Stowers v. Huntington Development & Gas Co.

72 F.2d 969, 98 A.L.R. 536, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 4743
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedOctober 2, 1934
Docket3636
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 72 F.2d 969 (Stowers v. Huntington Development & Gas Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stowers v. Huntington Development & Gas Co., 72 F.2d 969, 98 A.L.R. 536, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 4743 (4th Cir. 1934).

Opinion

SOPER, Circuit Judge.

An action of ejectment was instituted in the District Court by Huntington Development & Gas Company, a corporation, against Matthias Stowers, J. E. Stowers, and the board of education of Union district, Lincoln county, W. Va., which involved title to the minerals underlying a tract of land of 150 acres on Sycamore creek in said district. The ease was submitted to the court upon an agreed statement of facts, without the intervention of a jury, and the court, being of the opinion that the plaintiff had paramount title to the mineral rights in controversy, rendered a judgment in its favor, from which the Stowers only have appealed.

The title of the Huntington Company is traceable to grants of four large adjoining tracts of land, aggregating 215,000 acres in extent, made by the state of Virginia to General Samuel Smith of Maryland in 1796-1797. By sundry mesne conveyances, the title to these tracts became vested in Gustavus A. Saeehi, who, by deed of June 27, 1865, conveyed to the trustees of the Parent Oil, Coal & Land Association of the Guyandotte 100,000 acres thereof, including the tract of 150 acres involved in this proceeding; and, by divers deeds and instruments subsequently executed, the title of the parent association passed to the Huntington Company, the plaintiff in this case, except as the title may have been affected by the transactions hereinafter described. In 1872, during the ownership of the parent association, an action of ejectment was instituted by it and other plaintiffs in the District Court of the United States for the District of West Virginia, declaring on the 100,000-acre tract referred to, naming as defendants James A. .Holley and a large number of other persons, including one James M. Edwards; and on August 2, 1872, service of the declaration and notice was had upon Edwards, and on January 14, *971 1873, a rule to plead was Issued against him. Thereafter, on November 8, 1873, ho executed a disclaimer or mineral deed, which was not recorded uniil March 28, 1911, therein the pendency of the ejectment suit was recited, and, in consideration of being released from litigation, and from liability for costs in said action, he disclaimed all title in the tract of 109,000 acres, excepting therefrom certain small portions which covered the land now in controversy; and he agreed that the plaintiffs in that action might take judgment against him for the remainder. The deed, however, contained the declaration that the plaintiffs in the action reserved the minerals, with all the ordinary mining privileges. The legal effect of this deed between the parties, under the law of West Virginia, was to vest title to the minerals in the plaintiffs, and title to the surface in Edwards, and a severance of these interests in the land was thus effected; so that the interest of the successors in title to the parent association was thereafter confined to the mineral rights. See Huntington Dev. & Gas Co. v. Stewart (C. C. A.) 44 F.(2d) 119, where the record (which by stipulation has been made part of the record in this case) shows that a deed of disclaimer, similar to the deed of James 1V1. Edwards of November 8, 1873, was under consideration.

Prior to the institution of this action of ejectment, one Ephraim Griffith, a x>redeeessor in the lino of title under which the defendants claim, was in possession of the tract of 150 acres, claiming title under three grants from the state of Virginia of 1837, 1850, and 1857, respectively, and therefore junior to the grants of General Smith. Griffith died prior to the institution of the suit in 1872, leaving a will wherein he appointed Harrison Griffith executor of his estate, with power to sell the testator’s lands aforesaid. Neither the executor nor the heirs at law of Griffith were made parties defendant in the ejectment suit above described, or in subsequent actions of ejectment brought by the parent association. Oil March 14, 1873, however, Harrison Griffith, the executor, executed a deed of the 150-aere-tract to the said James M. Edwards, who, as we have seen, was a party defendant in said suit, and entered into the compromise or settlement above described. The executor’s deed contained the following reservation:

“Excepting the minerals which are retained for the sake of a compromise with the Parent Oil, Coal and Land Association of the Guyandotte. The parties of the first part grants unto the party of the second Xiart the above described lands with covenants of Special Warranty, against himself as such executor and against the heirs of the said Ephraim Griffith, Sen. Doe.,' but should the land he lost by any title superior to that of the title of Ephraim Griffith, Sen. Dec., then the said parties of the first part, shall refund to the said Jamos M. Edwards the amount of the purchase money, or any part thereof, that may have been paid by the said James M. Edwards without any interest.”

It is through this deed, which was recorded on February 5, 1878, and certain subsequent mesne conveyances, 1 that the Stowers claim title to a one-half interest in mineral and mining rights in the 150 acres, and J. E. Stowers claims to be the owner of the surface, excepting, however, the rights in one-half acre claimed by the board of education of Union district. From 1893, Elias Stowers and his successors in title have continuously resided on the 150 acres, and have continuously farmed, cultivated, and possessed it in every way, except by physical development of the minerals in and under the same.

On January 27, 1900, the predecessors in title of the Huntington Gomx>any leased for oil and gas purposes 30,726 acres of its large boundary of land,' embracing the 150-acro tract in suit to Otto Gemer and others, and the gas rights under this lease were acquired on January 1, 1909 by Columbia Gas & Electric Coinxiany, and have since been held by it. In pursuance thereof, it entered upon the premises, drilled wells thereon, and since 1912 has continually marketed gas therefrom, paying to the Huntington Company and its predecessors in title the royalties accruing under the lease. The Huntington Company itself for ien years prior to the institution of the pending suit has operated gas wells drilled by it and its predecessors on other portions of its larger boundary. No wells, however, have been driven by any one on the 150 acre tract.

It is clear to us from this recital of facts that the plaintiff has good title to the mineral rights and the defendants to the surface of the land in question. The plaintiff depends on an unbroken chain of title from *972 the earlier grant, 2 subject to the severance of the surface and mineral rights under the compromise with Edwards in 1873, while the defendants, whose paper title is derived from a later and therefore inferior state grant, must depend upon adverse possession of the surface since 1893, contending that no valid severance of the two interests resulted from the transac1~ions we have described.

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Bluebook (online)
72 F.2d 969, 98 A.L.R. 536, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 4743, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stowers-v-huntington-development-gas-co-ca4-1934.