Opinion of the Court by
Affirming.
On and prior to December 16, 1859, James H. Laws wias the owner of a large tract of land adjoining the lands of Valentine G-earbeart. On tbat day Gearheart executed and delivered to Laws a deed, the material parts of which are as follows:
‘ ‘ This Indenture, made and entered into this 16th day of December, 1859, by and between Jas. H. Laws, of the city of Cincinnati and State of Ohio, of the first part, and Valentine Gearheart and Sallie Gearheart, his wife, of the county of Floyd and State of Kentucky, of the other part,
“Witnesseth: That the said Valentine Gearheart, for and in consideration of the sum of two hundred dollars in hand paid, the receipt thereof is hereby acknowledged, paid by the said Jas. H. Laws, hath bargained and sold to*442 the . . . Jas. H. Laws the following described property, and doth hereby convey the same to-wit:
“All of the mineral right and coal privileges and rights-of-way to and from said minerals and coal privileges, also the right to search for all undiscovered minerals and coals upon the lands hereinafter described, and being and lying in the county of Floyd and State of Kentucky and on the waters of Tolar’s Creek, and upon the land where said Gearheart now lives, bounded as followeth:
“Now, I, said Valentine Gearheart hath sold and doth hereby convey the above described privileges unto the said James H. Laws forever, free from me, my heirs and assigns, and will forever warrant and defend the same; and I, the said Sallie Gearheart, wife of said Valentine Gearheart, doth hereby convey and release . . . all .right in and to dower in the foregoing described privileges.”
On March 1, 1860, Laws and wife conveyed all of his lands, including that deeded to him by Valentine Gear-heart, to the Big Sandy- Coal Mining Company, which in turn mortgaged the property to Laws to secure the payment of certain bonds. Thereafter, Laws died and the bonds descended to his son and only heir, Harry L. Laws. He brought suit in the Federal court to enforce his mortgage lien and became the purchaser of all the property covered by the mortgage.
L. Dow Scott, who purchased from the heirs of Valentine Gearheart by deed dated July 29, 1905, brought this suit against Harry L. Laws, to quiet his title to the minerals. Laws answered and asserted title by virtue of the conveyances and the proceedings above set out. To this answer plaintiff filed a reply, interposing among other defenses a plea of limitation. On final hearing plaintiff’s petition was dismissed, and Laws was adjudged the .owner of the mineral rights and coal privileges in the tract of land in controversy. Plaintiff appeals.
It is the contention of plaintiff that Valéntine' Gear-heart conveyed to Harry L. Laws’ predecessor in title only a mining privilege, which was abandoned and lost by a failure for more than forty years to develop the property.
In this connection, great stress is placed upon the fact that Valentine Gearheart only sold and conveyed “the above described privilegés,” and that Sallie Gear-
Since there was a severance of the mineral estate from the surface estate, the owner of the minerals did not lose his right or his possession by any length of nonuser, nor did the owner of the surface acquire title by the statute of limitations to the minerals by Iris exclusive and continued occupancy and enjoyment of the surface merely. 18 R. C. L. sec. 86, p. 1178; Arnold v. Stevens, supra;
But the further contention is made that oil and gas did not pass by the conveyance in question. Here the grantors conveyed “all of the mineral right and coal privileges and rights-of-way to and from said minerals and coal privileges; also the right to search for all undiscovered minerals and coals upon the lands hereinafter described.” The case of McKinney v. Central Kentucky Natural Gas Co.,
Judgment affirmed.
