Patterson v. May

29 N.W.2d 547, 239 Iowa 602, 1947 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 362
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedNovember 11, 1947
DocketNo. 46990.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 29 N.W.2d 547 (Patterson v. May) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Patterson v. May, 29 N.W.2d 547, 239 Iowa 602, 1947 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 362 (iowa 1947).

Opinion

SMITH, J.

The 93 acres will be referred to as tract A, the 27 acres as tract B. The controversy involves the ownership of the coal and mineral (claimed by both plaintiff and defendant Jensen) underlying the entire 120 acres. Plaintiff is the conceded owner of- the entire surface estate. The court held that she also owned all the subsurface rights of tract B, but only a fractional interest in the subsurface of tract A. Both parties appeal. Defendant Jensen is designated as appellant. Defendant May participated in the trial but has not appealed or filed any brief here.

We state the respective contentions without reciting the details of the somewhat voluminous pleadings. There is little real factual conflict in the evidence bearing on the issues on this appeal.

*606 Prior to November 9, 1914, tract A and other lands were owned by the widow (Mary A. Buncombe) and beirs of John F. Duncombe of Fort Dodge. On that date partition proceedings were commenced resulting in two referee deeds which together conveyed tract A, but reserved to the owners “all coal, coal mines, minerals, mineral products, oil and gypsum beneath the surface.” One deed omitted the words “coal mines” in the exception. Thereafter (December 19, 1916) the final report of the referee was approved and he was discharged. The final report did not disclose this retention of subsurface rights but the form of the deeds had already been presented to and approved by the court.

Plaintiff acquired title to the 120 acres from one Schall and wife by contract, dated September 20, 1935, and resultant warranty deed dated November 19,' 1938. Both instruments excepted “coal and mineral underlying” tract A but there was no such exception or reservation as to tract B. In the transaction Schall also assigned to plaintiff, on September 20, 1935, a tax sale certificate, dated August 5, 1935, covering “mineral reserve” under the entire acreage. However, no tax deed ever issued under it as redemption was made May 8, 1937, in the name of “L. Y. Iiarpel by James L. May.”

Mesne conveyances of tract A from the referee’s deeds down to September 3, 1925, are not shown nor do the source and manner of devolution of title of tract B to that date appear. From that date however the chain of title of the Schalls, plaintiff’s immediate grantors, to both tracts as described, is unbroken.

From 1916 to 1918, inclusive, and from 1923 to 1930, inclusive, there was no attempted separation of surface and subsurface estates as to either tract for pimp ose of taxation. There was a separation affecting a part of both tracts in 1919 to 1922, inclusive, but no taxes were paid on the “mineral reserve” (separately assessed to Mary A. Buncombe) and they were never carried forward. The fact seems to have no significance here.

In 1931, however, and in succeeding years, the tax lists showed (on pages separate from the pages showing the regular *607 land assessments) various tracts, including this 120 acres, with the words “Mineral Reserve” written at the top of each page but not repeated in the various property descriptions. The regular land assessment lists however showed no exception or reservation or separation, or any reference to an attempted separate assessment of any subsurface estate, nor did they reveal that the entire ownership was not included in the regular land assessment.

From 1931 to 1935, inclusive, the “mineral reserve” under this entire 120 acres was in the manner just described assessed to L. V. XIarpel. How or why the separate assessment of the so-called “mineral reserve” was made or how L. V. Harpel came to be listed as owner, or the source of his title, if any, does not appear. The assessor testified he made the assessment because it appeared in the book furnished him by the auditor. There is no explanation showing why the auditor so listed it as it had not previously appeared on the tax books.

In 1936 and 1937 this “mineral reserve” was in the same manner listed as assessed to “L. V. Harpel Est.” Thereafter to and including 1943 the name of defendant James L. May appeared in the assessment and in 194-4 plaintiff’s name as to, tract A and May’s name as to tract B.

The assessment rolls for 1937 are in evidence. One return shows the entire 120 acres with no reservation in name of E. L. and Ida Bchall but signed and verified by plaintiff.

Another return, on a 1930 blank with the figure 7 written over the cipher, shows description of the entire tract with words “mineral reserve” written below. The return is in name of “L. V. Harpel Est.” address “Mrs. L. Y. Harpel, Boone, la.” The affidavit is unsigned with word “nonresident” written in.

Rolls for other years are not shown.

On December 7, 1936, this “mineral reserve” underlying the entire 120 acres was sold for the taxes of 1934 and 1935 and certificate issued to defendant James L. May who received tax deed dated July 16, 1940, and conveyed by warranty deed to defendant Jensen on October 9, 1943. The tax deed described “the mineral rights under * * *”; the deed to Jensen covered “the coal and mineral underlying,” etc. The variations in descriptions may not be important.

*608 In the meantime on April 9, 1937, tbe widow and son as sole heirs of L. V. Harpel entered into a contract to sell defendant May the “Mineral Reserve underlying” the 120 acres and on January 2, 1940, they executed to him a quitclaim deed. May redeemed (May 8, 1937) from the August 5, 1935, tax sale (already referred to) presumably on the strength of this April 9th contract, as it bound him to pay “all taxes now due and delinquent and assessments that may accrue on said property * *

On July 12, 1937, said defendant May executed a “coal lease” to certain parties (who subsequently assigned to defendant Jensen) covering the 120 acres and some adjoining land in the section next west. By this “lease,” lessor agreed to “sell and convey all the coal that is or may underlie the surface of” the described land.

Under deed to her from Schalls, plaintiff of course claims entire ownership of the 120 acres not expressly reserved or excepted. She also claims to own in addition the subsurface rights to tract A (excepted in said deed) basing this latter claim on two other conveyances: (1) A quitclaim deed, dated February 25, 1944, from a Duncombe heir, one J. Augustine Woolington, covering all grantor’s “undivided interest * * * in and to the coal and mineral underlying” tract A; and (2) A referee’s deed (hereinafter referred to) dated May 29, 1944, purporting to convey “the coal and minerals underlying” tract A.

Defendant Jensen of course relies on his warranty deed from defendant May which in turn must be based on the tax deed to May, dated July 16, 1940, or upon the conveyance from the Harpels, or upon both.

The trial court upheld plaintiff’s claim under the Wooling-ton deed to the extent of at least an undivided two fifteenths of the described subsurface estate in tract A and quieted her title to the entire surface estate in tract A and to the entire estate, surface and subsurface, in tract B, decreeing the tax deed to defendant May and the referee’s deed to plaintiff both void.

We first consider the decree, adjudging the tax deed to be void.

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Bluebook (online)
29 N.W.2d 547, 239 Iowa 602, 1947 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 362, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patterson-v-may-iowa-1947.