Robinson v. Eastern Gulf Oil Co.

244 S.W. 914, 196 Ky. 385, 1922 Ky. LEXIS 544
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMay 12, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 244 S.W. 914 (Robinson v. Eastern Gulf Oil Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robinson v. Eastern Gulf Oil Co., 244 S.W. 914, 196 Ky. 385, 1922 Ky. LEXIS 544 (Ky. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Moorman —

Affirming.

The former appeal of this case was disposed of in Eastern Gulf Oil Company, etc. v. Lovelace, etc., 188 Ky. 238. The judgment was reversed aid the cause remanded to the Lee circuit court for trial on the equity side of the docket. In the opinion the court said:

“From a reading of the authorities, supra, we-are convinced that the defendants in this case are entitled to have the writing of May 6, 1909, reformed so as to ex[387]*387press the true intention of the parties in executing it, if, upon proof heard, it fails to do so. . . . We refrain from expressing an opinion as to the effect of the paper in controversy if construed upon its face only, since its language affords room for two different and distinct constructions. If there existed no other equitable consideration for the admission of extraneous proof to sho.w the intent and purpose of the parties in executing it, the ambiguity appearing upon its face would afford such grounds.”

On the second trial in the circuit court the only issue was whether the paper in controversy did or did not express the true intention of the parties in executing it. The chancellor at that hearing’ held that it was intended as a release of a lien on the land described, and, accordingly, adjudged a reformation of it to conform to the intention of the parties in executing it.

It is shown in the proof that the Millers Creek Lumber Company in 1905 acquired a tract of land of more than 2,000 acres in Lee county, several miles from Beattyville; that its purpose in acquiring the land was to market the timber on it, and that it employed John S. Robinson and W. B. Chester to assist in the cutting and removing of the timber; that by the latter part of 1907 practically all of the merchantable timber had been removed and on January 4, 1908, the lumber company sold about 2,000 acres of the land, including all of its original purchase, except a tract of 148 acres which it had previously sold to Malin Jones, to John S. Robinson, for $3,000.00. Of this amount $1,800 was paid in cash, and for the balance John S. Robinson executed his promissory notes to secure which a lien on the land was retained by the Millers Creek Lumber Company. In making the conveyance the lumber company reserved one-half of all minerals in and under the land.

It also appears in the record that before purchasing the 2,000 acre tract, John S. Robinson had negotiated with different persons for the sale of various parts of it; that on January 20, 1908, he conveyed to George S. Barnett 100 acres on Cave’s fork (the land in dispute), reserving in the deed all minerals in and under the land. The deed recited that Robinson derived title from the Millers Creek Lumber Company, under deed of date January 4, 1908. All of the timber on the 2,000 acre tract had not been removed when the conveyance of January 4,1908, was made and the right of entry'for the pur[388]*388pose of removing it was reserved by the grantor in that deed. On December 7, 1910, after all marketable timber had been removed, the Millers Creek Lumber Company, in order to perfect the title in John S. Robinson, conveyed to him the timber then on. the land, and in that instrument reiterated its reserved' right to one-half of the coal and other minerals in and under the land. Robinson made conveyances-of different parts of the land, beginning January 20, 1908, and, finally, by deed of December 8, 1910, to D. B. Pendergrass, disposed of his remaining interest, under the deeds of January 4, 1908, and December 7, 1910, including all his mineral rights. In the previous conveyances mentioned he in some instances excepted or reserved all the minerals, in others one-half of them, in others one-half of the coal, and in others he made no exceptions or reservations whatever.

The tract of 100 acres on Cave’s fork, conveyed by Robinson to Barnett on January 20, 1908, was sold by Barnett to Jack Spicer and conveyed to the latter’s wife, Maggie Spicer, May 17, 1909, the coal being reserved. However, none of the mineral rights passed under the deed, for Barnett had acquired none in his deed from Robinson. At that time there was a purchase money lien in favor of Robinson on the 100 acre tract for $175.00. There was also a lien for $1,200.00 on the entire tract of 2,000 acres in favor of the Millers Creek Lumber Company under the deed of January 4, 1908. The evidence shows that Spicer, learning of the lien of the Millers Creek Lumber Company, refused to consummate the purchase until that lien was released and also required a release of the lien in favor of John S. Robinson. It appears that Robinson, Spicer and Barnett went to the office of the county court clerk in Beattyville to arrange for the release of those liens, and while there the writing of May 6, 1909, was prepared by Gr. W. Pendergrass, a deputy clerk in his father’s office, with the assistance and suggestions of John S. Robinson.

The appellants, heirs of John S. Robinson and their lessees, claim that the writing of May 6, 1909, was intended as a conveyance of one-half of the minerals, except the coal, in the 100 acre tract. They hdmit that before his death, Robinson had disposed of the interest that he acquired in the 2,000 .acre tract, under the deeds from the Millers Creek Lumber Company-of January 4, 1908, and December 7,1910. But they say that while employed by that company in cutting the timber from the [389]*3892.000 acre tract, be discovered a mineral deposit on Cave’s fork within the boundary of the 100 acres and conceived the idea that it was very valuable and with that in mind purchased the 100 acres before acquiring title to the 2,(300 acre tract, or at any rate purchased it independently of the larger tract, believing that it would make him and his heirs rich/ and that the writing of May 6,1909, was executed to effectuate that purchase.

For appellees it is contended that the intent and purpose of the writing of May 6,1909, was to release the lien on the 100 acre tract included in the boundary of the 2.000 acres, which existed by reason of the unpaid purchase notes of $1,200.00; and thalt Pendergrass, who prepared the writing, was young and inexperienced, did not know how to write a deed of release and thus failed to express in the instrument the true intent and meaning of the parties to it.

The recited consideration in the writing’ of May 6, 1909, is $175.00 cash in hand paid. The granting clause is in the form of an absolute conveyance of one-half of the fee, except the coal. Immediately preceding the signature “Millers Creek Lumber Company, by J. Will Clay, president,” are the following words written with pen and ink: “We release all purchase money liens we have on all the land J. S. Eobinson sold to John Barnett on Cave’s fork, Lee county, Kentucky.” Were it not for these words there could be no question that the writing is an absolute deed of conveyance. But the words written with pen and ink following the typewritten words render the instrument ambiguous on its face as was held on the former appeal of this case.

In the absence of fraud the general rule is that the reformation of a written instrument to conform to the intention of the parties to it will not be decreed unless the proof as to its intent and purpose is full, clear and convincing. This necessarily includes the showing of a mutual mistake in its execution. There is a full discussion of the subject in Ison, et al. v. Sanders, 163 Ky. 605, with the citation of numerous decisions of this court and others supporting the doctrine.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
244 S.W. 914, 196 Ky. 385, 1922 Ky. LEXIS 544, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robinson-v-eastern-gulf-oil-co-kyctapp-1922.