Simpson v. Kistler Investment Co.

713 P.2d 751, 90 Oil & Gas Rep. 364, 1986 Wyo. LEXIS 455
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 22, 1986
Docket85-129
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 713 P.2d 751 (Simpson v. Kistler Investment Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Simpson v. Kistler Investment Co., 713 P.2d 751, 90 Oil & Gas Rep. 364, 1986 Wyo. LEXIS 455 (Wyo. 1986).

Opinion

URBIGKIT, Justice.

This case is an appeal from a declaratory judgment imposing a constructive trust on interests in severed mineral estates derived from a ranching business relationship of ancestors to the present litigants. Two separate ranches were involved.

The trial court’s decision in granting the relief requested by imposition of a constructive trust will be affirmed.

The three groups of participants as claimants to the severed mineral interests are the Simpson family (Simpson), successors to Erie Simpson, as defendants and now appellants with the Kistler Investment Company, as successor to W.L. Kistler, Jr., deceased (Kistler), and Cornelia F. Vaillanc-ourt (Vaillancourt), as plaintiffs and now appellees.

Simpson defines the appellate issue as to the Flying MY Ranch mineral-interest controversy:

“The District Court erred, as a matter of law, in ordering a conveyance of minerals to the appellees (a deceased partner’s heirs and successors) in violation of the Wyoming Uniform Partnership Act,” (partnership liquidation real-property question),

and as to the Three Bar Ranch:

“The District Court erred in holding that the 1959 assignment from Erie Simpson, an individual, to Three Bar Ranch, Inc., a corporation created vested mineral interests [by stated reservation or exception] in W.L. Kistler, Jr. and Robert and Cornelia Vaillancourt, contrary to Burnell v. Roush, Wyo., 404 P.2d 836 (1965).” (Reservation or exception-in-favor-of-third-party rule.)

Kistler and Vaillancourt differently stated the issues: (1) that it was the intent of the parties to own the underlying minerals in their proportionate share; (2) that a new partnership was created between the heirs of Kistler and the surviving partner, Erie Simpson, after the death of W.L. Kistler, Jr.; (3) since the mineral estate remained in the name of Simpson, that a trust should be imposed to denominate the beneficial ownership interests of the participants in proportion to their contribution for acquisition and partnership operation.

We would find three questions presented:

(1) Status of the mineral estates in the Three Bar Ranch transaction as affected by the rule that a conveyance cannot be accomplished by a reservation or exception in favor of a stranger to title.
(2) Status of partnership real property after dissolution and termination of the partnership.
(3) Imposition of a constructive trust on the interests in the severed mineral estates to establish title rights without assignment documents executed as conveyances.

There is no significant factual dispute. The basic facts and extensive exhibits were introduced by stipulation. At issue is a severed mineral interest remaining after the sale of ranchlands in northern Wyoming and southern Montana.

The parties in the present conflict include the heirs, distributees and devisees of Erie J. Simpson, as appellants, with the distribu-tee and devisee of W.L. Kistler, Jr., and Cornelia Vaillancourt (now widowed, and the only original remaining participant) as appellees.

Simpson was a Wyoming rancher, Kistler an oil and gas real estate and ranching entrepreneur from Oklahoma, and Cornelia and Robert Vaillancourt were friends of the Kistler family and residents of California. Cornelia was a sister of Simpson’s first wife, Edith.

These interrelations and associations led to the mutual arrangement for their acquisition of the Three Bar Ranch in 1955. After the ranch commenced operation as a partnership, the parties then organized a corporation for its continued operation, and

*Retired November 30, 1985.

*753 Simpson assigned the ranchlands, as first acquired in his individual name, to the corporation, with the following included in the filed document:

“Excepting and reserving, however, all mineral rights mentioned in said agreement, in that it has been heretofore understood and agreed that the mineral rights pertaining to the Three Bar Ranch shall be distributed and vested as follows, to-wit: 37½% to W.L. Kistler, Jr., 37V2% to Erie Simpson and Edith F. Simpson, and 25% to Cornelia F. Vaillanc-ourt.”

Simpson claims retention of all originally acquired mineral interests.

The original partnership interests as then continued in the shares issued in the corporation, were Simpson 225 shares or 37.5 percent; Kistler 225 shares or 37.5 percent; Cornelia Vaillancourt and Robert Vaillanc-ourt 150 shares or 25 percent. From 1956 through 1970, W.L. Kistler, Jr. (and his heirs after his death in 1964), Simpson and Vaillancourt continued to make capital contribution in their respective percentages toward the operation of the Three Bar Ranch. Those contributions, which were substantial, are reflected in the books and income tax return for the ranch operation and corporate records.

In 1957, the Flying MY Ranch also became available for purchase, and Simpson, through an intermediary, arranged for its purchase again as acquired in his individual name. The Vaillancourts declined to participate in this additional acquisition, and the ranch was purchased and then operated as a fifty-fifty partnership of Simpson and Kistler, with each contributing one-half of the purchase and operating capital requirements, which amounts were again substantial. Kistler died in 1964, which left Simpson surviving as the remaining partner in the Flying MY Ranch. The interest of Kistler in that partnership and stock in the Three Bar Ranch devolved by devise and distribution to the present Kistler plaintiffs-appellees.

Simpson claims retention of all acquired mineral interest in this ranch also.

In 1970, the Three Bar Ranch (as the corporate owner for Three Bar) and Simpson (as the managing partner for Flying MY) executed a sales agreement to sell both ranches, and provided by agreement:

“ * * * and RESERVING to the Sellers, their heirs, executors, administrators, successors and assigns an undivided three-fourths (¾) of all of the oil, gas, fissionable material, coal and other minerals now owned by the Sellers in or under said premises. It is understood and agreed that certain minerals in and under the lands owned by Three Bar Ranch, Inc. are owned or controlled by the shareholder of Three Bar Ranch, Inc., rather than by the corporation, and Three Bar Ranch, Inc. agrees that it will obtain for the Buyers from said shareholders a Mineral Deed conveying one-fourth of all oil, gas, fissionable material and other minerals now owned by said parties under the lands of the Three Bar Ranch, Inc.”

A mineral quit-claim deed from Robert M. Vaillancourt, Cornelia F. Vaillancourt and representatives of the Kistler interests, as well as Erie Simpson, was consequently executed, delivered and recorded in accord with the sales agreement. The conveyance by Simpson for the Flying MY Ranch included a reservation of three-fourths of the mineral interest.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
713 P.2d 751, 90 Oil & Gas Rep. 364, 1986 Wyo. LEXIS 455, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/simpson-v-kistler-investment-co-wyo-1986.