54 So. 200 | Ala. | 1910
The bill in this case was filed by complainants in the law and equity court of Walker county to quiet title to the mineral interests in the S. W. % of the S', E. % of section 26, and N. W. % of N. E. % of section 35, all in township 15, range 7, in Walker county, Ala. Milly West and others are made parties respondent upon the ground that they are claiming title, or are reputed to claim .some right, title, interest, or claim in the mineral interest in the lands or incum-brances upon the same. Upon the trial Milly West alone asserts any claim. She claims the legal title to said mineral interest.
It may be said that the following facts are established by a preponderance of the evidence: That the legal title to the entire interest in the lands in controversy was in the heirs of John H. Plyer, when, in 1877, one James Garner entered into the adverse possession of the same under color of title. The said James Gaimer remained in such adverse possession until the year 1883, when he executed a deed to one Joseph W. Dim-mick, trustee, purporting to convey to him all the coal and other minerals in, under and upon said lands; also all timber and water upon the same necessary for the development, working, and mining of said coal and other minerals and the preparation of the same for market and the removal of the same; and also the right
Had James Garner not executed the deed, in 1883, to Dimmiek purporting to convey the coal and mineral interest in said lands to him, there could be no question but that his adverse possession would have ripened into a perfect title to the entire interest in the land several years before his death. What AAras the effect of the deed executed by the said James Garner to Joseph W. Dimmiek? The appellee contends that it operated a severance of the agricultural from the mineral rights in the lands, thereby creating two separate estates in the lands, and that the deed operated an abandonment of the possession of the mineral interests by the grant- or; and, the grantee failing to take possession of same
The only case cited by counsel on either side, wherein the facts were substantially the same, and the relation of the parties the same, as here, the same conclusion is reached by the court as we have reached, though the reasons given are not the same. While we do not entirely agree with the reasoning of that case, we do agree with the conclusion reached. The case referred to is that of McBurney v. Glenmary Coal & Coke Co., et al., 121 Tenn. 275, 118 S. W. 694.
It foilows from what we have said that the application for a rehearing must be granted, and judgment of affirmance heretofore rendered must be set aside, and
Reversed and Rendered.