194 Ky. 628 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1922
Reversing.
The real question in the case presented by this appeal is, who is the true owner of the oil and gas in and under the eight-acre tract of land, in Lee county, on ■which appellee, Malissa Norman, now lives and claims both the surface and the mineral. A very large part of the record is devoted to the presentation for construction of a written contract of date May 4, 1920, between the Northern Lee Oil & Gas Company of the one part, and the assigns of two oil leases, executed by the two adverse claimants of the mineral in and under the •said land. Each set of claimants assert title to a one-eighth royalty in the oil and gas under their lease of the ’ land, which now has on it several good wells. The company refused to pay one-fourth royalty, one-eighth to each of them, but asserts it is willing to pay a royalty of one-eighth to the true owner of the mineral in the tract. A determination of the true ownership' of the oil and gas under the lands in dispute will, we think, relieve the court of the necessity of devoting much space to the interpretation of the contract.
On December 25, 1901, James T. Maloney, then the owner of a 58-acre tract of land on Sugar Camp branch and Jack Mann’s branch, in Lee county, sold and conveyed the same to John Coomer for the sum of $100.00, $5.00 of which was in hand paid and the balance evidenced by two promissory notes, the said Maloney retaining a lien upon the property for the security of the unpaid purchase money, and making the following reservations in the habendum clause:
“To have and to hold the same, together with all its appurtenances thereunto belonging to the said John Coomer, his heirs and assigns forever, saving and excepting therefrom and from this conveyance all the coal, iron, gas and oi'l of any and every sort or description, with the right of egress and ingress to mine and work and remove the said coal, iron, gas or oils, without any charge to the grantor.”
Needless to say that it is admitted by all parties to this controversy that James T. Maloney, who is named grantor in said deed, did not divest himself of the oil and gas or other minerals mentioned by said conveyance, but on the contrary continued to own the same. The aforementioned deed was duly recorded in the office of the clerk of the Lee county court on the 30th day of De
■On March 13, 1920, James T. Maloney and wife, in consideration of one dollar and one-eighth royalty, executed to Lee Kash an oil and gas lease upon the whole of the 58 acres, the surface of which he had conveyed to Coomer in 1901, and which 58 acres included and covered the eight acres claimed by Malissa Norman and on which she shortly theretofore executed an oil and gas lease to A. M. Sutton. This lease, with the one from Malissa Norman, passed from Lee Kash and others to the Northern Lee Oil & Gras Company under a written contract of date May 4, 1920, by which it is claimed by some of the appellants that the company agreed to pay certain additional royalties.
Recognizing the validity of the reservations of the oil and gas and other minerals made by James T. Maloney in his deed to the Coomers, of date December 26,
Where a party to an action claims real estate, or an interest therein, under and through a writing on the face of which there were erasures, interlineations or other evidences -of mutilation, the genuineness of which is challenged by the opposing party, the burden is upon the party producing the paper to show by satisfactory evidence that the interlineations, erasures or mutilations in the writing were made or occurred before delivery, or, if subsequently, by agreement of the parties, or through some accident or misfortune, and the paper is not admissible until its authenticity has been established by sufficient evidence to make out a prima facie case. With this rule in mind let us examine the original title bond under which Malissa Norman claims the oil and gas. It purports to have been written on April 20,1903, and is on a sheet of old-fashioned foolscap paper, now yellowed by age. The writing, which was done with pen and ink, is reasonably legible but gives unmistakable evidence of having been done by one not an expert in penmanship. In fact it appears to be the writing of one not accustomed to drawing such instruments or using a pen except at rare intervals. After the date the first word, “this,” starts with a small letter when it should have been a capital. The first sentence reads: ‘ ‘ this indenture made and entered into by and between John Coomer and James Maloney of the -first partys D B Pence of -the sécond part all of the county of lee and State of Ky. witnesseth. ’ ’ In the foregoing sentence the words,
On the other hand, James T. Maloney, John Coomer and Margaret Ann Coomer all testify that no such instrument was ever prepared, read or signed by them or in their presence at the time and place mentioned by Pence, or at' any time or place. Maloney says he did not write the paper, that it is not in his handwriting, and that he did not sign it or authorize another to do so nor deliver it or know anything about it until a short time before this litigation commenced, and that at that time it was in the hands of parties interested in the cause of Mrs. Norman and those claiming under the same title. ’ He further- states that he obtained from Pence a red muley heifer for which he paid him $25.00 in cash, and at the time took from him a written receipt signed by Pence, the original of which is exhibited in the record and made a part of the -evidence. The evidence stands one for 'and three against the authenticity of the alleged title bond, and this' is not all. The questioned writing purports to be merely a title bond by which Maloney obligated himself to join in a deed with the Coomers to Pence for the land, and although the Coomers made, executed and delivered to B. D. Pence a deed of general warranty for the said lands in 1903, only a few months after the date of the alleged title bond, James T. -Maloney did not sign said deed,-and the explanation given by Pence for his failure to have Maloney sign the deed is wholly unsatisfactory. The fact that Pence accepted the deed from Coomer and his wife for the land only a short time after the date of the alleged title bond without having Maloney join in the deed, as by the alleged title bond he was bound to do, is a very strong circumstance against the validity of the bond. The deed from the Coomers to pence- recites that the Coomers derived title from J. T. Maloney. Another strong circumstance connected with the alleged title bond is that the name James Maloney is written both in the top of the bond and is so subscribed, whereas it appears . that Maloney in the execution of other papers about that time always signed his name J. T. Maloney. It nowhere
2. It is next insisted that Mrs. Norman acquired title tojhe oil and gas by adverse possession. The statutes of limitation do not run in favor of the owner and holder of the surface against the fee owner of the mineral estate in the same land; nor is a deed or other conveyance of mineral ehampertous merely because at the time of the conveyance the lands are possessed by another. The two estates, when once separated, remain independent and a prescriptive title to the mineral can never be acquired by merely holding and claiming the land, even though title be asserted in the mineral all the time. The possession of the surface owner is the possession of the owner of the mineral, .under section 2366a, the two being amicable. The only way the statutes can be started running in favor of the surface holder as against the owner of the mineral is by the former taking actual possession of the mineral under claim of right by opening mines or wells and 'Operating the same. "When this possession has continued for the statutory period, title to the mineral by adverse possession is perfected. The opening of a coal bank or oil or gas wells for the purpose of taking only a small quantity of the mineral for domestic purposes and not with the avowed intention of acquiring title to the whole mineral estate does not start the statutes running. In fact entry on to or into the possession of the mineral estate in order to start the statutes of limitation running in favor of the claimant must be accompanied with such open, notorious and adverse
3. Having reached tbe conclusion that appellee, M'alisaa Norman, owned no interest in tbe oil and gas at tbe time sbe executed tbe lease'to Sutton, and that tbe title to all said mineral was reserved byJames T. Maloney in bis deed to Coomer and wife, but was later conveyed by Maloney and wife to Kash and others, who transferred it to appellee, Northern Lee Oil & Cas Company, and there being no provision in the contract of May 4, 1920, between the two Suttons, Kash and Eversole of tbe one part, and appellee Northern Lee Oil & Cas Company of the second part, by which appellee Malissa Norman was to have or receive a royalty from tbe said eight acres of land, it becomes unnecessary for the court to discuss or construe the said contract.
For tbe reasons indicated tbe judgment is reversed for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Judgment reversed.