States Oil Corp. v. Ward

236 S.W. 446, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 351
CourtTexas Commission of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 11, 1922
DocketNo. 284-3531
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 236 S.W. 446 (States Oil Corp. v. Ward) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Commission of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
States Oil Corp. v. Ward, 236 S.W. 446, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 351 (Tex. Super. Ct. 1922).

Opinion

RANDOLPH, J.

This suit was filed by E. J. Ward and others, who will hereinafter be called plaintiffs, against States Oil Corporation arid others, who will be hereinafter referred to as the Oil Company or defendants. The plaintiffs, who had conflicting interests, agreeing to sue jointly and to settle their differences in other litigation, sought to cancel certain reservations in a deed from the Central Texas Mining, Manufacturing & Land Company, to M. B. Owens, or, in the alternative, that the reservations in said deed be held to not include within its meaning petroleum oil, and for judgment removing whatever cloud was cast on plaintiffs’ title by reason of such reservations.

The case was submitted to the district court of Eastland county upon an agreed statement of facts, and that court rendered judgment in favor of plaintiffs, practically as prayed for. From this, judgment appeal [447]*447was taken to the Court of Civil Appeals for the Second Supreme Judicial District, and was from there transferred by the Supreme Court to the Court of Civil Appeals for the Eighth District. That court affirmed the judgment of the' district court (223 S. W. 250), and, the Supreme Court having granted a writ of error, the case has been referred to this section of the Commission of Appeals for consideration.

The Mining Company deeded certain land in Eastland county on the 6th day of June, 1883, to N. B. Owens, and the deed was recorded in the deed records of that county on the 8th day of September, 1883. The conveyance to Owens, regular in form as a warranty deed, had appended as a part thereof reservations, which reservations will later be set out in so far as is necessary for the determination of the case.

[1] The honorable Court of Civil Appeals in their opinion affirming the case hold that the question in the case is:

“Did the Mining Company, by the instrument relied upon by appellants [States Oil Corporation and others] reserve the title to the minerals or simply reserve the right to prospect for them and to become the owners thereof after they had been extracted from the lands?”

In arriving at the answer to the question thus propounded by them that court announces the following conclusions:

“Clearly these words do not retain the title to the minerals in place under the surface, but simply prescribe the steps by which they may be taken from the ground, and expressly provide that ‘the minerals found and taken from the mines and borings shall be the property of said company.’ This expression clearly precludes the idea that the title to the minerals was retained in the Mining Company by the reserving clauses of the instrument at the time of its execution, and declares that the minerals may become the property of the grantor only after they have been taken from the ground.”

To sustain this position the Court of Civil Appeals give a partial quotation from the reservations contained in the deed. It occurs to us that the excerpt from the reservations so given by that court is not quite sufficiently full to give the intent and purpose of that instrument. In the first place, the fee-simple title to the land and all “coal, minerals, 'and other valuable deposits” was vested in the Mining Company. It delivers to Owens a warranty deed to all of the property except such portions as is by the terms of the deed reserved to it. It has never parted with the title to the minerals and “other valuable deposits,” unless it does so in the very deed it makes to Owens. This being true, what property or property rights did it reserve? This deed, after apt words of conveyance, description, and warranty, recites:

“But it is expressly agreed and stipulated that this deed is made subject to the following rights of the said Mining Company, each and all of which rights are hereby reserved and are not to pass by this deed.. 1. The Central Texas Mining, Manufacturing & Land Company reserves the right at all times hereafter to enter upon the land hereby conveyed and prospect for and make surveys at will on any part of it for coal, minerals, stone, or any other valuable deposit, and to open up on said land and operate with machinery, appliances, and attachments, which it may deem necessary, mines;. borings, and quarries, and the coal, minerals, stone, or other valuable deposits found in and taken from all such mines, borings, and quarries, shall be the property of said Central Texas Mining, Manufacturing & Land Company,” etc.

Certainly, if there were no coal, minerals, stone, or other valuable deposits on or in the land, then there would have been none to convey. But, if there were any of those substances present in the land, and search for them could have developed that fact, the language of the instrument reserving them from the sale was just as potent to reserve the present title in the grantor as if the conveyance had been made to him. The expression “and the coal, minerals, stone, or other valuable deposits found in and taken from all such mines, borings, and quarries shall be the property of said Central Texas Mining, Manufacturing & Land Company, and it shall have the right to remove same,” is clearly a reservation of present title, and evidently was not intended to mean a mere attempt to prescribe the steps by which they might be taken from the ground. There was nothing stipulated as a condition precedent for the Mining Company to pay or to perform in order to vest title in it, and for it to earn the title to the minerals. It is true that there was a provision in the reservation giving a method of making locations and providing when such locations were made that a failure to proceed with operations for three and five years should be considered an abandonment of such specific location, but this was a condition subsequent, and applied only to locations made, not to the reservations as a whole, and was evidently intended only as a protection to the surface owner against repeated entries without a continuance of operations.

In the case of Texas Co. v. Daugherty, 107 Tex. 226, 176 S. W. 717, L. R. A. 1917F, 989, the Supreme Court, construing a number of so-called oil leases with the intention of determining the estate of the Texas Company therein for taxation purposes, where the words “granted, bargained, sold, and conveyed” were used to transfer “all the oil, gas, coal, or other minerals in and under” the particular tract, Chief Justice Phillips, speaking for the court, says:

“It will be observed that they [referring to the leases] constitute no mere demise of the premises for a given period, as in the case of an ordinary leasehold. Nor do they amount simply to a grant of the right to prospect upon [448]*448the land for oil or gas and reduce those substances to possession and ownership. * * * The rights of the grantee are made subject to forfeiture, if operations for the drilling of a well for oil or gas are not begun within one year from the delivery of the instrument, or if the payment of the amount provided in lieu of such commencement is not made; * * *
“It will be further noted that no condition is 'expressed or act required of the grantee which preceded the vesting of such estates as the instruments created.

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Bluebook (online)
236 S.W. 446, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 351, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/states-oil-corp-v-ward-texcommnapp-1922.