This аction was brought by the defend- • ant in error, plaintiff below, R. J. Mounce. After trial and while this appeal was pending; the plaintiff died and the action has been revived in the name of the administrator of his 'estate. In his petition, the plaintiff joined as defendants every one appearing in the chain of title and, after stating his ownership of the surface and an undivided 3/8ths of the minerals under the property, asked the court to quiet his title and determine the ownership of the -remainder of the outstanding mineral interest.
Briefly, the facts are as follows: While this-60 acres was owned by the allottee, an undivided one-half interest in the minerals was conveyed by her to G. E. Rogers. The deed- was recorded. This interest has been transferred to several of the defendants to *432 this action, but for the purposes of this opinion this one-half undivided interest will be referred to as the Rogers’ interest. Thereafter, the allottee conveyed the surface and remaining .mineral interest to Scott Lockhart. While Lockhart was in .possession, Creek County attempted to sell the property for taxes, and a resale (feеd was issued to the County. In these proceedings the property,.was advertised for an amount in excess of the taxes delinquent on the date of the first advertisement. On August 11, 1941, a commissioners’ deed to the property was executed in favor of Jack Carman. On August 25, 1941, for the sum of “One Dollar and the payment of all back taxes or the settlement of back taxes”, Lockhart quitclaimed his interest to Carman, reserving, however, an undivided one-fourth interest in the minerals. During the interim between the execution of these two deeds, Carman visited the property and talked with Lockhart’s tenant concerning the rent due, as well as renting it to him for thе succeeding year. The tenant agreed to pay him the rent for 1941, but he never did. Nothing further was done by Carman to acquire possession. Carman filed both of his dеeds for record on September 3, 1941. In December, 1941, Carman quitclaimed all his- “right, title, and interest” to plaintiff’s predecessor in .title but reserved an undivided one-half of ■three-fourths of the minerals, stating that it was his intention to convey 22½ acres of royalty. This grantee eventually conveyed all her . interest to the • plaintiff by wаrranty deed but excepted from the grant all minerals not owned by her “of record”. Possession of the surface of the property has been in Carman and these subsequent grantees. -There has been no possession of the mineral estate separate from the possession of the surface. .,
The trial court rendered judgment quieting title in plaintiff to the surface and 3/8ths -of the minerals; in Carman to 3/8ths of'the minerals; and in the heirs of Lockhart to l/4th of the minerals. The subsequеnt grantees of the Rogers’ interest appeal. ■ . -
At the outset it should be noted that the facts concerning the attempted tax sale follow the now аll-too-familiar pattern proscribed by numerous opinions of this court. The resale - deed to Creek County was void, thus the'county deed to Carman convеyed no title. Williamson v. Hart,
The facts shоw that the tax deed was- recorded, but. do., they also show an adverse possession? The attempt by Car-man- to take possession of the propеrty through the tenant was not effective for this purpose. The purported attornment of Lockhart’s tenant to Carman was void because a tenant сannot attorn to a stranger without the consent of his landlord. 41 O.S.1951 § 13.; Clark v. Keith,
Upon the delivery of the Lock-hart deed, however, Carman came into the constructive possession of the property through Lockhart’s tenant. Since he was entitled to’ the posséssion of the property by virtue of this deed, he is presumed to have taken possession in accordance with his rights under that conveyance. Blackwelder v. Spillman,
Prescriptive title by adverse possession is not established by inference. The burden of proving an ouster is on the рerson asserting the adverse possession. Coats v. Riley,
It is a rule of almost universal acceptance that the severance оf a mineral interest from the ownership of the surface estate creates a separate estate in those minerals. 1 (A) Summers, Oil & Gas, Sec. 138. The pоssession of the surface thereafter is not adverse to this separate mineral estate even when the surface owner also owns a portiоn of the minerals. This court has subscribed to that view. Deruy v. Noah,
' The judgment is reversed with directions to prоceed in a manner conforming to the views expressed in this opinion.
The Court acknowledges the aid of the Supreme Court. Commissioners in the preparation of this opinion. After a tentative opinion was written by Commissioner NEASE and approved by Commissioners CRAWFORD and REED, the cause was assigned to a Justice of this Court. Thereafter upon report and consideration in conference, the foregoing opinion.was adopted by the Court.
