Morley v. Smith

118 S.E. 135, 93 W. Va. 682, 1923 W. Va. LEXIS 102
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 8, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 118 S.E. 135 (Morley v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morley v. Smith, 118 S.E. 135, 93 W. Va. 682, 1923 W. Va. LEXIS 102 (W. Va. 1923).

Opinion

Lutz, Judge:

The defendant, United Fuel Gas Company, appeals from decree of the circuit court of Roane county partitioning 9 acres and 105 square rods of land.

Nancy. L. J. Smith died intestate, many years ago, seized and possessed, among other real estate, of certain land described as 33 acres (but in fact containing only 9 acres and 105 square rods), situate in Roane county, leaving surviving her eleven children as her sole heirs at law.

By deed of July 24th, 1909, J. M. Smith, son of Nancy L. J. Smith, conveyed to plaintiff M. E. Morley an undivided 1/llth in fee of said land; by deed of September 8th, 19Í1, plaintiff conveyed the surface of said interest to L. F. iSmith, who thereafter, by deed of June 28th, 1921, reconveyed the same to plaintiff; and' by deed of September 25th, 1919, Fannie Smith, granddaughter of Nancy L. J. Smith, conveyed / to plaintiff her undivided 1/22 interest in fee in said land, whereby the plaintiff became vested with 990/7260 (3/22) undivided interest ip fee in said land, which he owned and possessed at the institution of this suit. The undivided remainder of said land was then held and owned by the defendants as follows: .

Prussia Carper. 660/7260 in fee
R. K. Ogden.. . 55/7260 in fee
A. J. F. Hopkins.. 55/7260 in fee
H. C. Looney. 275/7260 in fee
L. F. Smith. 5225/7260 surface
H. C. Looney.. 2530/7260 oil and gas
Annabelle Rader.. 660/7260 oil and gas
Rosa Chapman..:. 132/7260 oil and gas
[684]*684Lizzie Drennin.. U. 132/7260 oil and gas
L. H. Moore.. 132/7260 oil and gas
Okey Chapman..'. 132/7260 oil and gas
United Fuel Gas Company.. 1782/7260 oil and gas

The plaintiff in his bill alleges that his interest in the land is susceptible of being laid off to him in kind and prays that the same may be done.

The United Fuel Gas Company, the only defendant contesting the suit, demurred to plaintiff’s bill on the ground that it was not sufficient in law or in equity, and also filed its separate answer thereto. The answer denies the right of partition among the owners of the land by sale or otherwise, and avers that the United Fuel Gas Company has no interest in the surface of the land but is the owner of the oil and gas under certain undivided interests therein, and that this defendant "is advised, believes, and so avers that such oil and gas is indivisible and incapable of being partitioned because the extent, location and value of said oil and gas cannot be ascertained, if there be any such oil and gas under smd land.”

The court, by its decree of September 22d, 1921, overruled the demurrer and upon the bill, and answer, of the United Fuel Gas Company, decreed the ownership of the land as above set out, and further: "That partition be made of said lands and oil and gas interests, provided the same are susceptible of partition, between and among said several persons; allotting to each of them their respective interests as herein already, shown, and that the commissioners hereinafter appointed to make partition of said lands and oil and gas interests do make such partition and assign to each of said persons his respective interests therein, if partition of said interests can be made in that way; and that if partition cannot be made in that way, that said commissioners assign to such of said persons entitled to share therein, such parts of said lands and oil and gas interests as may be susceptible of such assignment to them, and report the interests not assigned as not. being susceptible of partition; and that if said commissioners.find that said lands and oil and gas interests cannot be partitioned, giving to part of said persons their respective interests, that they [685]*685shall report such fact to the court. And if said commissioners report that none of said lands and oil and gas interests, or any part or interests therein,, cannot be partitioned among the persons owning the same, then they shall further report to the court all of the facts and circumstances upon which they base their findings”.

The commissioners, as shown by their report filed in the cause January 23d, 1922, allotted the land in controversy to the owners as follows:

To plaintiff M. E. Morley, as Lot C, 1 acre and 28 square rods in fee;
To defendant Prussia Carper, as Lot D, 118 square rods in fee;
To defendant R. K. Ogden, as Lot E, 18 square rods in fee;
To defendant A. J. F. Hopkins, as Lot F, 18 square rods in fee;
To defendant H. C. Looney, as Lot B, 83 square rods in fee;
To defendant L. F. Smith, as Lot A, 7 acres surface ;
To defendant United Fuel Gas Company, 14/41; H. C. Looney 18/41; Anabelle Rader 5/41; and Rosa Chapman, Lizzie Drennin, L. H. Moore, and Okey Chapman each 1/41 of the oil and gas underlying said 7 acres, Lot A.

To which report the defendant United Fuel Gas Company -excepted on the ground, among others, the commissioners should have reported that the land, or at least the oil and gas thereunder, be sold because not susceptible of partition.

Under exception to the report of commissioners that partition should have been by. sale, the appellant directs its fire against the action of the circuit court, and for this attack it marshals the cases of Hall v. Vernon, 47 W. Va. 295; Preston v. White, 57 W. Va. 278; and Robertson Land Co. v. Paul, 63. [686]*686W. Va. 249. Those cases were suits purely for the purpose of partitioning' oil and gas, and hold that partition of oil and gas, owned by co-owners separate from the surface, cannot be decreed, except by sale and division of the proceeds. The suit here has as its purpose, adhered to by the commissioners and the circuit court, the partition of the land itself. There has been no partition among the co-owners of the supposed oil and gas therein which have been severed by conveyances from the surface. The court has merely confined these .interests to that part of the land laid off in one boundary as surface containing seven acres. This is as it should be. The oil and gas, under the law, follow the interests in the land, from which they have been severed.

‘ ‘ The land under which the oil and gas is ■ supposed to exist may be partitioned in such manner among co-owners of the surface as to effect a division of the oil and gas privileges”. Hall v. Vernon, supra; Franklinite Company v. Condit, 19 N. J. Eq. 394. In the latter case, which the former cites for the proposition stated, one of two co-tenants had conveyed certain mineral interests and the grantee thereof sought partition of those interests against the non-consenting co-tenant. The court in denying such right said:

‘ ‘ Such deed will be held to bind the grantor, but as to his co-tenant it is void. The reason is, that it would prejudice the right of the co-tenant to a partition.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
118 S.E. 135, 93 W. Va. 682, 1923 W. Va. LEXIS 102, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morley-v-smith-wva-1923.