Missouri Pac. Rd., Thompson, Trustee v. Strohacker

152 S.W.2d 557, 202 Ark. 645, 1941 Ark. LEXIS 246
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMay 26, 1941
Docket4-6368
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 152 S.W.2d 557 (Missouri Pac. Rd., Thompson, Trustee v. Strohacker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Missouri Pac. Rd., Thompson, Trustee v. Strohacker, 152 S.W.2d 557, 202 Ark. 645, 1941 Ark. LEXIS 246 (Ark. 1941).

Opinion

Griffin Smith, C. J.

Certain lands in Miller county were federal gwernment grants to St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Railway Company. The Iron Mountain Company’s rights were acquired by Missouri Pacific Railroad Company. In 1892 and 1893, however, the Iron Mountain Company made certain conveyances, reserving “all coal and mineral deposits.” 1

Appellees, as fee-simple owners, seek to cancel the reservations and to quiet in themselves title to oil and gas. Their contentions are that when the reservations were written into the deeds it was not intended by the term ‘ ‘ all coal and mineral deposits” to include gas and oil.

The chancellor sustained contentions of the plaintiffs. The question here is one of construction, or intent.

The government grant to Iron Mountain Company reserved “all mineral lands within the limits of the grant made in § 2 [of the Act of Congress in question].”

An agreed statement covers all facts considered by the chancellor. Essentials are as follows:

F. E. Bates, Missouri Pacific chief engineer, made an examination of office files, and found that the land in question was originally conveyed to Big Wood Lumber Company. In 1892 and 1893, when the deeds were delivered, counsel for Iron Mountain were not certain what construction should be placed on the government’s reservations. It was feared by the attorneys that, after the patents had been issued, the government might undertake to reclaim minerals, and “at least one of the reasons for reservations [in Iron Mountain deeds] was this fear . . . that if a fee-simple absolute title were conveyed by the railroad company and the government should subsequently reclaim any minerals within said lands under the provisions of [Act of Congress of 1866, 14 Stat. 1, 338], the railroad would be required to respond to the purchasers of the land for damages under its warranties. ’ ’

The engineer’s statement was predicated upon various letters in the railroad company’s files — letters evidencing* correspondence between the company proper, and officers of Missouri Pacific Land Grant Land Department. May 9, 1887, attorneys for Iron Mountain wrote the Iron Mountain land commissioner that it was the opinion of Judge Portis, as well as that of Judge Pike, that the act reserving mineral lands from grants to railroad companies was binding upon the company, “and for that reason, whenever land is sold, it is sold with the reservation attached. ’ ’

In 1898 certain government granted lands were conveyed, the railroad company reserving “all coal and mineral deposits.” Thereafter a wheatstone company undertook to purchase the mineral rights so reserved by the railroad company. In a letter written by the company’s general attorney in 1899, addressed to the company’s land commissioner, it was recommended that the conveyance be in exact terms of the reservation, and by special warranty deed. It was said: “The reason I advise a special warranty is that some question may possibly arise as to your having anything to'convey under the mining reservations of the United States. I therefore would not by general warranty convey the ‘mineral deposits’ of any land. ’ ’

The agreed statement commits the parties to the proposition that the phrase “coal and mineral deposits” was used in the deeds to make the reservation as broad as any possible reservations of the government under the federal statutes.

The entry on coal lands was under act of March 3, 1873, 17 Stat. L. 607, and for this reason the department of the interior in its circulars and letters usually referred to coal lands as not included in the general classification of “mineral lands.” In 1883 Commissioner McFarland of the interior department ruled that while coal lands, in the general sense of the word, are minerals, they had not been held subject to entry under the mining laws, “but have always, since a date long prior to passage of the mining act of 1866, been disposed .of under special statutes at private cash entry. Said entries are not mineral entries, and have never been so designated in this office.”

The -agreed statement mentions that between June and December, 1890, First Assistant -Secretary Chandler, in writing to the commissioner of the general land office, stated that certain lands were not shown to be, “as a present fact, valuable for coal or other minerals.”

A letter from the interior department, written in 1890, made comment that the act of 1864, which amended an act of 1862, ‘ ‘ enlarged the grant from five to ten sections per mile on each side of said road, and provided, among other things, that the term ‘mineral lands’ wheréver used therein, or in the original act, should not be construed to include coal and iron lands; that no lands granted by the act of 1864 or the original act should include any mineral lands. ’ ’

It was the view of Engineer Bates that the phrase “coal and mineral deposits” was a common expression in various documents of the interior department and in files of the Iron Mountain land department at Little Rock.

On the question of intent as to the reservations, the history of oil and gas discovery is reviewed by O. W. Rapp, U. S. land commissioner, as shown in the footnote. 2

In Arkansas exploratory work seems to have been done as early as 1888, according to reports made by State Geologist John C. Branner, In respect of that period, Branner mentions the occurrence of oil and gas in the vicinity of Fayetteville. His summary was that many people had been led to believe that “something substantial might be realized from it. ’ ’ His comments are shown in the margin. 3

Appellant quotes certain data to show that congress, in 1886, may have liad in mind the possibility of oil in Arkansas when the land grant act was passed. In a second report entitled, “Geological Eeconnoissance of Arkansas,” David Dale Owen, in'1860, discusses discoveries in Pennsylvania. Regarding Arkansas geology he made the observations shown in the fourth footnote.* ** 4

Union Coal Company, of Ouachita county, was (in 1860) erecting a plant for distillation of oil from lignite. 5

In further substantiation of its contention that oil was recognized as a possibility when the land grants were executed, appellant quotes from communications by Secretary Lamar, dated in 1885 and 1886. 6 , 7

■Beginning in 1932 mineral rights to the lands here involved were separately assessed under authority of act 221, approved March 27,1929.* *****7 8

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152 S.W.2d 557, 202 Ark. 645, 1941 Ark. LEXIS 246, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/missouri-pac-rd-thompson-trustee-v-strohacker-ark-1941.