Newton v. Brown

386 N.W.2d 424, 222 Neb. 605, 1986 Neb. LEXIS 948
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedMay 2, 1986
Docket85-071
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 386 N.W.2d 424 (Newton v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Newton v. Brown, 386 N.W.2d 424, 222 Neb. 605, 1986 Neb. LEXIS 948 (Neb. 1986).

Opinion

Shanahan, J.

Leslie and Anna Brown appeal the judgment of the district court for Red Willow County, reforming their deed to the north half of Section 22, Township 2 North, Range 28 West of the 6th P.M., in Red Willow County, Nebraska, to conform with a contract for the sale of that real estate. We affirm.

A proceeding to reform a written instrument is an equity action. Hohneke v. Ferguson, 196 Neb. 505, 244 N.W.2d 70 (1976). On appeal to the Supreme Court, an equity action is a trial de novo on the record, requiring this court to reach a conclusion independent of the findings of a trial court but subject to the rule that, where credible evidence is in conflict on material issues of fact, the Supreme Court will consider the fact that the trial court observed the witnesses and accepted one version of the facts over another. See, Neb. Rev. Stat. § 25-1925 (Reissue 1979); In re Estate of Lienemann, ante p. 169, 382 N.W.2d 595 (1986).

Originally, Marie Esch owned the half section described in Brown’s reformed deed, which was subject to a lease for oil and gas production. According to the producers’ unit agreement for Section 22, there were four producing oil wells on Marie’s half section. Marie’s son-in-law, Herbert Newton, farmed the land as her tenant. In 1970 Herbert and his wife, Betty, sold their south half of Section 22, adjacent to Marie’s half section, to Leslie and Anna Brown but reserved the mineral rights on that half section until 1977. Herbert and his family moved to Indiana in 1971. Marie died in 1972. Each of Herbert’s three children — Steven E. Newton, Diana Newton Norman, and Regina C. Newton — inherited an undivided one-third interest in their grandmother Marie’s half section. Because Regina’s age was then 5 years, Herbert became guardian for Regina. Herbert managed his children’s inherited half section, which was thereafter leased to the defendant Leslie Brown. When Brown became the Newton children’s tenant, oil wells were still *608 producing on the half section, and Brown knew the Newton children were receiving royalties from oil companies as mineral lessees. For oil production on their half section, the children monthly received two royalty checks, one from Husky Oil and the other from Koch Oil Company.

Herbert periodically inspected his children’s farm in Nebraska. On one such occasion, in the fall of 1975 at the McCook sale barn, Herbert visited with Leslie Brown about Brown’s possible purchase of the children’s farm, but no terms for a sale were reached. When he was back home in Indiana, Herbert telephoned Brown in January 1976 concerning a possible sale of the children’s half section. Herbert suggested a price of $155,000 but told Brown “[n]o oil or mineral or gas rights would go with it [the children’s half section]; that was the desire of their grandmother that [sic] would never be sold.” Brown said he would “think it over.”

During a March visit to Nebraska, Herbert met Brown and his wife, Anna, at a McCook restaurant, where the Browns and Herbert agreed, generally, on terms for a sale of the children’s land. After Herbert had contacted his son, Steven, and his daughter, Diana, who lived in Kearney, all parties convened on the morning of March 30, 1976, in the office of Herbert’s attorney. While the attorney was reading aloud a proposed and typed draft of the contract, namely, a provision that the “sellers reserve all oil, gas, mineral rights in or under the ground as long as production exists,” Anna Brown remarked: “I don’t like that in or under the ground.” Anna Brown further commented: “If we were to drill an irrigation well, we would have to pay those kids for the water.” The attorney reassured Anna that the reservation did not relate to water of the tract being acquired, but Anna stated that she would not sign any contract, unless the phrase “or under the ground” was deleted.

The attorney directed his secretary to retype the contractual provision regarding the mineral reservation, the phrase “or under the ground” was deleted, and the retyped contract contained the following:

RESERVATIONS
The sellers expressly reserve unto themselves all of the oil, gas and mineral interests in said real estate as long as *609 production exists.

The parties, including Herbert, as guardian for Regina, signed the revised contract which, among its other terms, specified a purchase price of $155,000, namely, $65,000 to be paid as soon as Browns obtained a loan from the federal land bank; $60,000 due on September 1,1976; and $30,000 as a final installment payment of the purchase price. Immediately after signing the revised contract and as provided in that written agreement, Herbert, again as guardian for Regina, and the Newton children executed a warranty deed for conveyance of the children’s half section to the Browns. The deed did not contain any reservation of mineral interests. When they signed the contract and, subsequently, the deed, the parties never noticed the discrepancy between the contract and the deed, that is, omission of the mineral reservation from the deed. The attorney informed the parties that the signed contract and executed deed would be kept in escrow at a McCook bank pending payment out of proceeds received by Browns from their federal land bank loan. Neither Herbert nor his children received a copy of the contract and deed. On June 10, 1976, Browns obtained a loan from the federal land bank, made a part payment to the Newtons from such loan proceeds, and received their deed to the Newton children’s half section. Also, Browns gave Newtons a real estate mortgage as collateral for the unpaid balance of the purchase price, which mortgage was subordinated to the federal land bank mortgage and was due in September 1982. Browns recorded their deed on July 1,1976.

Husky Oil and Koch Oil Company continued to issue monthly checks to the Newton children in payment of royalties from the producing wells on the half section acquired by Browns. Regina’s royalty payments were placed in certificates of deposit at a minimum annual rate of interest at 10.5 percent, while royalties paid to Diana were placed in a “cash management fund” paying interest at a minimum rate of 10 percent per annum. Browns farmed the half section after their acquisition in 1976 and on September 1, 1982, made their last payment for the Newton land. On February 10, 1983, the attorney who had prepared the contract and deed on March 30, 1976, died. .

*610 In early March 1983 Steven, who had moved to Kansas, contacted a Kansas bank to obtain a loan for which his oil royalties from the half section would be collateral. The bank balked at accepting Steven’s royalty payments as collateral because the deed given to Browns did not contain any mineral reservation in favor of Steven or his sisters. Steven telephoned Herbert about the omission of any mineral reservation in the Brown deed. Steven also contacted Browns about the mineral reservation discrepancy involving the contract and deed, and sought a quitclaim deed from Browns regarding the mineral interests on the half section.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
386 N.W.2d 424, 222 Neb. 605, 1986 Neb. LEXIS 948, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/newton-v-brown-neb-1986.