Rippey v. Steatite Co.

28 Va. Cir. 255, 1992 Va. Cir. LEXIS 286
CourtNelson County Circuit Court
DecidedJune 15, 1992
DocketCase No. CH-3036
StatusPublished

This text of 28 Va. Cir. 255 (Rippey v. Steatite Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nelson County Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rippey v. Steatite Co., 28 Va. Cir. 255, 1992 Va. Cir. LEXIS 286 (Va. Super. Ct. 1992).

Opinion

By Judge J. Michael Gamble

This is an action brought by the Complainants (“Rippey”) pursuant to § 55-153 et seq. of the Code of Virginia to extinguish mineral rights on a parcel containing 9.455 acres recently owned by Rippey. The general issue in this case is whether the mineral rights should be extinguished on this property.

The initial action was brought by Rippey against the Steatite Company and parties unknown who may be successors in title to the Steatite Company. An order of publication was duly run as required by law. Nobody initially appeared in response to the order of publication, and accordingly, a decree extinguishing the mineral rights was entered by the Court on February 13, 1992. Within twenty-one days thereafter, on March 5, 1992, the Court vacated its final decree dated February 13, 1992, pursuant to the motion of S. Vance Wilkins, Jr., who claimed ownership of the mineral rights as successor to Steatite. Thereafter, S. Vance Wilkins, Jr., filed an answer and cross-bill asking, among other things, that the Court not extinguish the mineral rights on the subject real estate.

[256]*256Ernest L. Jones and Nancy L. Jones purchased by deed of bargain and sale dated February 14, 1992, thefee simple interest in the 9.455 acres from Rippey. Therefore, in the period between the entry of the decree on February 13, 1992, and the vacation of the decree on March 5, 1992, Jones acquired the fee simple surface title from Rippey.

The 9.455 acres acquired by Rippey was a portion of a tract of land containing 454 acres more or less formerly owned by W. Howard Carter and others. The mineral rights on this 454 acres were conveyed to Robert B. Honeyman by deed dated November 14, 1907, and recorded in the Circuit Court of Nelson County in Deed Book 33, page 217. The 454 acres is shown on a plat by Holmes, Wyland and Brown dated April 22, 1907, entered as Defendant’s Exhibit # 5 in this action. The 9.455 acres owned by Rippey is a portion of parcel # 8, containing 30.5 acres shown on such plat.

The deed from Carter and others to Honeyman in 1907 reserving the mineral rights was admitted as Defendant’s Exhibit # 6. Such deed grants to Honeyman all mines, minerals, stones, and quarry rights on the 454 acres, together with the right to enter upon any part of the land for the purpose of mining, quarrying, and manufacturing minerals or stones. The deed from Carter to Honeyman further grants to Honeyman the right to erect all buildings necessary or convenient for mining, quarrying, and manufacturing all stones, with the number and character of all buildings to be determined by Honeyman and his assigns. The deed also gives the right to dump on any part of the 454 acres all refuse arising from any mining, quarrying, or manufacturing of any minerals and stones, and the right to build dams on and flood or overflow any part of the land. Also, the right is given to construct any highways or roads over any part of the property.

The chain of title to the mineral rights leads directly from Honey-man to Wilkins. Defendant’s Exhibit # 4 sets forth the chain of title. At one point, it was thought that there was a gap in the chain of title by virtue of the failure to record a deed dated March 30, 1915, from Alan J. Fox, Trustee in Bankruptcy of the Steatite Company, to Daniel J. Carroll. However, this deed is recorded at Deed Book 42, page 241, in the Clerk’s Office of the Circuit Court of Nelson County. The failure to find this deed was apparently because there is an indexing error. Also, there are a few typographical and spelling errors, but no erroneous deed book references. (See erroneous reference to “J. T. [257]*257Carroll” in Defendant’s Exhibit # 3, pages 23-30, rather than “D. J. Carroll.”) The deed for the 9.455 acres to Rippey dated July 25, 1989, recorded at Deed Book 283, page 473, specifically conveys the 9.455 acres subject to the mineral rights granted by Carter and others to Honeyman in 1907. (Defendant’s Exhibit # 2.) Also, the prior deeds in title in the Rippey chain of title convey the property subject to the 1907 mineral rights reservation.

The evidence at trial presented by both the. Complainants (Rippey) and Defendant (Wilkins) established that there are commercially valuable soapstone deposits remaining on portions of the original 454 acres. The testimony of Richard Sperry, the former plant engineer; Kenneth Carroll, who has been associated with the soapstone plant for decades; and Phillip McClung, a geologist, indicate that there is still soapstone remaining on this property. According to the testimony, most of this soapstone seems to be congregated in the vicinity of parcels 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, and 7 on Defendant’s Exhibit # 5. There were twenty-one holes drilled in 1961 as set forth on the report of Phillip McClung, a geologist (Defendant’s Exhibit # 16). Most of these borings were on parcel # 5, with a possibility that they may have been on parcel # 8. Mr. McClung testified that in his opinion there are no commercially valuable soapstone deposits on parcel # 8 as shown on Defendant’s Exhibit # 5. No witness for the Defendant, Wilkins, could conclusively say that there is commercially valuable soapstone on parcel # 8 or the 9.455 acres located within parcel # 8. Kenneth Carroll thinks that possibly some of the twenty-one holes drilled in the vicinity of parcel # 5 shown on Defendant’s Exhibit # 5 could have been drilled on a portion of parcel # 8; however, he is not sure that this is correct.

Section 55-154 of the Code of Virginia gives the Complainants a prima facie presumption that there are no commercial minerals on the property if the right to do so has not been reserved in writing made within thirty-five years prior to the suit, and no taxes have been paid within like period, or the right to mine has not been exercised within a like period. In the instant case, it is clear that Mr. Wilkins has paid the mineral taxes on such property as indicated by Defendant’s Exhibits # 12, # 13, # 14, and # 15. Also, as indicated by the testimony of Kenneth Carroll, mining has actually occurred on the 454 acres within the past thirty-five years. Thus, the Complainants do not have the benefit of the prima facie presumption.

[258]*258Accordingly, pursuant to § 55-155, the Complainants are required to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that there are no commercial minerals on the subject real estate. Rippey maintains that the title of Wilkins to the mineral rights is defective by virtue of a gap caused in the chain of title by the failure to correctly index the deed dated March 30, 1915, from Fox, Trustee, to Carroll. Rippey cites § 55-96 of the Code of Virginia, 15 Michie’s Jurisprudence, Recording Acts, and Hunton v. Wood, 101 Va. 54 (1903), for the general legal proposition that failure to record a deed renders the- deed void as to subsequent purchasers for valuable consideration without notice. This position by Rippey is incorrect for several reasons. First, in Jones v. Folks, 149 Va. 140, 144-145, 140 S.E. 126 (1927), the Supreme Court of Virginia held that “the admission to record is in law notice to the world.” Jones v. Folks was a case where there had been delivery of the deed to the clerk but the clerk had failed to correctly index the deed. In that case, the issue was whether in order for a recorded deed to constitute constructive notice to the parties, it must not only be delivered to the clerk but also properly indexed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
28 Va. Cir. 255, 1992 Va. Cir. LEXIS 286, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rippey-v-steatite-co-vaccnelson-1992.