Rocky Mountain Fuel Company v. Heflin

366 P.2d 577, 148 Colo. 415, 16 Oil & Gas Rep. 675, 1961 Colo. LEXIS 428
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedNovember 20, 1961
Docket19675
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 366 P.2d 577 (Rocky Mountain Fuel Company v. Heflin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rocky Mountain Fuel Company v. Heflin, 366 P.2d 577, 148 Colo. 415, 16 Oil & Gas Rep. 675, 1961 Colo. LEXIS 428 (Colo. 1961).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Day.

Plaintiff in error will be referred to as the Fuel Company, and defendants in error as plaintiffs, as they appeared in the trial court.

Plaintiffs filed their complaint under Rule 105 R.C.P. Colo., alleging ownership and possession of the surface of their respective lands therein described, and named the Fuel Company among others as defendants because of some claim of right, title, or interest therein adverse to plaintiffs.

*417 The Fuel Company is here by writ of error, seeking to reverse a judgment and decree quieting plaintiffs’ title to the surface only of the lands and holding the Fuel Company to have no right, title or interest therein.

The Fuel Company filed its answer and counterclaim alleging, among other things, that certain reservations were contained in a deed to plaintiffs’ predecessors in title and that the Fuel Company had reserved rights in the surface of the land in question. There is no dispute as to the presence of these reservations in the deed to plaintiffs’ predecessors in title. The only question presented is the validity of the reservations.

The deed involved was executed by Wilbur Newton, the Trustee of “The Rocky Mountain Fuel Company, a Wyoming Corporation” in a reorganization proceeding in the United States District Court for the District of Colorado. The Trustee by court order had become vested with all the property and title thereto of the Wyoming corporation. The United States Court subsequently approved a plan of reorganization providing for the formation of a new corporation to be known as “The Rocky Mountain Fuel Company, a Delaware Corporation,” in which was vested the undisposed of property of the former Wyoming corporation.

As part of the reorganization proceedings in the United States District Court, and in compliance with the orders and approval of that court, the Trustee made and executed the deed to the predecessors in title of the plaintiffs. This deed contains the reservations in dispute here, and, because the trial court held that certain of them were in violation of the “Rule Against Perpetuities” and therefore void, it is necessary to quote the pertinent oaragraphs in full for an understanding and determination of the correctness of the judgment.

Following that part of the deed conveying the subject land and following a recital of certain exceptions including existing rights of way for railroads, public roads, ditches, reservoirs, power lines, telephone lines, etc., *418 situate on said lands, and except also the surface of certain lands sold for Marshall Lake and Dam, the deed then recites:

“ ‘Said surface rights to be sold subject to right of ingress and egress; also subject to all existing rights-of-way; the Trustee reserves for himself and the Debtor all mineral rights, including, but not limited to, fire-clay, coal, oil and gas. The Trustee reserves for himself and the Debtor the right to re-purchase any portion of said surface for rights-of-way for railroads, pipe lines, reservoirs, power lines, construction of tipple, or for any other purpose that is necessary in carrying on existing mining operations or in carrying on future mining operations. In addition to the right of the Trustee on behalf of himself and the Debtor to re-purchase any portion of the surface necessary to carry on present or future mining operations, the Trustee on behalf of himself and the Debtor also reserves the right to re-purchase not to exceed thirty (30) acres of the above-described land for housing facilities, in carrying on mining operations. The Trustee on behalf of the Debtor agrees to pay the purchasers the agreed sum of Twenty-five Dollars ($25.00) per acre for all land so re-purchased by it. The Trustee reserves for himself and the Debtor the right to select the lands to be re-purchased at the time or times of making such re-purchase. Trustee on behalf of the Debtor further agrees to fence the camp and plant and put in, at its own expense, proper cattle guards at the entrances. Neither the Trustee nor the Debtor is to be liable to purchasers, or their heirs or assigns, for any damage which might be caused by subsidence of the surface as a result of any mining operations conducted by Trustee, Debtor, or their successors. All of such damages are hereby expressly waived and relinquished by the purchasers as part of the consideration for this purchase.’
“The above surface lands are sold subject to the further reservation that the said Trustee, on behalf of him *419 self and the Debtor, shall have the right to prospect for oil and gas and to carry on all necessary operations for the production of oil and gas, and the rights reserved for mining purposes above shall be construed to include operations for the development and production of oil and gas.” (Emphasis supplied.)

The word “Debtor” refers to the Wyoming corporation whose property rights defendant Fuel Company now owns.

At the trial the parties stipulated to most of the facts. There was testimony concerning the marketability of the subject lands in view of these reservations in the deed for the purpose of establishing that the reservations constituted an unreasonable restraint upon alienation and were therefore void. Defendant objected to this testimony and the court sustained the objection, deciding the issues solely on the basis of the Rule Against Perpetuities.

In the judgment and decree, the trial court found that the plaintiffs were the owners of the surface with mineral rights reserved to the fuel company, but also found: “* * * that these rights to re-purchase are void, invalid and inoperative as being in violation of the common law rule against perpetuities, and therefore that nothing in the nature of a right or option to re-purchase any of said lands was retained by the said Wilbur Newton, Trustee, grantor in said instrument and no right of any such nature or description passed to the Rocky Mountain Fuel Company, a Delaware Corporation, by conveyance nor by operation of law in said reorganization proceedings; that no defendant herein has any title or interest in or to the property described herein;”

The Fuel Company objects to the quoted findings and urges here:

1. That the trial court erred in voiding reservations in a deed because they were pursuant to order of the United States District Court, and further that plaintiffs *420 should seek remedy in the United States Court and not in the State Court.

2. In the alternative, if we determine that the trial court had jurisdiction to try the issue of validity of the reservations, then the court erred in holding that the right, unlimited in time, of an owner of the mineral estate to purchase such portions of the over-lying surface estate upon payment of a specified price and only when necessary to carry on existing or future mining operations was in the nature of a naked option violative of the common law rule against perpetuities.

As to the Fuel Company’s first objection, it is set out in the motion for new trial:

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Bluebook (online)
366 P.2d 577, 148 Colo. 415, 16 Oil & Gas Rep. 675, 1961 Colo. LEXIS 428, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rocky-mountain-fuel-company-v-heflin-colo-1961.