Voyta v. Clonts

328 P.2d 655, 134 Mont. 156, 9 Oil & Gas Rep. 522, 1958 Mont. LEXIS 16
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 13, 1958
Docket9588 - 9590
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 328 P.2d 655 (Voyta v. Clonts) 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
Voyta v. Clonts, 328 P.2d 655, 134 Mont. 156, 9 Oil & Gas Rep. 522, 1958 Mont. LEXIS 16 (Mo. 1958).

Opinion

MR. CHIEF JUSTICE HARRISON:

This is an appeal by each of the plaintiffs, James Connors, Harry E. Yoyta and Lou I. Yoyta, from the final decrees entered in favor of the defendants, W. H. Clonts, Jennie E. Clonts, R. G. Averitt and Ruth C. Averitt, by the district court of the twelfth judicial district of the State of Montana, in and for the County of Hill.

Following the taking of the appeals this court was notified in writing that the appellant, Harry E. Yoyta, had died and that Lou I. Yoyta had succeeded to all the right, title and interest in and to the properties of the appellant, Harry E. Yoyta, involved in this cause. In accordance with Rule XYII of this court, appropriate order of substitution was made and entered herein. Likewise this court was notified in writing that the appellant, James Connors, had died and that Lou I. Yoyta is the duly qualified and acting executrix of his estate. In accordance with Rule XYII of this court, appropriate order of substitution has been made and entered herein.

The plaintiffs, Harry E. Yoyta and James Connors, on and prior to December 1, 1951, owned certain lands in Hill County and listed the same for sale with a realtor of Great Falls, Montana, who advertised the lands for sale in the Great Falls Tribune. The defendant, W. H. Clonts, then a resident of Texas, now a resident of Hill County, Montana, read the advertisement, and accompanied by his son-in-law, R. G. Averitt, came to Great Falls on November 30, 1951, to investigate. The realtor took them to Hill County and showed them the land on December 1, 1951. They returned to Great Falls and that evening the realtor, Harry E. Yoyta, Mrs. Lou I. Yoyta, James Connors, W. H. Clonts, and R. G. Averitt met in the room of W. H. Clonts in the Falls Hotel.

*159 The sale and purchase of the lands was then and there discussed, and the realtor wrote up the sale agreement, which was introduced in evidence as plaintiffs’ Exhibit A. In preparing the agreement there were written into it the words, “Subject to land being leased for oil and gas by seller.”, and further in the agreement the words, “Seller is to retain 4.6875% of landowners mineral rights on above-described land.”

It was represented and understood at the time of the aforementioned meeting, that Hill County had reserved 6% per cent of the landowners’ royalty and that the landowners’ royalty vested in the plaintiffs was 6% per cent.

It was also represented and understood that the plaintiffs had leased their lands for oil and gas exploration before the sale agreement was written, and that Voyta and his wife intended to lease another part of the land before the actual deeds were executed. Voytas did lease their land on the next business day, December 3, 1951, after the sale agreement was entered into.

W. H. Clonts then returned to his home in Texas. The sale agreement required that the plaintiffs furnish Clonts with abstracts of title, Showing merchantable title vested in sellers. Abstracts were furnished sometime in January 1952. Clonts had an attorney in Texas examine the abstracts and he returned to Montana about February 15, 1952. He met with the Voytas and Connors in the presence of the realtor and called to their attention the fact that the United States had reserved all minerals upon the west half of Section 30, Township 37 north, Range 14 E.M.M. By reason of that fact, Voyta agreed to reserve only 3.125 per cent of the landowners’ royalty of oil and gas from the east half of Section 30, Township 37 north, Range 14 E.M.M. instead of the 4.6875 per cent reserved in the sale agreement.

Deeds were then prepared by the realtor. The deed covering the west half of Section 30, Township 37 north, Range 14 E.M.M. to Averitt contained no reservation of royalty by Voyta and wife, that being the tract wherein the United States had re *160 served the minerals. The deed conveying the east half of Section 30, Township 37 north, Range 14 E.M.M., reserved a royalty interest of 3.125 per cent of all oil, gas and minerals on above-described land which are recovered and saved. The deeds conveying the other lands contained reservations by Harry E. Voyta and wife and James Connors of a royalty interest of 4.6875 per cent of all oil, gas, and minerals which are recovered and saved.

In March 1953 Voyta received a letter from the lessee of his land demanding that he return the delay rentals for the period subsequent to February 1952 because he no longer owned any mineral or leasing rights on the lands in question. Upon receipt of this letter the plaintiffs sought the advice of an attorney and initiated three suits against the defendants for reformation of the deeds upon the grounds of mutual mistake.

The three complaints were all based upon the same theory, being in effect that plaintiffs were to retain all mineral and leasing rights to the land in question by the terms of the sale agreement entered into on December 1, 1951; that the effect of the words "Seller is to retain 4.6875% of landowners mineral rights on above-described land” meant that the landowners’ royalty of 6% per cent owned by the plaintiffs was to be divided in the following portions: 4.6875 per cent royalty to plaintiffs and 1.5625 per cent royalty to the defendants. In the case of Harry E. Voyta and Lou I. Voyta against R. G. Averitt and Ruth C. Averitt the division of royalties as to the east one-half of Section 30, Township 37 north, Range 14 E.M.M. was to be on the basis of 3.125 per cent royalties in plaintiffs and 3.125 per cent royalties in defendants.

The complaints then allege that through the mistake of the scrivener, the realtor, the deeds were so drawn that all minerals including oil and gas in place were conveyed to the defendants; that because of the mistake of the scrivener no provision in the deeds was made reserving all minerals and leasing rights in the plaintiffs. Plaintiffs allege that they did not know of the error at the time the deeds were signed and did not learn of the mis *161 take until March 11, 1953, when they received the afore-mentioned letter from the lessee. Prayer is then made that the court reform and revise the deeds in accordance with the alleged intention of the parties.

Defendants in their several answers admit that plaintiffs are entitled to the division of royalties as set out in their complaints, but deny that there was any mutual mistake and contend that plaintiffs never intended to reserve the mineral or leasing rights to the lands in question. The cases were consolidated for trial upon agreement of counsel for the respective parties.

At the trial of the actions the evidence is conflicting on the question of what the parties intended to convey. The plaintiffs resolutely maintain that they intended to convey only a 1.5625 per cent of the royalties to the defendants, (except of course in the tract of land to which they conveyed 3.125 per cent) retaining in themselves all other rights in the minerals. The defendants were equally adamant in denying that plaintiffs ever intended or represented that they intended to retain the mineral rights, admitting however that they did retain the afore-mentioned portions of the landowners’ royalties.

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Bluebook (online)
328 P.2d 655, 134 Mont. 156, 9 Oil & Gas Rep. 522, 1958 Mont. LEXIS 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/voyta-v-clonts-mont-1958.