Hattie Gifford, an unmarried woman and the owner in fee‘ simple of a section of land in Kimball County, sold and conveyed it on May 13, 1943, for a valuable consideration to appellants as joint tenants “subject to and reserving to the grantor herein personally an undivided one-half (%) interest in and to all gas'; oil or other minerals in on or under said land herein. conveyed,” and subject, to “an undivided one-half (%) interest in and to the' mineral fights as above set forth reserved in the grantor herein.” The grantor died intestate in the year 1946.
Appellants sought by this suit to have it determined *271 that the right or estate reserved by the grantor by virtue of the two provisions of the deed from her to appellants above quoted was personal to Hattie Gifford, terminated at her death, and that her heirs inherited no part of or interest in the real estate. Appellants prayed for a decree quieting an unconditional fee title to the land in them. Appellees claimed that Hattie Gifford excepted from her conveyance to appellants and that she continued until the time of her death to be the unconditional owner of an undivided one-half of the oil, gas, and other minerals in, on, or under the real estate, and that they, as her heirs, became and were the owners thereof. They sought a decree quieting title thereto in them. The district court found against appellants, for appellees, and quieted title in them to an undivided one-half of the oil, gas, and other minerals in the land.
It is conceded by the parties that Hattie Gifford retained an interest in the .land by virtue of the provisions of the deed set out herein, but they disagree as to the character and duration of the estate retained by her. The intention of the parties as expressed in the parts of the deed quoted and the effect of the deed must be determined from a consideration only of that instrument. There is an absence of extrinsic evidence to aid in discovering the intent of the parties.
The court in interpreting a conveyance of real estate is by legislative declaration required to carry into effect the true intent of the parties-so far as it can be ascertained from the whole instrument, if not inconsistent with law. § 76-205, R. R. S. 1943. Each word and provision in the conveyance must be' given such significance as will make effective the intention of the parties. Reuter v. Reuter,
The essence of the argument of appellants is that because the terms of the deed are “reserving to the grantor herein personally” that a reservation was intended and created in the grantor, and that it terminated with her death. Contrary to this appellees claim that the language of the deed excluded from the grant to appellants one-half of the oil, gas, and other mineral rights in the land; that the grantor continued to own them the same as she did before she executed the deed; and that at her death this interest vested in her heirs. Specifically appellees assert the deed created an exception and not a reservation.
A reservation is some new thing issuing out of what is granted. It creates a new right in the grantor from the subject of the conveyance, something which did not exist as an independent right before the grant and which is originated by it. In Eiseley v. Spooner,
The court in Smith v. Furbish, 68 N. H. 123,
In Restatement, Property, § 27, p. 80, it is said concerning an exception that: “The requirement stated in this Section as to the inclusion of words of general inheritance with respect to the conveyee has no application to an exception. The effect of an exception is to exclude from the operation of the conveyance the interest specified and it remains in the conveyor unaffected by the conveyance.” This illustration is given: “A owns land in fee simple absolute. He makes an otherwise effective conveyance thereof ‘to B, his heirs, and assigns
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excepting to myself, a strip ten feet wide along the west side of the land hereby conveyed.’ A still owns the strip in fee simple absolute.” See, also, Donnell v. Otts (Tex. Civ. App.),
The primary rule is that the intention of the parties as determined from the whole instrument shall govern. It is only when the intention is obscure or uncertain that resort may be had to subordinate rules of construction and permissible surrounding circumstances. In this case there is no ambiguity or obscurity in the language used in the deed and the intention of the parties thereto may be said to be quite obvious. The terms exception and reservation are frequently used synonymously, conjunctively, and interchangeably. It is not necessarily conclusive, and many times not even significant, whether the word selected is except or reserve. The intent is the primary matter to be considered. Whether a provision is a reservation or an exception does not depend upon the use of a particular word, but upon the character and effect of the provision itself. In Hicks v. Phillips,
The Legislature enacted the Uniform Property Act to modify and eliminate some common law technicalities and exactions. . One of its provisions is: ■ “An otherwise effective reservation of property by the conveyor reserves the interest the conveyor had prior to the conveyance unless an intent to reserve a different interest is effectively manifested.” § 76-106, R. R. S. 1943. An intent to reserve a different interest than the grantor had prior to the deed herein involved is not “effectively manifested” by the terms of the deed “reserving to the grantor herein personally.” Smith v. Furbish, supra; Donnell v. Otts, supra.
The office of a reservation is to reserve to the grantor something new out of that which is conveyed and which did not exist before as an' independent right. A reservation is always something taken back out of that which is demised. An exception is some part of the estate excluded from the grant and retained by the grantor as if there had been no conveyance made by him to the grantee. The conclusion is inescapable that Hattie Gifford by the terms of her deed to appellants retained a fee simple estate in one-half of the gas, oil, and other *276 minerals in the land conveyed. The inclusion of the word “personally” in the clause excepting this interest in the grantor cannot change the obvious intent of the parties and the meaning of the exception.
The judgment of the district court should be and it is affirmed.
Affirmed.
