Penner v. State Ex Rel. Commissioners of Land Office

1955 OK 340, 302 P.2d 144, 5 Oil & Gas Rep. 238, 1955 Okla. LEXIS 649
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 15, 1955
Docket36827
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1955 OK 340 (Penner v. State Ex Rel. Commissioners of Land Office) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Penner v. State Ex Rel. Commissioners of Land Office, 1955 OK 340, 302 P.2d 144, 5 Oil & Gas Rep. 238, 1955 Okla. LEXIS 649 (Okla. 1955).

Opinion

HALLEY, Justice.

This is an appeal by Katherine Penner '*and husband from a judgment of the District ■ Court of Custer County, Oklahoma. ■ They had sought a decree adjudging them to be the owners of áll the surface and one-half of the minerals in 160 acres of land and quieting their title thereto.

Plaintiffs named as defendants the State ex rel. Commissioners of the Land Office, the County Commissioners and County Treasurer and H. H. Darks. -Judgment was rendered -against, the County Commissioners and the County Treasurer and they filed no motion for a new trial and no Cross-appeal, and need not be mentioned further in this opinion. H. L. Hunt was made a party defendant and filed a cross-petition and is a party to this appeal. The Commissioners of the Land Office will be referred to as Commissioners, the plaintiffs as the Penners and the other parties by name.

The judgment. of the trial court was against the Penners on their claim to one-half of the minerals, and H. L. Plunt was given a money judgment against them in the sum of $760 and $125 attorney fees, and the Commissioners were adjudged to be the owners of the surface and one-half of the minerals, subject to their Certificate of Purchase to the Penners, who were adjudged to own a right in the surface rights oilly, and H. H. Darks was held to own one-half of the minerals, subject to oil and gas lease in favor of H. L. Hunt. Motion for a new trial by the Penners was overruled and they have appealed.

*147 A brief history of what preceded the present action is' deemed necessary to an understanding of the issues presented.'

K. V. Lucas and, wife had acquired a ■ one-half interest in the mineral rights on December 17, 1928, and it was admitted that the party who conveyed to them had acquired title to one-half of the minerals prior to the mortgage in favor of the Commissioners which was later foreclosed. It is not disputed that K. V. Lucas and wife, who conveyed a one-half interest in the minerals to H. H. Darks, had a good title thereto prior to the date of said mortgage.

This undivided one-half interest in the minerals had already been severed from the land when the Commissioners accepted a mortgage from the owners of the surface rights and one-h'alf of the minerals. This mortgage was foreclosed and H. H. Darks was named as a party defendant. He contacted the Commissioners and was informed that the foreclosure action would be dismissed as to him prior to judgment/ This • was not done and foreclosure judgment covered the surface rights and all of ‘the minerals.

H. H. Darks evidently relied upon his agreement with an attorney for the Com-' missioners, defaulted and the foreclosure judgment obtained by the Commissioners-apparently' covered all interest in the land, which was advertised and sold in 1935, and sheriff’s deed completing the sale undertook to convey to the Commissioners a complete title to both the surface and all of the minerals. . ' ■

In 1942, the Commissioners issued a notice of sale of this and other tracts of land, stating that the purchaser would receive “an undivided 50 per centum of all oil and gas and other minerals.”

At the public sale had under this notice,the plaintiff, Katherine Penner, became the purchaser. She was issued a Certificate of Purchase, reserving to the - Commissioners 50 per-cent of all minerals. -

In 1946, H. H.' Darks -filed a suit iii the' District Court ¿gainst the Commissioners' to cancel the sheriff’s deed in the fore-' closure proceedings in so far as it covered his oné-half interest of the minerals. Only the Commissioners were made a party defendant. , In 1948, judgment was rendered for Darks decreeing that he owned one-half of the 'minerals. The Penners apparently had no notice of this suit and in'11946, they had executed an oil and gas lease to H. L. Hunt covering one-half of the minerals.

The Penners claimed that they had no notice of the claim of Darks and no knowledge' that they did not own one-half of the minerals until the early part of 1954, when they filed the present action, praying that they be adjudged to own all of the surface ■ rights and one-half of the minerals.

The Commissioners answered and alleged that at the time of their sale to the Penners they believed that they owned all of the minerals and set up the judgment in favor of H., H. Darks, which, -left the Commissioners only one-half . of the minerals, which they were .required to reserve under Chapter 28, Art. 3,- Section 19(d), Session Laws of 1935, 64 O.S.1951 § 82(d). ' H. H. Darks answered and set up his ■ ownership of one-half of the minerals and ■ his judgment therefor against the Commissioners. ’

The parties entered into a stipulation covering practically all of the history of the facts involved, and it was agreed that copies of all the proceedings mentioned in the foreclosure suit and the suit of H. H. Darks against the Commissioners be admitted -in evidence, along with copies of oil and gas leases executed by the Penners and H. H. Darks to-H. L. Hunt and the amount of' delay rentals and bonuses paid to lessors' by Hunt, who had paid to- the Penners $760 and to H. H. Darks the sum of $600.- - It-was agreed that there had been no production.

It was expressly ¿greed that the conveyance of one-half of the minerals claimed’ by' H. H. Darks preceded the acquisition of any interest in the lahd by the Commissioner’s by'their mortgage and that, when H. H. Darks was made a party defendant *148 in the foreclosure proceedings by the Com-, . missioners, an attorney for the Commissioners advised him that the foreclosure action would be dismissed as to him, but that such promise was not kept.

Plaintiffs complain of the decree in that it holds that the Commissioners did not - by their sale, to the Penners convey any . interest in the minerals. This question is discussed under two propositions, (A) and (B). Under (A) it is contended that when the Commissioners sold the surface and one-half of the minerals in • 1942, it was the law of Oklahoma by judicial construction of Sections 10, 176, 231 and 265, Title 12 O.S.1951, that in a foreclosure action under facts here involved, the question of paramount title could be litigated and foreclosure judgment cóuld not be collaterally attacked by a party served but who defaulted. In support of this proposition, Ciesler v. Simpson, 187 Okl. 641, 105 P.2d 227, is cited as the law in effect, when the sale to' Katherine Penner was made despite the fact that in a later decision the law was construed differently.

Under (B) it is asserted that the Commissioners had authority to decide in good faith what mineral interest they owned and could sell, and upon such decision made a sale, this decision was binding' and the sale made thereon valid.

There appears to be no question but that the question of paramount title may be litigated in a mortgage foreclosure •: action, and that the property, rights ac-' quired in • compliance with one construe-: tion of a statute may not be lost on the ground that a different construction was later given to the same statute, as held by this Court in Ciesler v. Simpson, supra, and Bagby v. Martin, 118 Okl. 244, 247 P. 404.

However, our attention is called to the fact that in the foreclosure action by the Commissioners wherein it was simply alleged that H. H.

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Related

State Ex Rel. Commissioners of the Land Office v. Butler
753 P.2d 1334 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1988)
Norman v. State
597 P.2d 715 (Montana Supreme Court, 1979)

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1955 OK 340, 302 P.2d 144, 5 Oil & Gas Rep. 238, 1955 Okla. LEXIS 649, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/penner-v-state-ex-rel-commissioners-of-land-office-okla-1955.