Salmen Brick & Lumber Co. v. Williams

50 So. 2d 130, 210 Miss. 560, 1951 Miss. LEXIS 294
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 22, 1951
Docket37769
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 50 So. 2d 130 (Salmen Brick & Lumber Co. v. Williams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Salmen Brick & Lumber Co. v. Williams, 50 So. 2d 130, 210 Miss. 560, 1951 Miss. LEXIS 294 (Mich. 1951).

Opinions

[563]*563Ethridge, C.

This case involves a situation where a grantor, who had property conveyed to it with a one-half mineral exception, subsequently itself conveyed the property, using the same language which was used for the original mineral exception. The question is whether, under the facts to be presently described, the second grantor conveyed exactly what it received, or retained for itself the remaining one-half of the minerals.

This case is a consolidation by agreement of counsel of two separate appeals from final decrees of the chancery court of Pearl River County, Mississippi, adjudicating the title to one-half of the minerals in separate tracts of land. The deeds under which the parties claim are the same, with a common source of title, and the subject-matter and issues are identical and will be so treated in this opinion. In one of these actions Mrs. Trinity Tourne Williams, Mrs. J. C. Swartzwelder, and the Shell Oil Company filed their bill of complaint against Salmen Brick and Lumber Company, Ltd., and Raymond [564]*564F. Salmen, and simultaneously therewith G. H. Williams, Ed Frierson, and the Shell Oil Company filed their bill against the same parties.

In 1922 the Edward Hines Yellow Pine Trustees were the owners of the lands in question situated in Pearl River County, and on April 10, 1922, the said trustees conveyed certain lands by quitclaim deed to the Salmen Brick and Lumber Company, a corporation. At the end of this deed was the following clause: “Reserving forever from this conveyance, unto the Grantors, their successors, heirs and assigns, one-half of all oil, minerals or gases that may be on, in or under said lands or any part thereof, with the right to enter on said lands at any time, to explore for and remove such oils, minerals or gases, either from or under said lands or any adjoining or contiguous lands, in any manner and with any instrumentality of any and every kind and description that may be found necessary for the direct or indirect use and enjoyment of the estate so reserved; any entry or operation upon such lands, however, is to be made and carried on in such a manner as not to prevent or unreasonably interfere with the work and operation on said lands of the grantee, its successors and assigns, this reservation includes the right to remove oils, minerals, or gases that may be on, in or under adjoining lands, either belonging to the grantors herein, or in which they have reserved oil, mineral, or gas rights over the lands hereby conveyed, including all necessary rights of way on, or under the surface for such pipe line or pipe lines as may be necessary.” This deed was filed for record on June 8, 1922.

On March 29, 1926, the Salmen Brick and Lumber Company conveyed the same and other lands by general warranty deed to the Williams Yellow Pine Company, a corporation. The deed conveyed a large amount of land, including several thousand acres not affected by the 1922 deed. After the “convey and warrant” clause, it conveyed to the grantees all of the timber on certain [565]*565described lands, and then had the following clause: “also the following described lands in fee simple, to wit: . ’ ’ Following that was a description of several thousand acres not covered in the 1922 deed, and also all of the lands covered by the 1922 deed. Following those descriptions was the following clause: “reserving, however, from that conveyance as to the lands situated in” (here describing exactly only the lands conveyed in the 1922 deed); and following which was this clause: “unto the grantors, their successors, heirs and assigns, one half of all oil, minerals or gases that may be on, in or under said lands or any part thereof, with the right to enter on said lands at any time, to explore for and remove such oils, minerals or gases, either from or under said lands or any adjoining or contiguous lands, in any manner and with any instrumentality of any and every kind and description that may be found for the direct or indirect use and enjoyment of the estate so reserved; any entry or operation upon such lands, however, is to be made and carried on in such a manner as not to prevent or unreasonably interfere with the work and operation on said lands of the grantee, its successors and assigns; this reservation includes the rigid to remove oils, minerals, or gases that may be on, in or under adjoining lands, either belonging to the grantors herein, or in which they have reserved oil, mineral, or gas rights over the lands hereby conveyed, including all necessary rights of way on, or under the surface for such pipe line or pipe lines as may be necessary.” This deed was filed for recordation two days after its execution.

In 1948 the Salmen Company, one of defendants below and appellants here, executed a deed conveying to Raymond F. Salmen, one of the defendants below and appellants here, a one-fourth interest in the minerals in these lands. From 1940' to 1944, appellees, the complainants below, claiming -under the Williams Yellow Pine Company, executed various mineral deeds and leases on these lands. In 1949 appellees instituted the present actions [566]*566against appellants in the chancery court of Pearl River County. The bill of complaint set up the foregoing facts and prayed for a removal of the clouds asserted by appellants, cancellation of appellants’ claims to one-half of the minerals, and for a confirmation and quieting of appellees’ title thereto. The answer of appellants denied that the effect of the 1926 deed was to convey to the Williams Company one-half of the minerals. The final decrees in the chancery court cancelled any claims asserted by appellants, claiming under the Salmen Company, to the one-half mineral interest conveyed in 1922 to the Salmen Company, and subsequently conveyed to the Williams Company, and adjudicated that appellees, claiming under the latter Company, were the owners of the one-half mineral interest.

The particular issue is the effect of the “reservation” or exception clause in the second deed of 1926. We hold that it merely described the interest owned by the Salmen Company, was designed to protect the grantor’s warranty, the grantee therein received all of the minerals (one-half) owned by the grantor, and affirm the Chancery Court’s decrees.

The 1926 deed considered alone unambiguously conveyed the surface and one-half of the minerals to the grantee, the Williams Yellow Pine Company. It conveyed by general warranty the “fee simple” title, reserving one-half of the minerals. That deed in no way indicates that the grantor owned only one-half of the minerals, and on its face it vested in appellees’ predecessor in title, the Williams Company, one-half of the minerals. Yet appellants say that the grantor therein failed to convey what it warranted it was conveying, because under the precedent exception in the Hines Trustees, the grantor, Salmen Company, had only one-half of the minerals when the deed was executed. But there is no ambiguity on the face of the 1926 deed; it conveyed to the Williams Company one-half of the minerals.

[567]*567Hence the ambiguity, if any, arises when appellants undertake to show (a) that, as a result of the 1922 deed, the Salmen Company owned only one-half minerals in 1926, and (b) that the “reservation” in the 1926 deed is an additional exception of the remaining one-half of the minerals. In order to ascertain what effect these two deeds of 1922 and 1926 have when considered together as items in the chain of title, it is necessary to examine their various terms, and the circumstances at the time of their executions.

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Bluebook (online)
50 So. 2d 130, 210 Miss. 560, 1951 Miss. LEXIS 294, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/salmen-brick-lumber-co-v-williams-miss-1951.