This suit presents a controversy about the title to an undivided one-half interest in the oil, gas and other minerals in the Northeast Quarter of the Southeast Quarter of Section 11, Township 1 North, Range 17 West, Marion County, Mississippi, and involves among other questions a construction of Section 6605 of the Mississippi Code of 1942, which reads as follows:
“The deed of such conveyance in such cases shall be executed in the name of the county, by the president of the board of supervisors, pursuant to an order of the board entered on its minutes. The proceeds of all such sales, rents or leases shall be paid to the proper sixteenth section funds from which the loan originated, and for which the security so sold was pledged.
“The board of supervisors may accept in payment for the sale of said property, the bonds of the Home Owners Loan Corporation at par and accrued interest, and said board may accept in payment of any indebtedness owing, or that may become due and owing, for the loans of six
“Any real property, or other security, pledged to secure loans from the sixteenth section funds, and heretofore or hereafter purchased by a county, may be sold by said county to any person, including the original borrower on, or owner of, said property or security, for the value thereof, at the time of the sale by it mentioned in this section, to be ascertained and determined by the board of supervisors, and said board may accept in payment for such property or security cash, or part cash, and the balance in deferred payments not to exceed five years; or may accept in whole or in part payment for such property or security the bonds, whensoever and howsoever the same may mature, of the Home Owners Loan Corporation at par and accrued interest thereon to the date of the delivery of the said bonds.”
The litigation arises out of the following facts: On March 5, 1923, Marion County loaned to L. L. Askew from its sixteenth section funds the sum of $1,000, and accepted as security therefor a deed of trust executed by the said Askew on 320 acres of land which he owned in said county, including the land here involved. Default was made in the payment of the indebtedness and the deed of trust was foreclosed. The county became the purchaser at the foreclosure sale of the entire 320 acres at and for the sum of $1265, which was the highest bid for said property and less than the amount of the indebtedness secured, and pursuant to said sale the trustee conveyed the entire 320 acres to the county on April 18, 1940, and the county thereby became the owner of the entire property, to be held for the use of the sixteenth section funds from which the aforesaid loan was made.
On May 7, 1940, appellee applied in writing to the board of supervisors of Marion County to purchase 40 acres of the said 320 acres, being the 40 acres here involved, and described as the Northeast quarter of the Southeast quarter of Section 11, Township 1 North, Range
Appellee arranged a loan at the Columbia Bank to get the money to pay for his purchase. He testified that he got the deed at the bank and that at the time he received the deed someone at the bank told him that the county had retained one-half of the minerals. He made no complaint about it until this suit was filed in 1947. He testified that he never appeared before the board in person. Two members of the board and the attorney for the board testified that appellee came before the board and was expressly informed that the county was retaining one-half the minerals. Two days after he got the deed, he executed an oil and gas lease on the land, representing therein that he owned only an undivided one-half interest in the minerals. That lease lapsed by reason of the nonpayment of the delay rentals and appellee later executed another oil and gas lease on the land, under which he accepted and was accepting at the time of the trial of this cause delay rentals on only an undivided one-half interest in the minerals.
On November 1, 1943, the county executed an oil, gas and- mineral lease to G. G. Stanford on an undivided one-half interest in the minerals in the entire 320 acres. This lease, by assignments, was transferred in the proportion of a one-half interest therein to appellant Bluebird In
On October 7,1944, the county, by separate conveyance, sold and conveyed to C. L. Thornhill an undivided one-fourth interest in the minerals in 160 acres of the total 320 acres and an undivided one-fourth interest in the minerals in the remaining 160 acres of the total 320 acres. After these mineral conveyances, the county asserted and continues to assert title to an undivided one-fourth interest in the minerals in the entire 320 acres. The county regularly collected the delay rentals under its aforesaid lease to G. G. Stanford. From the one-fourth mineral interest which C. L. Thornhill purchased from the county, he sold and conveyed fractional interests in the minerals to various individuals with the result that said one-fourth interest is now claimed in various proportions by appellants, C. L. Thornhill, W. Esco Thornhill, Carlton Bayburn, Miss Evonne Brown, T. H. Barnes, Lee D. Hall, Mrs. Albertine-Hall, and Boss Guyton.
On March 1, 1947, appellee filed his bill against the appellants in the Chancery Court of Marion County, claiming that the county attempted in its deed to appellee to reserve an undivided one-half interest in the minerals and that this attempted reservation was without authority of law and was void, and that by virtue of his deed from the county he acquired title to the land and all of the minerals in the land. He prayed that all of the instruments by which appellants claimed any interest in the undivided one-half mineral interest here involved be cancelled as clouds upon his asserted title thereto, and that he be adjudged to be the true and lawful owner of said one-half mineral interest.
The county and the corporate defendants and the group of individual defendants filed separate answers, denying that the county was without authority to convey the land retaining a one-half undivided interest in the minerals,
The corporate defendants and the group of individual defendants incorporated cross-bills in their respective answers and prayed a decree adjudging the validity of their respective claims to the undivided one-half mineral interest here involved.
The case came on for hearing on November 9, 1948. At the conclusion of the trial, the chancellor took the case under advisement and more than two years later, to-wit, on December 9, 1950, rendered his decree granting the prayer of the original bill and dismissing the cross-bills of the corporate and individual defendants.
The contention of appellee on this appeal is succinctly stated by him as follows: “The position of the appellee is that the deed was valid and binding from its dating and that clearly, simply and absolutely, as a matter of law alone, the attempted reservation or exception was null and void and of no effect, leaving the fee simple title vested in H. Gr. Ford under the deed, valid in every particular except the void reservation.”
It will readily be seen that although the president of the board of supervisors had no authority under the board’s order to convey the land to appellee without retaining an undivided one-half interest in the minerals, and that although the deed to appellee was so drawn, he claims by virtue of said deed the entire fee in the land, including all estates therein. This is also notwithstanding the fact that the great weight of the evidence shows that at the time of appellee’s purchase from the county, he was expressly advised that the county was retaining one-half the minerals, and that at the time he accepted the deed he was advised and knew that the county retained therein one-half the minerals, and that two days thereafter he executed an oil, gas and mineral lease on
There are other factors in the case which we shall now consider and which in our opinion are wholly determinative.
Appellee contends that by the county’s deed he was conveyed the fee in the 40 acres with a reservation in the county of one-half the minerals and that such reservation was void becase not authorized by law and that the said reservation should, therefore, be stricken and the conveyance in fee permitted to stand as valid. If such is the effect to be given the deed, then it was wholly unauthorized and ineffective to vest any title in appellee. Under the express provisions of Section 6605 of the Mississippi Code of 1942, no lands held as security for the loan of sixteenth section funds and purchased by the county at foreclosure sale could be sold and conveyed except by a deed “executed in the name of the county, by the president of the board of supervisors, pursuant to an order of the board entered on its minutes”. Section 4048 of the Mississippi Code of 1942 also provides: “An officer shall not enter into any contract on behalf of the state, or any county, city, town, or village thereof, without being specially authorized thereto by law, or by an order of the board of supervisors or municipal authorities.”
Of course it is settled law also under the decisions of this Court that the board’s action is evidenced solely by the entries on its minutes. In the case of Bridges and Hill v. Board of Supervisors of Clay County,
In the case of McPherson et al. v. Richards et al.,
It is manifest, therefore, that the only authority of the president of the board to execute a deed to appellee was that evidenced by the board’s order on its minutes which directed the conveyance of the land to appellee, retaining in the county one-half of the minerals. If the .deed is to be construed as conveying more, then it ivas unauthorized and ineffective to vest in appellee the full fee simple title to the land. To hold otherwise would be to enlarge upon the board’s order and effect a conveyance of that which the board expressly directed to-be retained (and therefore not conveyed), namely, an undivided one-half interest in the minerals.
“A reservation reserves to the grantor some new thing issuing out of the thing granted and not in esse before, and an exception excludes from the operation of the grant some existing portion of the estate or parcel granted which would otherwise pass under the general description of the deed. ” 26 C. J. S., Deeds, Section 137, page 439.
“A reservation or exception can only be out of the estate granted.” 26 C. J. S., Deeds, Section 139, pages 446-447.
A reservation is of something taken back out of that which was clearly granted. It presupposes a transfer or conveyance of the property out of which the thing reserved issues or arises. In Moore v. Lord,
But finally, and more conclusive, is the authority vested in the board of supervisors under and by virtue of the aforesaid Section 6605 of the Mississippi Code of 1942. In construing this statute due consideration should be given to its purpose, the object to be accomplished, and the intention of the legislature in enacting it. This is in conformity with the generally recognized rules of construction.
“It is the duty of the Court to give to construing acts their practical application so far as possible, unless inconsistent with the obvious intent of the legislature or repugnant to the context of the statute. ” 59 C. J., at page 947.
In Board of Education v. Mobile & O. Railroad Company,
“While the intent of the legislature is to be found primarily in the language of the statute, where such language is vague, ambiguous, or uncertain, the court may look not only to the language but to the subject
“In construing a statute to give effect to the intent or purpose of the legislature, the object of the statute must be kept in mind, and such construction placed upon it as will, if possible, effect its purpose, and render it valid, even though it be somewhat indefinite. To this end it should be given a reasonable or liberal construction, and if susceptible of more than one construction, it must be given that which will best effect its purpose, rather than one which would defeat it, even though such construction is not within the literal interpretation of the statute, and even though both are equally reasonable. Where there is no valid reason for one of two constructions, the one for which there is no reason should not be adopted. ” 59 C. J. 961.
In the case of Smith v. Chickasaw County,
It becomes pertinent, therefore, to inquire into the purpose of the statute under consideration and the object to be accomplished by it and the intention of the legislature in enacting it. The pertinent provisions of said Section 6605 of the Mississippi Code of 1942 -were first enacted as Chapter 142 of the Laws of 1916. It is apparent from the entire context of the act that its chief
“A power to sell a fee ordinarily includes the power to sell a lesser estate or interest, or to grant an easement. ’ ’ 72 C. J. S., Powers, Section 25, page 422. We hold, therefore, that the board had the authority to sell the fee in the entire property or to sell separately acreage subdivisions of the property and reserve or retain mineral interests therein, or to sell the minerals or parts of the minerals separate from the land, as the board might determine to be to the best interest of the sixteenth section funds. We think these views are supported by the case of Federal Land Bank of New Orleans v. Cooper,
In the light of these conclusions, the cases of Burke v. Southern Pacific Ry. Co.,
We are accordingly of the opinion that the chancellor was in error in sustaining the prayer of the original hill and dismissing the cross-hills of the corporate and individual defendants. The decree of the court below is, therefore, reversed and a decree rendered here for the appellants, wherein the original bill of appellee is dismissed and the prayer of the cross-bills of the corporate and individual defendants granted.
Reversed and decree here for appellants.
PEE CURIAM.
The above opinion is adopted 'as the opinion of the Court and for the reasons therein indicated, the judgment of the court below is reversed and decree rendered here for appellants in accordance with the foregoing opinion.
