West v. Aetna Life Insurance Company

536 P.2d 393
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 12, 1975
Docket46401
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 536 P.2d 393 (West v. Aetna Life Insurance Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
West v. Aetna Life Insurance Company, 536 P.2d 393 (Okla. Ct. App. 1975).

Opinion

BOX, Presiding Judge:

An appeal by F. Blair Thorp, et al., defendants in the trial court, from the sustaining of a demurrer to the evidence of defendants, and granting judgment to Bennie West and Odessa West, husband and wife, plaintiffs in the trial court.

Supreme Court Cause, No. 46,401 and Supreme Court Cause No. 46,402, decided this same date by this court, were consolidated for trial purposes by the trial court. The Supreme Court denied consolidation for the purposes of appeal, but allowed the parties to adopt the brief in one cause as the brief in both causes.

The parties to the two appeals will be referred to as they appeared in the court below; that is, Bennie West and Odessa West, as appellees in Cause No. 46,401, and C. W. West and Irene West, as appellees in Cause No. 46,402, as plaintiffs; Aetna Life Insurance Company, defendant in Cause No. 46,401 in the court below, as Aetna; F. Blair Thorp, P. H. Phillips, I. D. Roberts, Sam E. Lynn, Susie Phillips and Vickie Phillips, • defendants in Cause No. 46,401 in the court below, as defendants Thorp, et al., and Eagle-Picher Company, defendant in Cause No. 46,401 in the court below as Eagle-Picher. The defendant in Cause No. 46,402 in the court below, F. Jack Witherspoon, and appellant here, will be referred to as Witherspoon; the defendant and appellant, E. L. Whitten, as Whitten; Eagle-Picher Company as Eagle-Picher, and all remaining defendants in the court below and appellants in Cause No. 46,402 as defendants, Witherspoon, et al.

The pleadings and record of the proceedings in the two causes in the court below disclose that the plaintiffs in each case, by their respective petitions, alleged that they were the owners

[O]f all copper, gold, silver, lead or other types of metallic ores or metallic minerals lying under or that may be produced from . . . . ” (the lands as owned by each plaintiff) “ . . . subject only to certain conveyances and reservations of undivided interests in and to oil, gas and other minerals in and under and that may be produced from varying portions of said described lands, as held and owned by the Defendants as above named . . . .”

The record discloses that the named defendants claimed under two different types of instruments, that is: reservations as contained in deeds of conveyance, as executed by the defendants, Aetna, Wither-spoon and Whitten, and grants as contained in mineral deeds in which the remaining defendants were named as grantees. They were as follows:

RESERVATIONS:

1. Aetna claimed under a reservation as set forth in a deed as executed by Aetna reading as follows:

“There is excepted from this conveyance and reserved to the grantor an undivided one-quarter interest in and to all oil, gas and/or other minerals in and under the land herein conveyed . . .

2. Witherspoon claimed under a reservation as set forth in a deed as executed by Witherspoon reading as follows:

“RESERVING, HOWEVER, unto the undersigned F. Jack Witherspoon, an exact undivided %sths interest in and to all oil, gas and other minerals lying under or that may be produced from the premises above described . . . .”

3. Whitten claimed under a reservation as set forth in a deed as executed by Whit-ten reading as follows:

“E. L. Whitten hereby reserves an undivided one-half interest in and to the above described land for all oil, gas and mineral rights . . . .”

GRANTS:

The defendants Thorp, et al., in both causes, claimed under grants as contained in a standard form of “Mineral Deed,” entitled “Manly Form 249 AF, Mid-Continent

*395 Royalty Owners Association, Approved Form, Revised,” the granting clause of which form of mineral deed provided as follows:

“ . . . [D]o hereby grant, bargain, sell, convey, transfer, assign and deliver unto _ hereinafter called grantee (whether one or more) an undivided _ interest in and to all of the oil, gas and other minerals in and under and that may be produced from the following described lands, situated in Jackson County, Oklahoma, to-wit:
(description of lands)
together with the right of ingress and egress at all times for the purpose of mining, drilling, exploring, operating and developing said lands for oil, gas and other minerals, and storing, handling, transporting and marketing the same therefrom with the right to remove from said lands all of grantee’s property and improvements.”

Plaintiffs in each of the causes by their respective petitions as filed in the court below alleged that such reservations and grants were insufficient to vest in said defendants any right or title in or to “ . . . copper, gold, silver, lead or other types of metallic ores or metallic minerals, lying under or that may be produced from said described land . . . . ”; that said plaintiffs were the sole owners of such metallic ores or metallic minerals, and prayed the judgment of the court quieting their title thereto as against said defendants and each of them.

By their answer, the defendants F. Jack Witherspoon and Thorp, et al., alleged that at the time, said reservations and grants were made and taken, it was the intention of all parties to said instruments that there be reserved or granted to said defendants “ . . . undivided mineral interests in and to all of the minerals, with no exceptions . . . ; and that “ . . . the wording in said Mineral Deeds is ambiguous

The defendant Whitten, by his separate answer alleged that the reservation clause, to-wit:

“ . . . E. L. Whitten hereby reserves an undivided one-half interest in and to the above described land for all oil, gas and mineral rights . . . . ”

is ambiguous and that it was the intention of the parties to reserve unto the defendant an undivided one-half interest in and to all of the minerals, with no exceptions, lying under or that might be produced from the lands hereinbefore described.

By their separate replies to the answers of said defendants in each of said causes in the court below, the plaintiffs denied the allegations

“ . . . [0]f the answer of said Defendants that the instruments of conveyance as referred to in the answers of said Defendants .... were, or are, ambiguous either in law or in fact, it being by these Plaintiffs expressly denied that said instruments of conveyance (or of reservation) reserved or conveyed to, or caused to be vested in said Defendants, or any of them, any right, title, interest or estate in or to the copper, silver, gold or any other types of metallic ores or metallic minerals lying under or that might be produced from the lands constituting the subject matter of this action.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
536 P.2d 393, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/west-v-aetna-life-insurance-company-oklacivapp-1975.