48 S.E.2d 430 | W. Va. | 1948
A. B. Collins and Harlan Collins brought this suit in equity in the Circuit Court of Gilmer County against Clara Stalnaker and Hope Natural Gas Company, a corporation, for the purpose of partitioning the oil and gas within and underlying a tract of two hundred thirty-five acres of land in Gilmer County, formerly owned by Lu *545 V. Collins, the mother of the three individual litigants. Clara Stalnaker prosecutes this appeal from a decree of the circuit court, based upon the finding of that court that the individual parties were the owners in place of the oil and gas within and underlying said tract of land, directing the partition of the oil and gas and appointing commissioners to make such partition.
On March 11, 1941, Lue V. Collins, the owner in fee simple of the tract of two hundred thirty-five acres, the oil and gas within and underlying which is involved in this suit, executed a will which, among other things, contains the following provisions pertinent in this suit:
"I devise to my daughter, Clara Stalnaker the gas well now drilled on my home farm of two hundred and thirty five acres. She, the said Clara Stalnaker, is to have all the proceeds from said well.
"And in the event there is one or more wells drilled on said farm, then the proceeds of same shall be divided equally between my sons A. B. Collins and Harlan Collins, and my daughter Clara Stalnaker."
On the following day and under the name of L. V. Collins, she executed a deed conveying the two hundred thirty-five acres to her daughter, the defendant, Clara Stalnaker, the pertinent provisions of which read:
"Said first party is to have all the proceeds from one Gas well now on said farm as long as she lives and at death of first party well is to go to second party. And in the event there is more than one producing well drilled on said land hereby conveyed, the proceeds of the other wells so drilled shall be equally divided between A. B. Collins, Harlen Collins and Clara Stalnaker."
At the time the will and deed were executed, the acreage was under lease for oil and gas purposes to defendant, Hope Natural Gas Company, which then had one producing well thereon. Lue V. Collins died on August 16, 1942, and her will was duly probated in Gilmer County. Thereafter the only producing well was abandoned and the *546 lease terminated by the gas company under the provisions thereof. On February 23, 1944, Clara Stalnaker, executed a lease, purporting to embrace the whole of the oil and gas within and underlying the two hundred thirty-five acres to the gas company, but no additional wells have been drilled under said lease.
This cause is here on the pleadings and the trial court's rulings thereon. Clara Stalnaker's demurrer to the bill of complaint was overruled, and thereupon she answered, admitting the allegations of the bill of complaint which set forth the above-recited facts, but denying that her brothers were owners in common with her of the oil and gas in question. There was a general reply to the answer. The trial court, by the decree complained of, held that A. B. Collins, Harlan Collins and Clara Stalnaker were the owners in common in fee of the oil and gas in place, each being the owner of an undivided one-third interest therein, decreed partition thereof in kind, appointed commissioners for such partition, and further decreed that the lease between Clara Stalnaker and Hope Natural Gas Company, was binding only as to said lessor's undivided one-third interest.
The deed and the will, though couched in different terms, have the same legal purport. In the deed the grantor reserved "the proceeds from one Gas well now on said farm as long as she lives and at the death of the first party well is to go to" the grantee, Clara Stalnaker. The will provided that Clara Stalnaker was to have all the proceeds from the then producing well, but as the will did not take effect until Lue V. Collins' death, the deed and will give rise to no difference in principle, for under each Clara Stalnaker's beneficial interest in the one gas well, that is the proceeds thereof, did not vest until decedent's death. The will provides that "in the event there is one or more wells drilled on said farm, then the proceeds of same shall be divided equally between my sons A. B. Collins and Harlan Collins, and my daughter Clara Stalnaker." The deed provides that "And in the event there is more than one producing well drilled on said land *547 hereby conveyed, the proceeds of the others wells so drilled shall be equally divided between A. B. Collins, Harlen Collins and Clara Stalnaker." Under these latter provisions of the will and deed the grantor-testator by the use in both instruments of the words "in the event", clearly meant a well or wells other than the one already drilled and later abandoned.
On this appeal A. B. Collins and Harlan Collins, hereinafter spoken of as "appellees", contend that the effect of the deed to Clara Stalnaker was to except the oil and gas within and underlying the tract of land, except the gas produced from the well then drilled on the premises, and that the oil and gas, subject to such exception, were vested in A. B. Collins, Harlan Collins and Clara Stalnaker by the will of Lue V. Collins. Pursuing this position further, it is contended that the appellees, A. B. Collins and Harlan Collins, and the appellant, Clara Stalnaker, were the owners in common of the oil and gas in place within and underlying the two hundred thirty-five-acre tract, and under Chapter 146, Acts of the Legislature, 1939, which authorizes the partition of oil and gas, are entitled to partition thereof, whether the "proceeds of" other wells in addition to the then one producing well are real or personal property. Partition may be had in a court of equity of both real and personal property. In Warren v. Boggs,
We do not agree with counsel for the appellees in the position that the deed for the two hundred and thirty-five acres of land to Clara Stalnaker excepted the oil and gas in place, except the gas produced from the then producing well on the premises, and that the same became vested in the appellees, A. B. Collins and Harlan Collins, and the appellant, Clara Stalnaker, by the will of Lue V. Collins. The deed does not contain terminology which would conventionally give rise to an exception or reservation to the grantor, Lue V. Collins, of all the oil and gas in place with *548 the exception of the gas from the one producing well. By the deed the grantor, Lue V. Collins, in consideration of one dollar in hand paid and the stipulations set forth therein, granted with covenants of general warranty the two hundred thirty-five acres of land described as being situated on Owens Run, Center District, Gilmer County. "The stipulations" were evidently intended by the parties to be the covenants on the part of Clara Stalnaker "to maintain, keep and support" grantor during her natural life. The deed contains all of the necessary formal parts required to convey the entire title to the land, subject to the covenant as to support and the exception to the grantor of the proceeds of the then producing gas well, and subject to whatever effect the provision as to the division of the proceeds of wells other than the then producing well.
In Paxton v. Benedum-Trees Oil Co.,
The instant deed does not expressly provide that the individual parties litigant shall have an undivided interest in the additional well or wells, but, on the contrary, the deed provides for a division among these parties of the "proceeds" that may be derived from such well or wells. *549
Not until oil or gas is brought to the surface by actual production and severance from the land so that it can be and is marketed will there be any proceeds, and though it is true that oil or gas in place owned by tenants in common, which is brought to the surface by production, is personal property, and under Warren v. Boggs, supra, may be partitioned, oil and gas severed from the surface that is produced constitutes the thing itself and not the proceeds thereof. In McDonald v. Bennett,
The companionate cases of McIntosh v. Vail,
Unlike the instant suit, which as heretofore indicated, is a suit for partition of the oil and gas within and underlying the tract of land, each of the McIntosh suits involved a bill in the nature of an interpleader. Though the first McIntosh case (
It is to be further noted that the provision as to the one-sixteenth of the oil marketed and one-half of the net proceeds of the gas sold, under consideration in the firstMcIntosh case, stipulates that the grantee or his assigns "shall be entitled to" an interest in the minerals in controversy, and the Court held that the grantee by virtue of the language quoted had at least a clear equitable interest in the minerals enforceable in a court of equity. But, in the instant case, the deed contains no such words. *551 It simply provides that "in the event there is more than one producing well drilled on the said land hereby conveyed, the proceeds of the other wells so drilled shall be equally divided" among the grantee, Clara Stalnaker, and the appellees. The right to an interest in oil and gas, whether in place or after severance from the realty, is not the same as the right to an equal division of the proceeds thereof. In our opinion, the words "the proceeds of" the same "shall be divided equally", purport a division among the three individual parties after exploitation, production and sale of the oil and gas and not before. The division of the proceeds of the oil and gas is not automatic. It is an affirmative act, which must be performed by someone. Who, it may be asked, has the right under the provisions of this deed to exploit or lease the oil and gas and then divide the proceeds? No one, in our opinion, other than the owner thereof, Clara Stalnaker.
We think that the provision in the deed that "in the event there is more than one producing well drilled on said land hereby conveyed, the proceeds of the other wells so drilled shall be equally divided" among the grantee in the deed and her two brothers, A. B. Collins and Harlan Collins, means the proceeds derived from the sale of oil or gas which may be produced from any additional producing well or wells drilled on the land as distinguished from the oil and gas in place after severance from the land.
But it is contended by the appellees that the pertinent provision of the deed as to the alleged tenancy in common of the grantee, Clara Stalnaker, and the appellees, A. B. Collins and Harlan Collins, should be construed as a reservation of the oil and gas, subject to the exception as to the one producing well in favor of the grantor in the deed, Lue V. Collins, the subject matter of which, upon the death of Lue V. Collins passed to Clara Stalnaker and the appellees under the will of Lue V. Collins, in which case it would matter not whether the "proceeds" of the wells in addition to the one producing well are oil and gas in place. The Collinses not being parties to the deed, are strangers thereto and cannot take title on the theory that the provision in question is a reservation or exception in *552
their favor in common with Clara Stalnaker. Beckley NationalExchange Bank v. Lilly,
But as heretofore suggested the deed contains no wording which would evidence a direct conveyance of any interest in the oil and gas to the individual parties litigant as was had in the deed appraised by this Court in the first McIntosh case. So if the appellees are to prevail at all, the provision in question must be construed as a reservation in favor of the grantor, Lue V. Collins, of the oil and gas in place. With this position in mind, let us construe the deed looking in the first instance to the intention of the parties thereto, namely Lue V. Collins and Clara Stalnaker. But because a reservation or exception is necessarily for the benefit of the grantor, the deed must be construed most strongly in favor of the only grantee named therein, Clara Stalnaker. Realty Securities Discount Co. v. National Rubber Leather Co.,
The grant in the instant deed of the fee to Clara Stalnaker is clear, direct and in conventional form. It therefore cannot be cut down unless the express language of the instrument evidences the grantor's intention to do so. *553
To effect such result, the language relied upon to create an exception and reservation, must be as certain and definite as the granting clause. Miller v. Nixon, supra; 16 Am. Jur., Deeds, Sections 307 and 309. However, if by the provision of the deed that "in the event there is more than one producing well drilled on said land hereby conveyed, the proceeds of the other wells so drilled shall be equally divided" among the appellees and the grantee, Clara Stalnaker, the grantor intended to create an exception or reservation in her favor of the proceeds of the additional well or wells, the scrivener certainly did not use apt language. As the deed contains no language clearly expressing an intent on grantor's part to cut down or limit the grant to Clara Stalnaker, we cannot, in the face of the explicit language of the grantor, hold that the deed contains a reservation in favor of the grantor, except as to the then producing well, unless such reservation or exception may be implied. The rule, however, as to an implication of reservations or exceptions in the face of a direct grant is applicable in only limited instances, as where the subject matter of the alleged exception or reservation is essential to the enjoyment of the land not conveyed by the deed containing the alleged reservation or exception, which remains in the grantor. In this jurisdiction it has been held that a right may be deemed to have been impliedly reserved in a case of strict necessity. In Bennett v. Booth,
Therefore, Clara Stalnaker had the right to, as she did, enter into the lease with Hope Natural Gas Company without the appellees, A. B. Collins and Harlan Collins, joining therein, she being under the obligation in the event oil or gas are produced and marketed under the lease to account to appellees for two-thirds of the proceeds derived therefrom.
Being of the opinion that appellees held no tenancy in common with the appellant, Clara Stalnaker, they are not entitled to partition or any other relief in this suit. Consequently, the decree of the Circuit Court of Gilmer County is reversed and this cause remanded to that court with directions to dismiss appellees' bill of complaint.
Reversed and remanded with directions. *555