however, appellee was not a party, and pursuant to the judgment of the state court rendered in the above action, the Commissioner of State Lands on the 25th day of August, 1930, •conveyed these mineral rights to appellant. 'This conveyance to appellant, and which it ■offered on the trial, among other things recites that the mineral rights in controversy, "were forfeited and sold to the State of -Arkansas at a County Tax Collector’s sale for non-payment of taxes due thereon for the year set forth below, towit, mineral title only, in or under the follozving lands” (describing lands in or under zvhich such rights are situate, and being same in dispute); year for which forfeited, 1910.” (Italics supplied.)

The mineral rights here involved have not been at all developed or worked by any one; certainly, not by either of the parties to this action. ■ Appellee offered evidence tending to prove that he had paid taxes on these segregated rights for the years 1922, 1923, 1924, 1925, 1926, and 1927. The taxes for the years 1928, 1929, and 1930 were not paid when due, and the mineral rights in the land were again forfeited to the state; but appellee offered, for the three years mentioned, redemption certificates issued to him in 1931, pursuant to the local statute.

The appellant relies on numerous alleged errors, and discusses in its brief some ten of these. We take it, since this case sounds in equity the sole duty of this court is to ascertain whether the decree rendered by the court nisi was on the record right or wrong. If there was offered on the trial incompetent and inadmissible evidence, it will be' deemed, absent at least an affirmative showing in the findings of fact to the contrary, that the trial court put no reliance on such evidence. In short, such incompetent and inadmissible evidence will be disregarded, and then the record will be examined in order to determine whether there remains enough good evidence to sustain the decree of the chancellor. If there shall be found such, then the decree will be upheld; but if not, then of course it must be reversed.

All of the ten alleged errors relied on by appellant for reversal may fairly be boiled down into the below points: (a) That appellee’s deed is void, for that in 1921, when the Commissioner sold these segregated mineral rights to appellee and Patterson, no law was in existence in Arkansas, giving such Commissioner any authority, either to sell these rights at private sale, or to make a deed of conveyance therefor; (b) that it was not till 1929 that the Commissioner was given, by a statute passed in that year, authority so to sell and convey and that appellant purchased thereunder; (c) that there was no competent evidence in the record showing that the Commissioner of State Lands of Arkansas had ever certified the segregated mineral [277]*277rights to the county clerk for taxation, and that for divers reasons, the assessment, forfeiture for nonpayment of taxes, and sale of these mineral rights for taxes, and the purchase thereof by the state were void for errors and omissions; and (d) that the alleged payment by appellee of the taxes on these mineral rights for seven years did not, under the law and the facts, serve to vest title therein in appellee, and so such fact of payment, even if true, constituted no defense as against the title asserted by appellant.

As forecast, appellant contends, and appellee seems tacitly to concede, that if under local statutes there was not any power vested in the Commissioner of State Lands of the State of Arkansas, either to sell segregated mineral rights at private sale, or to make a deed of conveyance therefor, then the conveyance to appellee and Patterson is void. In the view we are constrained to take of this case, this is the chief and decisive question in it. That there had been prior to the alleged separate assessment for taxes, for the year 1910, a segregation of the mineral rights in dispute, from the surface, perforce a deed from the predecessor of appellant, reserving the mineral rights, is a stipulated fact. In such case, a statute of Arkansas, in force when the assessment here involved was made, provided thus: “When the mineral rights in any land shall, by conveyance or otherwise, be held by one or more persons, and the fee simple in the land by one or more other persons, it shall be the duty of the assessor when advised of the fact, either by personal notice, or by recording of the deeds in the office of the recorder of the county, to assess the mineral rights in said lands separate from the general property therein. And in such case a sale of the mineral rights for nonpayment of taxes shall not affect the title to the land itself, nor shall a sale of the land for nonpayment of taxes affect the title to the mineral rights.” Act March 1, 1897, p. 38; section 9856, C. & M. Dig. Arkansas 1921.

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Bluebook (online)
79 F.2d 275, 1935 U.S. App. LEXIS 4082, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/missouri-pac-r-v-bartlett-ca8-1935.