134 Ky. 239 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1909
Opinion op the Court'by
—Affirming.
The above-styled actions were instituted by appellees against the three separate appellants for the purpose of removing a cloud from and quieting the title to the lands described in the three petitions. The-actions were brought under the provisions of section 11, Ky. St. Appellants answered and controverted the allegations of the petitions. The testimony was. heard, and the case considered by the court, and judgments were rendered in behalf of appellees in accordance with the prayers of their petitions. The questions to be considered on the -three appeals are similar, and involved the construction of three conveyances. The first is a deed from James Ballard toBibbs and Dollins, dated March 25,1871, in the granting clause of which the following language is used, to-wit: “Do grant, bargain, sell and convey unto the par-lies of the second part his whole entire right, title and. interest in all minerals such as coal, iron, silver, gold,, copper, lead, bismuth, antimony, zinc or any other
The grantors in the above three conveyances or their grantees or descendants, after the date of the above conveyances, leased or sold to appellee Central Kentucky Natural Gas Company the exclusive right to the natural gas under said land, and it sank wells, found the gas, and is furnishing it to persons in several cities and towns in the state. Appellants have been setting up claim to this gas by reason of their conveyances from which the above questions are taken. Therefore the only question to be considered is whether the conveyances referred to include natural gas. It will be observed that gas is not specifically mentioned in either of the deeds; but in all of them the word “minerals” is used, which counsel for the parties concede, when given its broadest meaning, includes natural gas. But the question to be determined is: What was the intention of the parties to the deeds at the time they were made? Did the grantors understand at that time that oil and gas were minerals and would pass with the other minerals named in the conveyances; and 'did they intend to convey the gas ? In other words, did the minds of the parties to the conveyances meet upon the questions? Did the one understand that he was conveying, and the other that he was purchasing the gas thereunder? If not, the gas did not pass with the conveyances. The solution of this question depends upon the language used in the conveyances and the facts and circumstances surrounding the parties at the time they made them.
We have not been cited to, nor have we been able to find, any decisions in Kentucky that throw any light upon the subject. We find in Donahue on Petroleum & Gas, p. 220, the following: “When a lease
The case of Detlor v. Holland, 57 Ohio St. 492, 49 N. E. 690, 40 L. R. A. 266, is exactly in point. The conveyance of the mine right in that case was as follows: “Do hereby grant, bargain, sell and convey to the said Michael L. Deaver, and his heirs and assigns forever, all the coal of every variety and all the iron ore, fire clay and other valuable minerals, in, on or under the following described premises, * * * together with the right in perpetuity to the said Michael L. Deaver, or his assigns, of mining and removing such coal, ore or other minerals, and the said Michael L. Deaver, or his assigns, shall also have the right to the use of so much of the surface of the land as may be necessary for pits, shafts, platforms, drains, railroads, switches, side tracks, etc., to facilitate the mining and removal of such coal,
The case of Dunham v. Kirkpatrick, 101 Pa. 36, 47 Am. Rep. 696, is also in point. In that case the reservation was of “all timber suitable for sawing and all minerals.” The deed was made in 1870, and the opinion was rendered in 1882. The court held that the term “all minerals” did not include petroleum, because the mass of mankind did not so understand it; that nothing appeared in the record to show that the parties so understood it. However, the court in that case decided that petroleum was technically a mineral.
See, also, the case of Deer Lake Company v. Michigan Land and Iron Company, 89 Mich. 180, 50 N. W. 807. In the syllabus it is said: “A reservation in a
Appellees took the depositions of several old citizens in Pennsylvania, who testified: ‘ ‘ That they were well acquainted with the development of natural gas in this country; that it had no marketable value prior to the year 1882; that in that year it was piped to Bradford, Pa., in an experimental way.” They also introduced the state and assistant state geologist of Kentucky, and they testified that not until the year 1885 or 1886 did natural gas have any marketable value in the state of Kentucky, and that it was at that time piped from Meade county to the city of Louisville.
Appellants introduced several witnesses who resided in Menifee county near the lands containing the gas in controversy. They testified that, about the time these conveyances were executed, there was great excitement in that locality over natural gas. The-preponderance of the proof, however, is to the effect that the excitement was over the discovery of coal, and that the parties obtained these conveyances with the view of mining coal, which they did to some extent, but have long since ceased to use it for that or any other purpose. We may here remark that, if the excitement at that time was caused by the discovery of natural gas, it is strange that in drawing the conveyances they did-not use words which would have, without doubt, included natural gas. In addition to
Appellants claim that the case of Murray v. Allred, 100 Tenn. 100, 43 S. W. 355, 39 L. R. A. 249, 66 Am. St. Rep. 740, tends to sustain their position in this case. It does tend strongly to support them; but, when properly construed, it is not in conflict with the eases cited above. In that case one John Eodgers conveyed to Mathias Wright a certain tract of land in Tennessee. In the deed Eodgers reserved to himself, his heirs and assigns, “all mines, minerals and
Appellants also claim that the case of Dunham v. Kirkpatrick, supra, was overruled by the latter case of Gill v. Weston, 110 Pa. 313, 1 Atl. 921. That action was brought for the recovery of an engine and belt which had been removed from the oil leasehold by Curtis, the lessee. The question before us was not under consideration in that case, and was not referred to, except in the last few lines of the opinion, and upon the subject as to whether a lease for oil could be mortgaged. The court said that oil was a mineral, and was obtained by mining, and was a subject of a mortgage under the act of 1855 (P. L. 369), which made it lawful for a lessee for a term of years of mining lands to mortgage the same. The court made no reference to its former decision of Dunham v. Kirkpatrick, supra. It was not said in the DunhamKirkpatrick case that oil was not a mineral, but it was said that it was. However, the court, in construing the language used in the deed under consideration in that case, decided that the parties did not intend to pass the title to the oil. There is no real conflict between the cases.
Under the authorities referred to and all the facts in this case, we are of the opinion that appellants did not obtain by their conveyances the natural gas under the lands described therein.