294 F. Supp. 24 | S.D. Miss. | 1967
This tort action for conversion of oil in place was instituted here on August 29, 1967. The defendant completed an oil and gas well on November 1, 1947 under a lease executed to the defendant by the record owners on October 16, 1942 of the ten acre tract in Lamar County, Mississippi, described as SW %, .NW %, SW
The plaintiffs make several untenable contentions. They assert that they were induced to accept the first mentioned deed by a collateral oral promise that they would be paid five thousand dollars when a well was produced on said tract and were told that no well would be drilled unless said deed was accepted as it was. It is stated as a conclusion that they were tricked into such settlement and that they did not know of their rights and that they were thus defrauded and that such was concealed fraud. Suit in tort is brought for their interest in the oil produced from the J. S. Moody No. 1 Well in the Baxter-ville Field. Both parties have moved for summary judgment on affidavits and
While this rule is not in high favor in this circuit, it is a wholesome procedure by which the Court can obviate the necessity for a lengthy trial when it becomes clearly apparent that there is no genuine issue of any material fact and that one party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law. The defendant forcefully insists that necessary parties are not before the Court and that the suit should be dismissed unless such parties are made parties to this action. That contention does not reckon with the indisputable fact that this is not a suit to cancel a cloud on a title to land, or to quiet a title to land. If it were such a suit, then defendant would be eminently correct in its contention, but the complaint would be woefully inadequate and not maintainable without a deraignment of title under the laws of the State of Mississippi.
There is no concealed fraud in this case. The defendant promptly filed the settlement instrument in the land records of Lamar County approximately twenty-two years before this suit was filed. There is nothing before this Court to show the existence of any fraud or any concealed fraud in this case. Consequently, it must be presumed conclusively as a matter of law that the written instruments contained the entire agreement between the parties thereto. Any tenable contention as to the existence of any oral promise to pay five thousand dollars not contained in the written instrument would be barred by the Mississippi Three Year Statute of Limitations.
In sum, the plaintiffs have settled their claims to the full extent of their lawful interests in the mineral estate in said land and there has been a full accord and satisfaction thereasto. Alternatively, any claim they may have had has long since been barred by the three year and the six year statute of limitations. The motion of the plaintiffs for a summary judgment is without merit and will be overruled. The motion of the defendant to require the production of additional parties as necessary parties is without merit and will be overruled. Defendant’s motion for a summary judgment is well taken and will be sustained.
A judgment accordingly may be presented.
. § 1325 Mississippi Code 1942 provides: “In bills to confirm title to real estate, and to cancel and remove clouds therefrom, the complainant must set forth in plain and concise language the deraignment of his title; if title has passed out of the sovereign more than seventy-five (75) years prior to the filing of the bill, then the deraignment shall be sufficient if it show title out of the sovereign and a deraignment of title for not less than sixty (60) years prior to the filing of the bill; and a mere statement therein that complainant is the real owner of the land shall be insufficient, unless good and valid reason be given why he does not dera'gn his title; and in all such cases final decrees in the complainant’s favor shall be recorded in the record of deeds, and shall be indexed as if a coveyanee of the land from the defendant or each of them, if more than one; to the complainant or complainants, if more than one.”
. § 729 Mississippi Code 1942 provides: “Actions on an open account or stated account not acknowledged in writing, signed by the debtor, and on any unwritten contract, express or implied, .and on any title certificate relating to real property which was not a homestead and on which no title insurance policy was issued, shall be commenced within three (3) years next after the cause of such action accrued, and not after; provided, however, that the certificate referred to herein shall not apply to a certificate to the correctness of an abstract of title.”
. § 722 Mississippi Code 1942 provides: “All actions for which no other period of limitation is prescribed shall be commenced within six years next after the cause of such action accrued, and not after.”
. There was no relationship of trust or confidence between these parties. Nothing before the Court shows anything to toll the statute. When these instruments were recorded, the alleged concealed fraud rule was dissipated. McMahon v. McMahon, 247 Miss. 822, 157 So.2d 494. Nothing presented to the Court as required by Civil Rule 56(e) shows any fraud perpetrated on plaintiffs. Fraud is never presumed but must be pled with particularity under Civil Rule 9(b), and proved by clear and convincing evidence.
. A mere recital of fact in a deed is as effectual an estoppel as a covenant and binds parties and privies. Bush v. Person, (Miss.1855) 59 U.S. 82, 15 L.Ed. 273.