Walliker v. Escott

608 P.2d 1272, 1980 Wyo. LEXIS 250
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 21, 1980
Docket5197, 5198
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 608 P.2d 1272 (Walliker v. Escott) 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
Walliker v. Escott, 608 P.2d 1272, 1980 Wyo. LEXIS 250 (Wyo. 1980).

Opinion

ROSE, Justice.

This is a quiet-title action brought by the plaintiffs-appellees 1 , who are the successors in interest to Pearson and Robertson, grantees of the original patentee, Geneva Walliker. Appellant-George Walliker, Jr., is the heir of the patentee. On July 14, 1928, Geneva Walliker purported to convey to Pearson and Robertson separate undivided one-third interests in the oil and gas underlying certain lands in Park County, Wyoming.

At the time of the conveyances, Geneva Walliker had entered the property under the Carey Act, now § 86-7-101, et seq., W.S.1977. Prior to entry, she had contracted for shares in the Cody Canal Association to provide water for the land and had paid the state one-half of the land fee. In the process of perfecting her interest, she had progressed to the point where she was in possession of a certificate of location and a receipt from the Wyoming land commissioner. Mrs. Walliker was not, however, issued a patent to the land until some three years after the conveyances to Pearson and Robertson.

The relevant part of the 1928 conveyances read as follows:

That the said party of the first part, for and in consideration of One and no/100 ($1.00) . . . has Re-mised, Released and Quit Claimed . an undivided one-third interest in and to all oil and/or gas .

The district court held the instruments to be sufficient to convey the designated mineral interests and awarded summary judgment to the plaintiffs. The above facts are not in dispute.

In the district court, the plaintiffs urged that under the doctrine of relation 2 the 1928 conveyances became effective when Geneva Walliker acquired title to the lands in 1931. In support of their position, plaintiffs offered an affidavit of Ernest J. Goppert. The affidavit says that Goppert was Geneva Walliker’s attorney in 1928 and Geneva had agreed with Pearson and Robertson to execute and deliver the conveyances in consideration for their providing the funds to purchase the Cody Canal water rights and to pay the State of Wyoming the fee for the land. The plaintiffs argued that, because of the facts contained in the affidavit, Walliker should be estopped from contesting the conveyances.

The defendants objected to the introduction of the Goppert affidavit. They also requested that the trial court give them additional time to rebut the affidavit in the event that their objection was overruled. It was their contention that neither the relation doctrine nor estoppel would validate the conveyances in view of the quitclaim language therein contained.

The trial court rejected the estoppel argument, found no need to rule on the admissibility of the Goppert affidavit, rejected the request for additional time, and found *1274 for the plaintiffs-appellees upon the relation doctrine.

On appeal, the appellees have undertaken to bolster their relation argument with the facts contained in the Goppert affidavit. Appellant protests this with the contention that this court may not decide the issue of the admissibility of the affidavit since the trial court did not admit it. Appellant goes on to urge that if the trial court had admitted the document, it would have been required to grant the continuance for rebuttal.

We will accede to this argument since we do not consider the affidavit essential to our decision. We, therefore, undertake our inquiry by asking whether the undisputed facts admitted into evidence support the conclusion by the trial judge that, under the doctrine of relation, title to the oil and gas interest passed to the grantees when Wal-liker acquired patent to the land.

RELATION

Is There a Statutory Bar to Applying the Doctrine in This Case?

Appellant claims that the conveyances with which we are concerned are quitclaim deeds. He then urges a statutory bar to the application of the doctrine by reason of § 34-2-105, W.S.1977, which says:

“Every deed in substance in the form prescribed in the foregoing section [§ 34-2-104], when otherwise duly executed, shall be deemed and held a sufficient conveyance, release and quitclaim to the grantee, his heirs and assigns, in fee of all the then existing legal or equitable rights of the grantor in the premises therein described, but shall not extend to after acquired title unless words are added expressing such intention, (Laws 1895, ch. 93, § 2, 2nd par.; R.S.1899, § 2769; C.S. 1910, § 3661; C.S.1920, § 4618; R.S.1931, § 97-204; C.S.1945, § 66-204; W.S.1957, § 34 — 45.)” (Emphasis supplied.)

Section 34-2-104, W.S.1977, provides:

“Form of quitclaim deed.
“Quitclaim may be in substance in the following form:
“Quitclaim Deed
“A.B., grantor (here insert grantor’s name or names, and place of residence) for the consideration of (here insert consideration) conveys and quitclaims to (here insert grantee’s name or names) all interest in the following described real estate, (here insert description) situate in the county of . in the state of Wyoming.
“Dated this .... day of ... . A.D. . . .
“.A.B.
(Laws 1895, ch. 93, § 2; R.S.1899, § 2768; C.S.1910, § 3660; C.S.1920, § 4617; R.S. 1931, § 97-203; C.S.1945, § 66-203; W.S. 1957, § 34-44.)” (Emphasis supplied).

Appellees contend that the deeds in question are not quitclaim deeds within the meaning of § 34-2-105, supra, because they do not relinquish the grantor’s entire interest and, therefore, the “after acquired title” prohibition is not applicable to the conveyances. The two above-quoted statutes were enacted in 1895 in virtually identical form and have been the law of this state ever since. As can be seen, the statutory quitclaim form provides for a release of the grantor’s entire interest, id., while the conveyances with which we are concerned in this appeal purport to transfer a partial interest, leaving a residual equitable interest in the grantor.

We think appellees’ point is well taken. We note that § 34-2-105, W.S.1977, begins with the phrase, “Every deed in substance in the form prescribed in the foregoing section . . . .” There is an obvious and substantial difference between a deed which conveys the grantor’s entire interest and one which conveys only a portion of the grantor’s interest. Consistent with the after-aequired-title philosophy of §§ 34-2-104 and 34-2-105, supra, when a grantor who does not possess legal title quitclaims his entire interest in a piece of real property, the grantee cannot then expect that such a grant carries with it the implication that *1275 grantor has retained an equitable interest capable of ripening into legal title from which the grantee will then be permitted to claim. But when a desert-land entrywom-an quitclaims a portion

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Bluebook (online)
608 P.2d 1272, 1980 Wyo. LEXIS 250, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walliker-v-escott-wyo-1980.