46 W. Va. 451 | W. Va. | 1899
On the 7th day of February, 1898, the State of West ■Virginia filed her bill in the circuit court of Doddridge County for the purpose of selling for the benefit of the school fund various tracts and parcels of land, and. gas and oil interests in other tracts, as set out and described in the bill; alleging that certain of said lands are liable to sale
An agreed statement of facts, signed by the attorneys of the respective parties, was filed in the cause, w'hich statement, as far as it affects the questions involved in the appeal in this cause, is as follows: “Witnesseth, that the said Kamsey and Ireland, attorneys, and the said Snider, attorney, agree upon the following facts in said cause: The land on which the grants were given wherein the oil and gas interests are claimed to be forfeited, as set up in said bill, was valued at the last valuation or reassessment nf real estate in West Virginia as the land has always been assessed for taxation, and was placed on the land books of said county in the year 1892 at that valuation, and has continued on the land books for the years 1892, 1893, 1894, 1895, and 1896 at the same valuation, and that the taxes thereon, as so assessed, have all been paid for said years by said persons who owned the lands and gave the grants, or their vendees, and that said grants, or the interests therein, except those which have been closed by the payment of the final amount, have never been placed on the land books in the name of A. H. Lowe and his assigns for taxable purposes, and that they have paid no taxes on the same for said years, and that all of said grants are similar in form, and, .so far as it affects this question of taxation, identical with the copy filed with the answer of A. H. Low et al. marked 'Exhibit YY.’ ”
On the 26th of July, 1898, the cause was heard, the demurrer of A. H. Low and others to the bill was overruled, and the court held, and so decreed, that said oil and ga,s interests and estates in the bill mentioned were forfeited to. the State, and liable to .sale for the benefit of the school fund, subject to the conditions and requirements contained in the grants of said estates, and decreed that the commissioner of school lands proceed to sell the same at public auction for cash, from which decree the said defendants A. H. Low, John A. Nichol, L. E. Mallory, C. H.
Two questions arise in this case: First. Did the appellants have such interest in the land as could properly be taxed on the assessor's land books as real estate, separately from the interests of the vendors? And, second, if they hadl such interest, did their failure to have it placed on the land books, and charged with taxes thereon in their name, for the years 1892 to 1896, both inclusive, as alleged in the bill, work a forfeiture of their title, notwithstanding the same was carried on said books for the same years, and the taxes paid thereon in the names of their grantors? In other words, was the payment of the taxes on the lands for said years by their vendors, at the full valuation placed upon said lands by the assessment of 1891, which included, all gas, oil, minerals, and everything that went to malee up the real estate, complete and full satisfaction of all taxes thereon to which the State was entitled? To ascertain what estate, if any, appellants are entitled to, it is necessary to' take the whole contract together. As has been said, “it must be talren by the four corners,” and examined altogether, to get at the meaning of it. It starts out with, the “grantors have granted and conveyed, and do hereby oonvev, subject to the following-conditions”; then proceeds to malee such conditions that, while the grantee has the right, as appellee says in one of his briefs, “to take possession of the farm, punch it full of holes, and search and explore for oil, the farmer will not be heard to complain until ninety days have passed without the payment being made.” It is clearly a present grant, with the right to the grantee to' take possession and drill and work upon said land; and in the second paragraph the grantee is “granted all -the rights and privileges of drilling and operating on said land, to produce, store and remove the said oil and gas, necessary and usually granted to the lessee in an oil and gas lease.” So' that, in any event, the grantee has ninety days after a well has been properly completed, tubed, and tested for oil in which to pay the eight hundred dollars, in all iof which time he may produce, store, and remove the said oil and gas before the payment, so far as the provisions of said contract are
Reversed.