106 S.W.2d 610 | Ark. | 1937
Lead Opinion
On November 15, 1919, J. T. Mason and Lillian Hearon Mason, his wife, executed and delivered to W. D. Jackson, father of the appellees, a warranty deed conveying, by proper description, a certain forty acres of land situated in Nevada county, Arkansas. The granting clause of the deed is as follows: "* * * Do hereby grant, bargain, sell and convey unto the said W. D. Jackson and unto his heirs and assigns forever the following lands lying in Nevada county, Arkansas, to-wit: (here follows description of the lands.)" The habendum clause of said deed is as follows: "To have and to hold the same unto the said W. D. Jackson and unto his heirs and assigns forever with all appurtenances thereunto belonging, except one-half interest in all oil, gags and mineral rights."
J. T. Mason, the grantor in the aforesaid deed, died intestate leaving surviving his widow, the *237 appellant, and certain heirs. The latter executed a quitclaim deed to the appellant on July 31, 1936, conveying to her one-half the mineral interests reserved in the aforesaid deed. On the same day appellant executed an oil and gas lease to the Benedum-Trees Oil Company, whereupon suit was instituted by the appellees against the appellant seeking to cancel the quitclaim deed and the oil and gas lease as clouds upon their title.
This suit was predicated upon the theory that the reservation in the habendum clause of the warranty deed is void. Issue was joined by answer, and upon a hearing of the cause the chancellor found that the reservation in the deed was void and entered a decree granting the relief prayed. In this we think the chancellor was correct.
In the lower court, and on appeal, appellant contends that appellees' suit is barred by limitation and laches and, further, that the reservation in the deed is valid. We think a decision of the last question is decisive of the first. The reservation being void, as the chancellor found, no duty rested upon the appellees to take notice of the same until their title became clouded by conveyances of the estate attempted to be reserved.
From earliest times the rule has obtained that where two clauses in a deed are totally repugnant to each other, the first shall be received and the latter rejected. Cooley's Blackstone, 4th Ed., vol. 1, page 737; Doe v. Porter,
The appellant concedes that the earlier cases of this court approve the rule above stated, but contends that the "modern" rule should prevail over all technical rules of construction so as to effectuate the intention of the parties. In the earlier cases this rule was *238 recognized. In Doe v. Porter, supra, the court laid down certain rules for the construction of deeds, which, it said, were so ancient and of such universal application as to become "maxims in the science of the law." Among the rules stated, are the following: "All deeds shall be construed favorably, and as near the intention of the parties as possible, consistent with the rules of law. * * * The construction ought to be put on the entire deed, and every part of it. For the whole deed ought to stand together, if practical, and every sentence and word of it be made to operate and take effect."
In the case of Carl Lee v. Ellsberry,
In the case at bar, except for the name of the grantee and the attempted limitation on the grant, the granting *239 and habendum clauses are identical with those of the deed under consideration in the Ellsberry case: "Do hereby grant, bargain, sell and convey unto the said _________________ and unto his heirs and assigns forever, * * *. To have and to hold the same unto the said _________________ and unto his heirs and assigns forever, with all appurtenances thereunto belonging." Then follows the exception. In the instant case, as in the Ellsberry case, the granting clause conveys the lands described to the grantee in fee simple; the habendum defines the estate the grantee is to take in fee simple. The exception in the habendum clause attempts to limit the estate conveyed and is, therefore, repugnant to the granting clause which must prevail.
In Levy v. McDonnell,
In the case of Cole v. Collie,
Appellant complains of the harshness of the rule which, she contends, defeats the manifest intention of the grantor. She also contends that our "early" cases should not be controlling, but that the "modern" rule should prevail so as to defeat technical rules of construction and to effectuate the intention of the grantor. This court has already had before it such a contention on a number of occasions and has always endeavored to construe the separate clauses of the deed under consideration so as to reconcile them if possible. However, in Stokes v. State,
In McDill v. Meyer, supra, there was held to be no repugnancy between the habendum and granting clauses, the granting clause containing no words of inheritance and the habendum providing that if the grantee died without children the title should revert to the grantor, but otherwise it should go to the grantee's children. Also, in Bodcaw Lumber Company v. Goode,
Also, in the case of Citizens Investment Co. v. Armer,
Fender v. Rogers,
In the recent case of Gravette v. Veach,
We have endeavored to examine all our cases dealing with the subject under consideration and have found none to impair or alter the rule first announced as applied in the cases of Carl Lee v. Ellsberry; Levy v. McDonnell and Cole v. Collie, supra. The terms of the deed in the case at bar are identical with those of the deeds under consideration in the cases, supra. It follows that the decree of the trial court is correct, and it is, therefore, affirmed.
SMITH and McHANEY, JJ., dissent.
Dissenting Opinion
There is one fact in this case about which there is no room for doubt, reasonable or otherwise, and that is that the majority opinion has defeated the, obvious and plainly expressed intention of the parties to this deed. The grantor reserved a one-half interest in all oil, gas and mineral rights. That reservation has been ignored, and the majority hold that a right expressly reserved was in fact conveyed. A new contract has been made for the parties, and this has been done by disregarding the unambiguous language which was employed and giving it a construction which the parties did not intend. The grantee purchased the land and a half interest only in the oil, gas and mineral rights, yet he is given the entire oil, gas and mineral rights. He has been given valuable rights which he did not buy and which the deed was not intended to convey. Such a result should not be reached unless required by positive law, and the majority opinion does not furnish that justification. The implications of the opinion will be so far reaching in the timber and mineral portions of the state that I am constrained to register my protest and dissent.
There is no question about the right of a landowner to convey timber or mineral rights apart from the land, *243 or to convey the land and reserve these rights. The practice is so common that the General Assembly found it necessary to make provision for the separate assessment of these interests for purposes of taxation. By the act of April 7, 1905, provision was made for the separate assessment of timber rights. Section 9855, Crawford Moses' Digest. By the earlier act of March 1, 1897, provision was made for the separate assessment of mineral rights. Section 9856, Crawford Moses' Digest. The grantor, therefore, had the right to convey or to reserve all or any portion of the mineral rights. His plainly expressed intention to exercise that right should not be denied him unless some positive law requires that this be done, and I very respectfully, but very earnestly, insist that there is no necessity.
The case of Carl Lee v. Ellsberry,
In other words, two separate and inconsistent estates had been there conveyed to the same grantee. There was an irreconcilable repugnancy, and the question presented and there decided was which of these two estates was in fact conveyed. The rule of construction, that a deed is construed most strongly against the grantor could have been applied as of controlling effect. *244
It was said in the case of Whetstone v. Hunt,
There is no occasion here to resort to technical rules of construction to ascertain the intent of the parties to this deed, for there is no repugnancy here if we may read the deed in its entirety in determining the intention of the parties. There is a widespread misapprehension that we may look only to the granting clause of a deed to determine the estate or interest conveyed. This is not the law. In distinguishing the case of Fletcher v. Lyon, supra, from the Carl Lee case, supra, Chief Justice McCULLOCH said: "The rule announced in Carl Lee v. Ellsberry, supra, does not apply, as the whole of the premises of the deed must be considered together so as to give effect to it as a whole. Moreover, reservations, conditions or limitations not repugnant to the grant may appear in any part of a deed and be equally effectual. 1 Jones on Real Property in Conveyancing, 624; Martindale on Conveyancing, 121."
In the case of Fletcher v. Lyon, supra, the deed construed recited that "The grantors `do hereby grant, bargain, sell and convey unto the said Thomas R. Lyon, and unto his heirs and assigns forever, the following lands *245 lying in the county of Woodruff and state of Arkansas, to-wit: (Here lands are described), containing 372 acres.'" The opinion, also, recites that the grantors in the deed reserved "the right to use for grazing or farm purposes the surface of so much of said premises as the said grantee shall not desire to use in connection with any lumber manufacturing, lumbering or logging operations which he may wish to conduct over or upon said premises, or any part thereof." It was said by Chief Justice McCULLOCH that to properly construe a deed it should be read in its entirety, and when so read the reservation of the beneficial interest above set out was valid and had not been conveyed away in the apparent grant of a fee-simple title appearing in the granting clause.
The effect of a conflict between the granting and habendum clauses as to the estate conveyed is the subject of an extensive annotation to the case of Hammond v. Hammond, 84 A.L.R. 1050, and many of our cases are there cited. The effect of the note is that the rule requiring the rejection of clauses repugnant to and inconsistent with the granting clause is one of construction only, to be employed only where the repugnancy cannot be reconciled. But all the courts do not employ it even then. The annotator says: "The modern and now widely accepted rule, the strongholds of which appear to have been Kentucky, North Carolina, and California, has for its cardinal principle the proposition that, if the intention of the parties is apparent from an examination of a deed `from its four corners' without regard to its technical and formal divisions, it will be given effect though, in doing so, technical rules of construction will be violated. And by these courts it is held that the rule that an habendum creating an estate contradictory or repugnant to that given in the granting clause must be rejected is not a rule of property, but is merely a rule of construction, which will be resorted to only where the court cannot determine which of the clauses was intended to be controlling." Many cases from numerous states are cited in support of this statement, but it may again be said that there is no repugnancy in this deed *246 requiring the aid of technical rules of construction to ascertain the intent of the parties to this deed.
It would unduly extend this dissenting opinion to review our own numerous cases on the subject. The case of Stokes v. State,
The authorities there cited fully sustain the conclusion reached and the declaration of law there announced.
I, therefore, dissent, and am authorized to say that Mr. Justice McHANEY concurs in the view that the reservation of an interest in the oil, gas and mineral rights is valid and should be upheld. *248