O'Neal v. Bank of Parkdale

23 S.W.2d 257, 180 Ark. 901, 1930 Ark. LEXIS 13
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJanuary 20, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 23 S.W.2d 257 (O'Neal v. Bank of Parkdale) 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
O'Neal v. Bank of Parkdale, 23 S.W.2d 257, 180 Ark. 901, 1930 Ark. LEXIS 13 (Ark. 1930).

Opinion

Butler, J.

Mrs. Laura D. Fitzhugh and her two sons, Davis and Thomas B. Fitzhugh, conveyed by their warranty deed to M. M. O’Neal a farm owned by them situated in Ashley County, Arkansas, in which deed there was the following reservation: “The grantors reserve a one-sixteenth interest in all oil, gas and other mineral rights and properties in said lands for a period of ten years from tills date.” After the execution of this deed, O’Neal and his wife executed an oil and gas lease on said lands to Howard W. Morris; Laura D. Fitzhugh, Davis Fitzhugh and Thomas B. Fitzhugh, joining in the execution of this lease. The same was the ordinary “unless” lease used in this State, by the terms of which the usual one-eighth royalty was reserved by the lessors, the lessee agreeing to begin drilling operations on the land for oil and gas on or before February 16, 1929; a failure to begin operations within that time working a forfeiture of the lease “unless” the lessee, on or before that date, should pay to the lessor’s credit in the Parkdale Bank the sum of $400, which sum, when paid, should operate as a rental, and confer the privilege of deferring the commencement of a well for twelve months from said date. In-like manner, and upon like payments, the commencement of a well might be further deferred for the same period for a given number of years.

The Texas Company, assignee of Howard W. Morris, having failed to begin the drilling of a well upon the land on or before the date named, paid to the designated depository $400 for an extension of time as stipulated. The bank being doubtful to whom the money should be paid, M. M. O’Neal instituted this action claiming the entire sum. The Texas Company and Bank of Parkdale were made parties, and the Fitzhug'hs answered, claiming a one-half interest in the funds deposited. The case was heard by agreement of the parties on the complaint, its exhibits, and the other pleadings filed therein, which were the answer of the Fitzhug'hs, the separate answer of the Bank of Parkdale and a demurrer of the Texas Company. The court sustained the demurrer of the Texas Company, directed the Bank of Parkdale to pay the sum in its hands into the exchequer of the court, saving it harmless of costs, and decreed that the clerk of the court pay out of said funds the cost incurred, and one-half of the balance to O’Neal and one-half to* the Fitzhughs. O ’Neal has appealed from that part of the decree awarding ona-half of the Ifnnds to the Fitzhnghs, and the Fitzhnghs have appealed from that part of the decree taxing one-half -of the costs against them.

Since petroleum is the only mineral for which exploration has been made in Ashley 'County and southern and southeast Arkansas, and one-eighth of that mineral produced is the customary royalty retained, it is clear that this was the mineral in the minds of the parties at the time of the execution of the deed from the Fitzhughs to O'’Neal. No oil has as yet been produced and discovered in the locality in which the demised premises are situated, and the territory is what is denominated by oil prospectors as “wild-cat” territory. In such territory the cost of drilling oil wells is much larger than in proved territory, and the discovery of oil in paying quantities is a mere possibility only. As has been well stated by the learned chancellor, “To employ the idiom of the oil fields, this part of the State is ‘wild-cat’ territory, as distinguished from proved fields. The explorer hazards as much, or more, financial "outlay in his efforts to discover oil or gas in an unproved field as one who wagers his money on a hundred-to-one shot in a horse race, and the agony of suspense is much greater prolonged. To induce one to expend the money and labor incident to sinking a well in search of oil and gas, the explorer exacts a contract of the owner of the prospective or hoped for mineral, whereby the explorer takes seven-eighths of all he discovers, with one-eighth to the owner. This should fix the value af such minerals in place to both explorer and owner, and furnish a basis for transactions therein. Of course, in the first instance, all of such mineral in place belongs to the owner, but it has no actual value while in place, and costs seven-eighths in volume and value to produce it.”

It is therefore reasonable that one having only the right of one-sixteenth of the oil discovered on a farm in wild-cat territory could have no intention of exploring same, but could only hope for the exploration to be made by another. This, when it appears from the language used, in the deed that there was not an exception of the oil and gas, or any portion thereof, from the conveyance of the fee simple estate, but a reservation only of an interest in the same for a limited time, malíes it apparent that the right reserved was not an estate in fee, but in the nature of a chattel real to become vested when the oil and gas has been discovered and reduced to possession. Therefore, the extent of appellee’s right under the reservation in her deed would be one-sixteenth of the oil and gas, whenever discovered and the product secured, providing, such discovery and production should be made within the time limit named in the reservation.

Attorney for the appellant cites the case of Jackson v. Dulaney, 67 W. Va. 309, 67 S. E. 795, as applicable to the instant case. In that case it is held (quoting syllabus) : “The legal effect of a provision in a deed excepting and reserving- out of and from the grant at all times thereafter and forever unto the grantor, his heirs and assigns, one-tenth of all the mineral oil that may be obtained by the grantee, his heirs and assigns from the land granted, * * * is to except and reserve in such grantor, his heirs and assigns, to be delivered as stipulated, a royalty of one-tenth of all the oil produced. * * * If the owner of the land subject to such an exception and reservation lease the same for oil and gas reserving a one-eighth royalty, without stipulating how the one-tenth of all the oil reserved in such prior grant is to be discharged, his lessee will be entitled to deduct the same from the one-eighth royalty oil reserved in the lease. ’ ’

The distinction between that case and the instant case is that in that case the exception from the original conveyance was an interest in the fee, whereas, in the ease at bar, there was a reservation for a limited time of an interest therein. The chancellor, in his precedent for a decree,.used the expression, “when the Fitzhughs and O’Neal, joint owners of the real value of the prospectiv'e mineral property supposed to lie beneath the ^Ashley 'County property, leased the land for exploration, they became co-adventurers in an operation designed to yield to each of them one-sixteenth of any production, or one-eighth between them,” so that he doubtless inferred that said parties were joint owners in the mineral property. In this we think he was mistaken. By virtue of the deed O’Neal became the owner of the title in fee simple to the property conveyed, and included in the lease thereafter executed, subject only to the limited reservation of a one-sixteenth interest in the mineral. He was the unconditional owner, when the lease was executed, otf fifteen-sixteenths of the mineral, and of the entire surface of the land, and he could only be injured by entry upon the surface, and had the right to grant on any terms he might choose and for any purpose the privilege to enter thereon. 'The joining of Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
23 S.W.2d 257, 180 Ark. 901, 1930 Ark. LEXIS 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oneal-v-bank-of-parkdale-ark-1930.