Smith v. County of Musselshell

472 P.2d 878, 155 Mont. 376, 38 Oil & Gas Rep. 12, 1970 Mont. LEXIS 379
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 22, 1970
Docket11736
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 472 P.2d 878 (Smith v. County of Musselshell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. County of Musselshell, 472 P.2d 878, 155 Mont. 376, 38 Oil & Gas Rep. 12, 1970 Mont. LEXIS 379 (Mo. 1970).

Opinion

MR. CHIEF JUSTICE JAMES T. HARRISON

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

From a summary judgment for the plaintiff entered in the district court of Musselshell County, defendant appealed.

Charles P. Smith (hereafter inferred to as plaintiff), successor in title to land of A. J. Ziesmer, brought this suit to determine his interest in land located in Musselshell County and interests reserved by the original vendor, Musselshell County (hereafter referred to as the county). The district court rendered a summary judgment based on a 1945 quiet title decree which it found to be res judicata of all issues in the present suit.

From the record it appears that on June 4, 1941 the county sold approximately 672 acres of land to A. J. Ziesmer under a contract which provided: “Vendor reserves an undivided 6i/4% of all oil, gas and other minerals lying in. under and beneath the premises hereinbefore described.” The county gave a deed for this land to A. J. Ziesmer, dated April 5, 1944, which contained a reservation for the county of, “an undivided 6% royalty of all oil, gas, and other minerals lying in, and that may be produced from the premises here-before described, delivered free of cost to first party.” One *378 year later, A. J. Ziesmer brought an action to settle various interests in this land naming the county as one of several defendants, and on April 2, 1945, a district court decree quieted title in the land with this reservation: “Subject to a reservation in and to Musselshell County, Montana, of 614% of all oil, gas, and other minerals lying in and that may be produced from the said premises.”

The county urges as controlling in this cause a 1941 Montana statute which authorized county commissioners to convey county land and provides: “* * * the county may reserve not to exceed six and one-fourth per cent (6)4%) royalty interest in the oil, gas, and minerals produced and saved from said land.” Sec. 2, Ch. 171, Session Laws 1941, (now section 84-4191, E.C.M.1947). The effect of this statute, the county contends, is to limit a county’s reservation strictly to a royalty interest and to completely exclude by statute any reservation of a mineral interest.

The issues on this appeal are: (1) Whether or not the 1945 quiet title decree is res judicata regarding the interests of the county and the plaintiff; (2) If it is res judicata, does its interpretation allow the county a royalty interest or a mineral interest.

As to the first issue, four criteria exist in Montana law which must be met before a plea of res judicata can be sustained. These criteria are: (1) the parties or their privies must be the same; (2) the subject-matter of the action must be the same; (3) the issues must be the same, and must relate to the same subject-matter; and (4) the capacities of the persons must be the same in reference to the subject-matter and to the issues between them. State ex rel. Sullivan v. School Dist. No. 1, 100 Mont. 468, 50 P.2d 252; Brannon v. Lewis & Clark Cty., 143 Mont. 200, 387 P.2d 706: In the present action, plaintiff is the successor in title to land of A. J. Ziesmer, hence is in privy with all of A. J. Ziesmer’s former interests. The county was a party to the quiet title *379 action brought by A. J. Ziesmer in 1945 which concerned the exact land and reservation in issue in this suit. Therefore, the first three criteria are met. The fourth criterion is also met, because neither party is asserting any right on appeal which was not available to them or their predecessors in title in the 1945 quiet title action. As a result, the district court correctly found the decree of April 2, 1945 to be a conclusive statement and res judicata of particular issues presented on appeal regarding the respective parties’ interests. The rule was succinctly reiterated by the United States District Court in a similar case on issues found to be res judicata by a former decree to quiet title in these words: “A prior judgment is conclusive upon the issues made or tendered, and as far as those issues are concerned, the judgment is conclusive of everything that might have been urged for or against them.” Mondakota Gas Company v. Reed, 244 F.Supp. 327, 330 (D.Mont.1965).

Turning to the second issue, since the decree of April 2, 1945 is a final expression of the county’s reservation, it is the only document that can be inspected to determine the specific interest reserved. The decree describes the reservation as “6% of all oil, gas, and other minerals lying in and that may be produced from the said premises.” Does this connote a royalty or a mineral interest?

This Court has distinguished a royalty and a mineral interest in the following manner: “Since ‘royalty’ and ‘nonparticipating royalty’ are shares in production only, certain words denoting a share in production have been used to delimit the interest conveyed. Likewise a mineral interest being a severing of the mineral fee is often described in terms of .ownership under the ground. Thus, ‘produced and saved’ have been associated with royalties, ‘oil and gas in and under and upon’ the land, have been associated with a mineral interest.” Stokes v. Tutvet, 134 Mont. 250, 259, 328 P.2d 1096, 1101. The words ‘royalty”, “nonparticipating royalty”, and *380 “mineral interest” are not contained in the decree, so the only interpretive resort left is to examine words denoting a share in production or ownership underground. With regard to this, the important words found in the decree are “oil, gas, and other minerals lying in” which are similar but not exactly like the standard words “oil and gas in and under and upon” describing a mineral interest, and “produced from” which is only half of the standard phrase “produced and saved” describing a royalty interest. Thus, these words alone are not positively determinative of either a mineral interest or a royalty interest.

A more definitive answer on this point arises from the parent case in Montana in which a deed stated: “Reserving unto the said partios of the first part a 12%% interest and royalty in and to all oil and gas and other minerals of whatsoever nature, found in or located upon or under said land or premises above described, or that may be produced therefrom.’ ” Marias River Syndicate v. Big West Oil Co., 98 Mont. 254, 260-261, 38 P.2d 599, 600. The interest in the deed was found to be a mineral interest. With this language as a positive guide, a royalty interest in the present ease cannot be sustained.

Irregardless of the presence of the word “royalty” in the Marias ease, this Court extracted a mineral interest from language used therein, because there was no express provision in the deed for a royalty payment, “free and clear of the cost of its discovery and production” and no “express obligation on the part of any person to discover and produce oil or gas.” Marias River Syndicate v. Big West Oil Co., supra, at 265, 38 P.2d at 601.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Brown v. Department of Corrections
2005 MT 58 (Montana Supreme Court, 2005)
Lane v. Montana Fourth Judicial District Court
2003 MT 130 (Montana Supreme Court, 2003)
First Bank v. District Court for the Fourth Judicial District
737 P.2d 1132 (Montana Supreme Court, 1987)
Baertsch v. County of Lewis and Clark
727 P.2d 504 (Montana Supreme Court, 1986)
Phelan v. Lee Blaine Enterprises
716 P.2d 601 (Montana Supreme Court, 1986)
Audit Services, Inc. v. Anderson
684 P.2d 491 (Montana Supreme Court, 1984)
Stapleton v. First Security Bank
675 P.2d 83 (Montana Supreme Court, 1983)
Fox v. 7L Bar Ranch Co.
645 P.2d 929 (Montana Supreme Court, 1982)
McSweyn v. Musselshell County, Mont.
632 P.2d 1095 (Montana Supreme Court, 1981)
Hopper v. Hopper
601 P.2d 29 (Montana Supreme Court, 1979)
S-W Co. v. John Wight, Inc.
587 P.2d 348 (Montana Supreme Court, 1978)
Ham v. Holy Rosary Hospital
529 P.2d 361 (Montana Supreme Court, 1974)
Wheeler v. Armstrong
Montana Supreme Court, 1972

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
472 P.2d 878, 155 Mont. 376, 38 Oil & Gas Rep. 12, 1970 Mont. LEXIS 379, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-county-of-musselshell-mont-1970.