Title: Senterra, Ltd. v. Winland

State: ohio

Issuer: Ohio Supreme Court

Document:

[Until this opinion appears in the Ohio Official Reports advance sheets, it may be cited as 
Senterra, Ltd. v. Winland, Slip Opinion No. 2022-Ohio-2521.] 
 
 
 
 
NOTICE 
This slip opinion is subject to formal revision before it is published in an 
advance sheet of the Ohio Official Reports.  Readers are requested to 
promptly notify the Reporter of Decisions, Supreme Court of Ohio, 65 
South Front Street, Columbus, Ohio 43215, of any typographical or other 
formal errors in the opinion, in order that corrections may be made before 
the opinion is published. 
 
 
SLIP OPINION NO. 2022-OHIO-2521 
SENTERRA, LIMITED, APPELLEE AND CROSS-APPELLANT, v. WINLAND ET AL., 
APPELLANTS AND CROSS-APPELLEES. 
[Until this opinion appears in the Ohio Official Reports advance sheets, it 
may be cited as Senterra, Ltd. v. Winland, Slip Opinion No. 2022-Ohio-2521.] 
Property law—Marketable Title Act, R.C. 5301.47 et seq.—Oil and gas—Court of 
appeals’ judgment affirmed. 
(No. 2020-0197—Submitted October 5, 2021—Decided July 26, 2022.) 
APPEAL and CROSS-APPEAL from the Court of Appeals for Belmont County, 
No. 18 BE 0051, 2019-Ohio-4387 and 2019-Ohio-5458. 
__________________ 
STEWART, J. 
{¶ 1} In this discretionary appeal from a judgment of the Seventh District 
Court of Appeals, we are asked to determine the ownership rights to an oil and gas 
interest that has been severed from its surface property.  Appellee and cross-
appellant, Senterra, Ltd., the owner of the surface property at issue, seeks to quiet 
title to the disputed oil and gas interest in its favor and urges us to apply the deed-
SUPREME COURT OF OHIO 
 
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interpretation rule of equity set forth in Duhig v. Peavy-Moore Lumber Co., 135 
Tex. 503, 507-508, 144 S.W.2d 878 (1940) (the “Duhig rule”), which estops a 
grantor from claiming title to a severed oil and gas interest when doing so would 
breach the grantor’s warranty as to the title and interest purportedly conveyed to 
the grantee.  Appellants and cross-appellees,1 the heirs to the oil and gas interest 
(“the heirs”), argue that the Duhig rule is inapplicable and that Ohio’s Marketable 
Title Act (“MTA”), R.C. 5301.47 et seq., applies to the interest and gives them 
marketable record title to it. 
{¶ 2} We decline Senterra’s invitation to apply the Duhig rule, as it is 
inapplicable to the facts of this case.  Moreover, there is an unbroken chain of record 
title to the oil and gas interest at issue for at least 40 years following the root-of-
title deed to the property.  See R.C. 5301.48.  The MTA thus applies and preserved 
the heirs’ oil and gas interest.  Accordingly, we affirm the judgment of the Seventh 
District. 
Facts and Procedural History 
{¶ 3} In 2012, Senterra acquired a 77.5-acre parcel of land in Belmont 
County through a general warranty deed.2  The conveyance was subject to oil and 
gas interests that were severed from the surface property prior to Senterra’s 
acquisition of the land.  For the purposes of this case, the genesis of transfers of the 
land occurred in 1925 when Lulu E. and James H. Winland and Alta H. and William 
H. Dermot (collectively, “Winland-Dermot”) conveyed their interest in an 86-acre 
 
1.  Appellants and cross-appellees are Alan T. Winland, Laura J. Winland, Linda Godek, Clarence 
Winland, Frances Faulkner, Norman Winland, Teresa Winland, John D. McBrayer, Brenda S. 
Langkopf, Amy Kay Fahner, Jeff Fahner, Lori Jo Podsobinski, Charles Patterson, Cathy Patterson, 
Debra Saunders, Bill Saunders, Diane McBrayer Andersen, Brian Andersen, Linda Dollison, and 
Larry Podsobinski.  On August 21, 2020, counsel for appellants and cross-appellees filed 
suggestions of death notifying this court that Alant T. Winland died on May 19, 2020, and that 
Clarence Winland died on December 22, 2018. 
 
2.  Senterra acquired through the same transfer a second parcel of land that is not at issue in this 
appeal. 
January Term, 2022 
 
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tract of land to Joseph E. Russell and George W. Russell through a quit-claim deed.  
In the deed, Winland-Dermot “except[ed] and reserve[d]” a one-quarter interest in 
the oil and gas underlying the land. 
{¶ 4} In 1941, Joseph Russell and George Russell transferred their interest 
in the 86-acre tract to George Russell through a warranty deed but excepted from 
the transfer “all oil and gas rights.”  The deed did not mention the one-quarter 
exception and reservation made by Winland-Dermot in 1925.  In 1954, George 
Russell transferred the 86-acre tract to Stanley Juzwiak and Margaret Juzwiak 
through a warranty deed but excepted and reserved a one-quarter interest in the oil 
and gas for himself and his heirs and assigns.  The 1954 deed did not mention the 
prior exceptions or reservations contained in the 1925 and 1941 deeds. 
{¶ 5} In 1971, Stanley Juzwiak and Margaret Juzwiak transferred their 
interest in the remainder of the land, then 77.5 acres, to Seaway Coal Company 
through a warranty deed that restated George Russell’s exception and reservation 
of a one-quarter interest in the oil and gas.  In 1987, Seaway Coal Company 
transferred its interest to Shell Mining Company through a general warranty deed 
that again restated George Russell’s 1954 exception and reservation of the one-
quarter interest.  In 1992, Shell Mining Company transferred its interest to R & F 
Coal Company through a limited warranty deed.  The deed stated that the transfer 
was “subject to * * * conditions and restrictions of record,” and attached to the deed 
was the 1987 deed for the transfer of the land from Seaway Coal Company to Shell 
Mining Company. 
{¶ 6} In 2000, Capstone Holding Company, a successor by merger to R & 
F Coal Company, transferred its interest to Lora Lynn Kelly, David Joseph Sensius, 
and Steven George Sensius through a limited warranty deed.  Although the deed 
did not refer to any specific prior exceptions or reservations, it contained the 
following language: “UNDER and SUBJECT to any and all exceptions, 
reservations, restrictions, * * * [and] covenants and conditions * * * shown by 
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instruments of record.”  (Capitalization sic.)  In 2012, Lora Kelly, David Sensius, 
and Steven Sensius conveyed their interest to Senterra through a warranty deed.  
The deed referred to the 1992 deed for the transfer of the land from Shell Mining 
Company to R & F Coal Company, and it contained language regarding prior 
exceptions and reservations identical to that used in the 2000 deed. 
{¶ 7} In 2018, Senterra filed a complaint in the Belmont County Court of 
Common pleas against the heirs and other defendants,3 seeking to quiet title to the 
interests in the oil and gas underlying the land.  Senterra filed a motion for summary 
judgment, arguing among other things that the oil and gas interests retained under 
the 1925 and 1941 conveyances were extinguished by the MTA and that George 
Russell’s purported reservation of a one-quarter interest in the oil and gas in the 
1954 deed was legally ineffective under the Duhig rule.  Alternatively, Senterra 
argued that the oil and gas interests were abandoned under Ohio’s Dormant Mineral 
Act, R.C. 5301.56. 
{¶ 8} The trial court granted summary judgment to Senterra regarding title 
to the interest that had been retained by George Russell, determining that the 
reservation made in the 1954 deed was void ab initio under the ordinary rules of 
contract construction and the Duhig rule.  The court also determined that the 
reservations of the oil and gas interests made in 1925 and 1941 were extinguished 
by the MTA and that Senterra possessed marketable record title to the oil and gas 
interests.  The court then determined that Senterra’s claims based on the DMA were 
moot. 
{¶ 9} The heirs appealed to the Seventh District, arguing that the trial court 
erred when it applied the MTA to extinguish their oil and gas interests, that it 
incorrectly determined that the interests were extinguished by the MTA even if the 
MTA applied, and that it erred when it determined that George Russell’s reservation 
 
3.  Senterra’s complaint also named as defendants Rice Drilling D, L.L.C., and Gulfport Energy 
Corporation, neither of which are involved in this appeal. 
January Term, 2022 
 
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of the one-quarter interest in the oil and gas was void ab initio pursuant to the Duhig 
rule. 2019-Ohio-4387, 148 N.E.3d 34, ¶ 34, 48-49, 84-85.  The court of appeals 
affirmed the trial court’s determinations that the MTA applied and extinguished the 
oil and gas interests that had been retained in the 1925 and 1941 deeds, id. at ¶ 43-
44, 68-74, but it reversed the trial court’s determination that George Russell’s 
reservation of the one-quarter interest was void ab initio, id. at ¶ 94, 96.  The court 
of appeals held that the Duhig rule was inapplicable to that reservation and that the 
MTA applied and preserved the one-quarter interest in the oil and gas.  Id. 
{¶ 10} Senterra filed an application for reconsideration with the court of 
appeals, requesting that it grant a limited remand to the trial court based on the court 
of appeals’ determination that the trial court had erroneously applied the Duhig rule 
when it should have determined that the interest was preserved under the MTA.  
2019-Ohio-5458, ¶ 4.  Senterra asserted that the court of appeals’ holding revived 
its claim that the interest had been abandoned under the DMA.  Id.  The court of 
appeals granted the application and remanded the matter to the trial court for it to 
determine whether the interest had been abandoned under the DMA.  Id. at ¶ 6-8. 
{¶ 11} The heirs appealed to this court, and Senterra filed a cross-appeal.  
We accepted jurisdiction to consider the heirs’ first proposition of law: “The 
Dormant Mineral Act, R.C. 5301.56, is the specific provision of the Marketable 
Title Act, R.C. 5301.47 et seq., with respect to the transfer of severed, fee oil and 
gas ownership interests to a surface owner and its provisions prevail over the 
general provisions which are inapplicable.”  See 158 Ohio St.3d 1522, 2020-Ohio-
3018, 145 N.E.3d 311.  We also accepted jurisdiction to consider Senterra’s sole 
proposition of law: “When a reservation fails under the Duhig Rule, it is declared 
void ab initio at the time of the deed and cannot be revived pursuant to later 
determinations that prior reservations were made or deemed ineffective pursuant to 
statutory mechanisms.”  See id. 
SUPREME COURT OF OHIO 
 
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{¶ 12} We held the appeal and cross-appeal for our decision in West v. 
Bode, 162 Ohio St.3d 293, 2020-Ohio-5473, 165 N.E.3d 298.  See 158 Ohio St.3d 
1522, 2020-Ohio-3018, 145 N.E.3d 311.  After West was decided, we lifted the stay 
and ordered briefing on the proposition of law presented in Senterra’s cross-appeal 
only, 160 Ohio St.3d 1514, 2020-Ohio-6834, 159 N.E.3d 1178, because we 
addressed the arguments relating to the heirs’ proposition of law in West, holding 
that there is no irreconcilable conflict between the MTA and the DMA, see West at 
¶ 2. 
Law and Analysis 
{¶ 13} As an initial matter, we decide the issue presented in the heirs’ 
proposition of law in accordance with our decision in West and affirm the judgment 
of the court of appeals on that issue. 
{¶ 14} Turning to the proposition of law presented in Senterra’s cross-
appeal, we note that when the MTA was originally enacted in 1961, it did not apply 
to mineral interests.  West at ¶ 17, citing former R.C. 5301.53(E), 129 Ohio Laws 
1040, 1046.  The General Assembly amended the MTA in 1976, however, to allow 
property owners to clear their properties’ titles of unused mineral interests.  Id.; see 
also Am.S.B. No. 267, 135 Ohio Laws, Part I, 942-943.  “The [MTA now] 
extinguishe[s] oil and gas rights by operation of law after 40 years from the 
effective date of the root of title unless a saving event preserving the interest 
appear[s] in the record chain of title.”  Corban v. Chesapeake Exploration, L.L.C., 
149 Ohio St.3d 512, 2016-Ohio-5796, 76 N.E.3d 1089, ¶ 18 (lead opinion); see also 
Collins v. Moran, 7th Dist. Mahoning No. 02 CA 218, 2004-Ohio-1381, ¶ 20 
(explaining that the MTA operates “as a 40-year statute of limitations for bringing 
claims against a title of record”). 
{¶ 15} “Ohio’s [MTA] is taken primarily from the Model Marketable Title 
Act.”  Heifner v. Bradford, 4 Ohio St.3d 49, 51, 446 N.E.2d 440 (1983).  The MTA 
provides that a person who has an unbroken chain of title of record to any interest 
January Term, 2022 
 
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in land for at least 40 years has a “marketable record title” to that interest.  R.C. 
5301.48; see also West, 162 Ohio St.3d 293, 2020-Ohio-5473, 165 N.E.3d 298, at 
¶ 15.  Marketable record title is a title of record that extinguishes interests and 
claims existing prior to the date of the root of title.  R.C. 5301.47(A).  “ ‘Root of 
title’ means that conveyance or other title transaction in the chain of title of a 
person, purporting to create the interest claimed by such person, upon which he 
relies as a basis for the marketability of his title, and which was the most recent to 
be recorded as of a date forty years prior to the time when marketability is being 
determined.”  R.C. 5301.47(E).  Thus, the root of title must precede the date when 
marketability is being determined by 40 years and it must account for the interest 
claimed by the person seeking marketable record title.  Id.; see also Blackstone v. 
Moore, 155 Ohio St.3d 448, 2018-Ohio-4959, 122 N.E.3d 132, ¶ 9.  The court of 
appeals explained the process for determining the root of title under the MTA: 
 
“Assuming the Model Act were enacted as written, an 
examiner inspecting title would use it as follows: beginning with the 
date forty years before the date on which he is determining title and 
moving chronologically backwards therefrom, he would find the 
most recently recorded conveyance of the subject parcel.  This 
document is his potential root of title.  After giving a cursory 
examination of the previous title documents to determine easements, 
interest owned by the federal government, and reversionary, 
possessory interests in leases, he would closely scrutinize the 
documents in the chain of title for the forty years immediately 
following the root.  Finding no competing recorded interests, he 
could safely assume that all interests previous to the root of title not 
otherwise excepted were extinguished and that the title was defect 
free up to the date of the root.  If, however, he found competing 
SUPREME COURT OF OHIO 
 
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claims in the chain, he would go back to the next closest preceding 
conveyance and repeat the process.  He would continue moving 
back until he found a conveyance followed by forty years of clean 
title.  That document would be his root, and he could safely conclude 
that the act extinguished all competing interests recorded prior to 
that date.” 
 
2019-Ohio-4387, 148 N.E.3d 34, at ¶ 57, quoting Hubbert, Rocked by Rocket: 
Applying Oklahoma’s MRTA to Severed Mineral Interests after Rocket v. Donabar, 
68 Okla.L.Rev. 381, 386 (2016). 
{¶ 16} Further, “[a]n interest that has been extinguished by operation of the 
[MTA] cannot be revived.”  West at ¶ 15, citing R.C. 5301.49(D).  The only 
exception to that rule is if there was a saving event that appears in the record chain 
of title— “i.e., the interest was specifically identified in the muniments of title in a 
subsequent title transaction, the holder recorded a notice claiming the interest, or 
the interest ‘[arose] out of a title transaction which has been recorded subsequent 
to the effective date of the root of title.’ ”  (Brackets added in Corban.)  Corban, 
149 Ohio St.3d 512, 2016-Ohio-5796, 76 N.E.3d 1089, at ¶ 18, quoting R.C. 
5301.49(D). 
{¶ 17} Relying on the Seventh District’s application of the Duhig rule in 
Talbot v. Ward, 2017-Ohio-9213, 102 N.E.3d 544 (7th Dist.), the trial court 
determined that George Russell’s reservation of the one-quarter oil and gas interest 
was void ab initio.  In Talbot, the Seventh District analyzed successive recorded 
transfers of a property’s oil and gas interests that occurred within a 40-year period.  
Id. at ¶ 2-13.  The court of appeals neither mentioned nor applied the MTA in 
Talbot.  Rather, in determining the ownership of the interests at issue, the court 
applied the Duhig rule.  Talbot at ¶ 45-74. 
January Term, 2022 
 
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{¶ 18} The origin of the transfers of the disputed oil and gas interests at 
issue in Talbot occurred in 1943, when a grantor conveyed his surface property to 
a grantee but excepted and reserved a one-half interest in the oil and gas underlying 
the property while failing to adequately mention any prior exceptions or 
reservations regarding that interest in the deed.  Id. at ¶ 45-51.  The other one-half 
interest in the oil and gas was owned by a third party who subsequently sold that 
interest.  Id. at ¶ 64-65.  The grantee later sold his one-half interest to the third 
party’s successor in title who by then owned the other one-half interest.  Id. at ¶ 7, 
61.  And in 1977, the third-party successor recorded a preservation affidavit 
claiming ownership of the entire oil and gas interest.  Id. at ¶ 40, 61. 
{¶ 19} The appellees in Talbot argued that the original grantor had retained 
the one-half interest that he excepted and reserved to himself.  Id. at ¶ 53.  But the 
court of appeals held that under the Duhig rule and the ordinary rules of deed 
construction, even if the original grantor had excepted or reserved the one-half 
interest, that exception or reservation failed because the original grantor violated 
the warranty of title and his successors in interest were estopped from claiming title 
to the reserved fractional interest.  Talbot at ¶ 68. 
{¶ 20} The Seventh District distinguished Talbot from this case because 
Talbot did not involve an unbroken chain of title of record for 40 years, which is 
necessary for the MTA to apply.  2019-Ohio-4387, 148 N.E.3d 34, at ¶ 91-92.  The 
court of appeals noted, “In Talbot we were not asked to apply the MTA.  Given the 
facts [in Talbot], the MTA could not have been used to extinguish an interest; the 
MTA could not remove the clouds on the title to the minerals because there were 
competing interests that were preserved within the 40 year period.”  Id. at ¶ 91.  We 
agree with the court of appeals that the Duhig rule does not apply to the facts of this 
case.  See Trial v. Dragon, 593 S.W.3d 313, 319 (Tex.2019) (determining that the 
Duhig rule applies only “if the grantor owns the exact interest to remedy the breach 
SUPREME COURT OF OHIO 
 
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at the time of execution and equity otherwise demands it” [emphasis sic]).  Rather, 
this matter is resolved solely by the MTA. 
{¶ 21} In 1925, Winland-Dermot excepted and reserved a one-quarter 
interest in the oil and gas.  Accordingly, Joseph Russell and George Russell could 
each retain at most a three-eighth interest in the oil and gas under the 1941 deed 
(one-half each of the remaining three-quarter interest).  However, in 1954, George 
Russell excepted and reserved for himself and his heirs and assigns a one-quarter 
interest in the oil and gas and, because he did not account for the prior exceptions 
or reservations contained in the 1925 and 1941 deeds, the plain language of the 
1954 deed indicated that he conveyed the surface property and a three-quarter oil 
and gas interest to Stanley Juzwiak and Margaret Juzwiak.  Because of the 
exception and reservation made by Winland-Dermot in the 1925 deed and the 
exception made by Joseph Russell in the 1941 deed, George Russell owned only a 
three-eighth interest in the oil and gas; but he purported to convey a three-quarter 
interest. 
{¶ 22} Senterra argues that under the Duhig rule, since George Russell 
conveyed to Stanley Juzwiak and Margaret Juzwiak an interest in the property that 
was greater than what he had owned, his attempt to retain the oil and gas interest 
failed and should be declared void at the time of the 1954 deed.  The flaw in that 
argument, however, is that George Russell did not own the exact interest necessary 
to remedy the breach at the time of the conveyance: he excepted and reserved a 
one-quarter interest when he held only a three-eighth interest.  Therefore, forfeiting 
his one-quarter interest in favor of Stanley Juzwiak and Margaret Juzwiak would 
not remedy the alleged breach, as it would not provide the Juzwiaks with their three-
quarter interest. 
{¶ 23} Similarly, the dissenting opinion incorrectly frames the Duhig rule 
as standing for the proposition that a grantor’s overconveyance at the time of 
executing the deed renders the grantor’s exception or reservation under the deed 
January Term, 2022 
 
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void ab initio.  However, the Duhig rule embodies a narrow, equitable principle 
that, as noted above, does not apply here.  See Dragon, 593 S.W.3d at 318 
(emphasizing that “Duhig applies the doctrine of estoppel by deed to a very distinct 
fact pattern, and its holding is narrow and confined to those specific facts”).  
Further, Senterra does not direct this court’s attention to any Ohio authority that 
stands for the proposition that a grantor’s exception or reservation is void at the 
time of the deed’s execution when the grantor also purports to convey more than 
he owns. 
{¶ 24} Moreover, Senterra’s position ignores the applicability of the MTA 
here and its purpose, which is to “ ‘ “simplify[] and facilitat[e] land title 
transactions by allowing persons to rely on a record chain of title.” ’ ”  West, 162 
Ohio St.3d 293, 2020-Ohio-5473, 165 N.E.3d 298, at ¶ 15, quoting Corban, 149 
Ohio St.3d 512, 2016-Ohio-5796, 76 N.E.3d 1089, at ¶ 17, quoting R.C. 5301.55.  
Senterra wants us to disregard the more than 40-year unbroken chain of record title 
that preserved George Russell’s one-quarter oil and gas interest under the MTA and 
yet scrutinize the 1954 deed as if the interests retained in the 1925 and 1941 deeds 
were not extinguished by the MTA. 
{¶ 25} Although the extinguishment of the exceptions or reservations 
contained in the 1925 and 1941 deeds is not at issue here due to our decision in 
West, the lower courts’ determinations regarding the extinguishment of those 
interests are important to our analysis.  The trial court determined that the Winland-
Dermot reservation was extinguished because the root-of-title deed was the 1954 
deed, there was no reference to the interest in the chain of record title following the 
1925 deed that created the interest, and there was no saving event under R.C. 
5301.49 that preserved the interest.  The court of appeals affirmed the trial court’s 
determination that Senterra and its predecessors in title had an unbroken chain of 
record title to the interest for more than 40 years.  2019-Ohio-4387, 148 N.E.3d 34, 
at ¶ 68. 
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{¶ 26} Similarly, the trial court determined that the exception made by 
Joseph Russell and George Russell in 1941 was extinguished because the root-of-
title deed was the 1971 deed (a determination to which the parties had stipulated), 
there was no reference to the interest in the chain of record title following the 1941 
deed that created the interest, and there was no saving event under R.C. 5301.49 
that preserved the interest.  The court of appeals affirmed the trial court’s 
determination that Senterra and its predecessors in title had an unbroken chain of 
record title to the interest for more than 40 years.  2019-Ohio-4387 at ¶ 73.  The 
court explained that even though Joseph Russell and George Russell had each 
retained a three-eighth interest in the oil and gas under the 1941 deed, the language 
of the 1971 root-of-title deed accounted for only George Russell’s one-quarter 
interest.  Id.  Accordingly, the court determined that the remaining one-half 
interest—Joseph Russell’s three-eighth interest plus George Russell’s remaining 
one-eighth interest—was extinguished.  Id. 
{¶ 27} The significance of the extinguishment of those interests is that there 
were no recorded, competing interests to George Russell’s exception and 
reservation of the one-quarter oil and gas interest created in the 1954 deed.  The 
1971 root-of-title deed specifically referred to George Russell’s exception and 
reservation of the one-quarter interest.  The exception-and-reservation language 
was repeated in the 1987 deed, and the 1992 deed referred to the 1987 deed by the 
county recorder’s volume and page number.  Although the MTA extinguished the 
exceptions or reservations made in the 1925 and 1941 deeds, it did not extinguish 
the exception and reservation of the interest made by George Russell. 
{¶ 28} Senterra urges us to apply the Duhig rule and to consider the state of 
title to a property at the time that the conveyance of the property occurred, even 
when the conveyance preceded the root-of-title deed, and to recognize interests that 
were not preserved in the chain of record title or subject to any saving event under 
the MTA.  But an interest that has been extinguished by the MTA may not be 
January Term, 2022 
 
13 
revived.  West, 162 Ohio St.3d 293, 2020-Ohio-5473, 165 N.E.3d 298, at ¶ 15, 
citing R.C. 5301.49(D).  Had Winland-Dermot or Joseph Russell properly retained 
their interests or challenged the 1954 conveyance before their interests were 
extinguished, the outcome of this case might be different.  But the exception and 
reservation of that interest was not challenged until 2018 when Senterra filed its 
quiet-title complaint, which was more than 40 years after the root-of-title event—
the 1971 deed that restated George Russell’s exception and reservation regarding 
the one-quarter oil and gas interest. 
{¶ 29} The dissenting opinion ignores the fact that both the trial court and 
the court of appeals determined that the MTA extinguished the interest sought to 
be retained by Winland-Dermot in 1925 and the interest sought to be retained by 
Joseph Russell and George Russell in 1941, 2019-Ohio-4387, 148 N.E.3d 34, at 
¶ 43-44, 68-74.  The dissenting opinion unilaterally determines that the 1925 
conveyance is a better root of title for George Russell’s one-quarter-interest 
exception and reservation, finding that “[a] title search conducted using the 1925 
conveyance as the root of title—and going forward 40 years—would demonstrate 
that George Russell’s purported 1954 exception was void.”  Dissenting opinion, 
¶ 70.  However, there is no basis on which to conclude that the 1925 conveyance is 
the root of title because, as the court of appeals correctly acknowledged, Senterra 
is the party seeking to quiet title, the 1971 deed accounts for the interest for which 
Senterra seeks marketable record title, see Blackstone, 155 Ohio St.3d 448, 2018-
Ohio-4959, 122 N.E.3d 132, at ¶ 9, and the 1971 deed is the most recently recorded 
deed during the 40-year period prior to the time when marketability was being 
determined, which was 2018, that accounts for the interest.  See R.C. 5301.47(E).  
Moreover, the dissenting opinion’s cherry-picking a new root of title to support its 
pseudo-MTA analysis does not resuscitate the interest sought to be retained by 
Wilmot-Dermot or the interest sought to be retained by Joseph Russell and George 
Russell, and it is nonsensical to acknowledge that those interests were extinguished 
SUPREME COURT OF OHIO 
 
14 
by the MTA while also concluding that George Russell conveyed in the 1954 deed 
more than he owned, thus voiding his interest.  This court is not, as the dissenting 
opinion suggests, validating George Russell’s “defunct” one-quarter-interest 
exception and reservation through application of the MTA.  Dissenting opinion at 
¶ 64.  Rather, we merely disagree with the dissenting opinion and Senterra that 
George Russell’s one-quarter-interest exception and reservation was void at the 
outset.  As such, we hold that George Russell and his heirs and assigns have 
marketable record title under the MTA to the one-quarter oil and gas interest at 
issue. 
Conclusion 
{¶ 30} We affirm the judgment of the Seventh District Court of Appeals and 
hold that the one-quarter oil and gas interest retained by George Russell and his 
heirs and assigns was not subject to the Duhig rule and that the heirs’ interest was 
preserved under the MTA.  In accordance with the judgment of the court of appeals, 
the cause is remanded to the trial court for it to determine whether the interest was 
abandoned under the DMA. 
Judgment affirmed. 
O’CONNOR, C.J., and DONNELLY and BRUNNER, JJ., concur. 
DEWINE, J., dissents, with an opinion joined by KENNEDY and FISCHER, 
JJ. 
_________________ 
DEWINE, J., dissenting. 
{¶ 31} This case concerns the ownership of oil and gas located under a tract 
of land in Belmont County.  The facts are somewhat complicated, but the question 
before us is simple: What happens when a landowner attempts to convey a 
fractional property interest and at the same time retain a fractional property interest 
for himself, but he doesn’t own enough of the property to do both?  Under settled 
property-law principles, the answer is that the landowner’s attempt to retain the 
January Term, 2022 
 
15 
interest fails.  And that makes sense: if I have three apples, and I give three apples 
away, I can’t keep one for myself.  The majority, though, applies Ohio’s Marketable 
Title Act, R.C. 5301.47 et seq., to achieve a contrary result.  Properly understood, 
however, the MTA does not sustain the majority’s holding.  Respectfully, I dissent. 
I.  BACKGROUND 
{¶ 32} Senterra, Ltd., owns the surface of the tract of land in question.  This 
dispute is about the mineral rights.  Does Senterra own all the mineral rights, or do 
the heirs of George Russell own a portion of those rights?  To answer this question, 
we need to go back in time. 
{¶ 33} Nearly a century ago, two families, the Winlands and the Dermots, 
collectively owned the property.  In 1925, the Winland-Dermot families conveyed 
their complete interest to Joseph and George Russell, except that, relevant here, 
they retained a 1/4 share of the oil and gas interest (“the mineral interest”).  After 
that conveyance, the Russells collectively owned the property, save for the 
Winland-Dermot 1/4 mineral-interest share. 
{¶ 34} In 1941, Joseph Russell conveyed the surface estate to George.  But 
the Russells both retained their mineral interest in the property.  This meant that 
they each owned a 3/8 share of the mineral interest. 
{¶ 35} Things get messy in 1954.  That year, George Russell sold the 
surface of the property to the Juzwiaks.  He also conveyed by warranty deed some 
of his mineral interest.  The deed language conveyed all the property, “excepting 
and reserving to George W. Russell, his heirs and assigns, one-fourth (1/4) of all oil 
and gas in and underlying the above described property.”4  (Capitalization deleted.)  
 
4.  The majority and the lower courts refer to the interest that George Russell purported to retain for 
himself as a “reservation.”  But as I explain below, it is more accurate to refer to it as an “exception,” 
because its purpose was to exclude from the conveyance mineral rights that were already in 
existence.  See Peppertree Farms, L.L.C. v. Thonen, 167 Ohio St.3d 52, 2022-Ohio-395, 188 N.E.3d 
1061, ¶ 18.  Thus, this dissent will refer to the interest that George Russell purported to “except[] 
and reserv[e]” for himself in 1954 as an “exception.” 
SUPREME COURT OF OHIO 
 
16 
Thus, George Russell purported to convey to the Juzwiaks a 3/4 share of the mineral 
interest while retaining the final 1/4 share.  But remember, George Russell’s share 
of the mineral interest was just 3/8.  So he purported to convey twice the mineral 
interest that he owned and still retain an interest for himself. 
{¶ 36} To recap, following the 1954 conveyance, the Juzwiaks owned the 
surface estate and claimed a 6/8-share mineral interest, and George Russell claimed 
a 2/8-share mineral interest.  Meanwhile, consistent with the chain of title, Joseph 
Russell claimed a 3/8 share of the mineral interest (under the 1941 conveyance), and 
the Winland-Dermot families claimed a 2/8-share mineral interest (under the 1925 
conveyance).  That’s too many slices for one pie (13/8)—in other words, some 
interest holders had competing claims to the same minerals.  This quandary gives 
rise to the present dispute.  But it is necessary to continue through the property’s 
transfer history. 
{¶ 37} The Juzwiak interest subsequently changed owners five times, 
culminating with Senterra’s purchase in 2012.  Intervening transfers occurred in 
1971, 1987, 1992, and 2000.  Each successive conveyance of the Juzwiak interest 
up to, eventually, Senterra’s purchase, noted the 1954 George Russell exception 
but not the original Winland-Dermot or Joseph Russell reservations or exceptions.  
In 2012, Senterra purchased all 86 surface acres of the property and the Juzwiaks’s 
portion of the mineral rights. 
{¶ 38} Until that point, the interest holders had never litigated the effect of 
George Russell’s 1954 overconveyance.  For a while, mineral interests in Ohio 
were considered “valueless.”  See Fenner L. Stewart, When the Shale Gale Hit 
Ohio: The Failures of the Dormant Mineral Act, Its Heroic Interpretations, and 
Grave Choices Facing the Supreme Court, 43 Cap.U.L.Rev. 435, 445 (2015).  That 
all changed when the gas boom reached Ohio.  Id. at 437.  When “the promise of 
rich gas royalties spread through the local communities in Eastern Ohio, owning 
land [came to be] like owning a lottery ticket.”  Id. at 438. 
January Term, 2022 
 
17 
{¶ 39} Accordingly, in 2018, Senterra brought a quiet-title action to unify 
its surface land with the underlying severed mineral interests.  The complaint 
named the known and unknown heirs and assigns of the Dermots, Winlands, the 
Russells, and other individuals and businesses either known or thought to have an 
interest in the property.  Several heirs to the Winland-Dermot interest filed an 
answer.  A large contingency of the defendants—including, one presumes, George 
Russell’s heirs—failed to respond, and a default judgment was entered against them 
accordingly.  In an affidavit, Senterra’s representative, David Sensius, averred that 
he oversaw an extensive record search in Belmont County’s public offices that did 
not identify the address or identity of any heir of George Russell.  And Sensius 
published notice to George Russell and his unknown heirs in a local publication of 
general circulation, The Times Leader, without any heir coming forward. 
{¶ 40} Senterra argued that all prior interests except for the 1954 George 
Russell exception were extinguished by operation of the Marketable Title Act.  And 
it argued that George Russell’s exception was void from the start because it was 
not possible to give effect to both the exception and the conveyance he had made.  
The trial court granted summary judgment to Senterra.  It concluded that under the 
MTA, the Winland-Dermot and Joseph Russell interests were extinguished in favor 
of Senterra because Senterra had an unbroken chain of title to the property dating 
back more than 40 years that did not include those interests in the chain of title.  It 
further concluded that the 1954 George Russell exception was void at the time it 
was made because it was impossible for him to convey his entire mineral interest 
while also retaining a part of the same interest.  Thus, it quieted title in favor of 
Senterra, concluding that Senterra owned 100 percent of both the surface estate and 
the mineral estate. 
{¶ 41} The Winland-Dermot heirs appealed to the Seventh District Court of 
Appeals. The court of appeals held that Senterra owns the entire surface estate as 
well as the extinguished Winland-Dermot and Joseph Russell mineral-interest 
SUPREME COURT OF OHIO 
 
18 
reservations or exceptions.  2019-Ohio-4387, 148 N.E.3d 34, ¶ 68, 73.  But it 
reversed with respect to the 1954 George Russell exception, reasoning that “while 
the MTA extinguished the claims not preserved by the Winland-Dermot heirs and 
Joseph Russell’s heirs, it also validated the defect George Russell created and 
validated his 1/4 oil and gas interest reservation.”  Id. at ¶ 96.  The court of appeals 
also concluded that a 1/8 share of George Russell’s original 3/8-share mineral interest 
was extinguished in favor of Senterra, because George Russell had sought to retain 
only a 2/8 share in the 1954 conveyance.  Id. at ¶ 73. 
{¶ 42} Although the Winland-Dermot heirs sought this court’s review of 
the adverse portion of the court of appeals’ decision, the only matter that remains 
for us to consider is Senterra’s cross-appeal.  See 158 Ohio St.3d 1522, 2020-Ohio-
3018, 145 N.E.3d 311; 160 Ohio St.3d 1514, 2020-Ohio-6834, 159 N.E.3d 1178.  
Senterra challenges the court of appeals’ decision that George Russell’s heirs own 
a 1/4 share of the mineral rights. 
{¶ 43} It is unclear from the record why the Winland-Dermot heirs have 
elected to defend the portion of the court of appeals’ judgment that assigns a 
fractional mineral interest to the heirs of George Russell.  In their briefing to the 
court of appeals, they claimed to be “the heirs of Lulu E. Winland, James H. 
Winland, Alta H. Dermot, and William H. Dermot.”  But in their briefing to this 
court, they now claim to be “the heirs of Lulu E. Winland, James H. Winland, Alta 
H. Dermot, William H. Dermot, George W. Russell, and Joseph E. Russell.”  
(Emphasis supplied.)  There is nothing in the record, however, that documents any 
change to the parties in this case.  It is curious, to say the least, that the majority 
never addresses this issue. 
 
 
January Term, 2022 
 
19 
II.  ANALYSIS 
A.  Under Established Principles of Property Law and through Application of the 
MTA, Senterra Owns All the Mineral Rights in the Property 
{¶ 44} The nub of this dispute is that in 1954, George Russell purported to 
convey more property than he owned—he owned a 3/8 share of the mineral interest 
in the property but sought to convey a 6/8 share and to also keep a 2/8 share for 
himself.  Today, Senterra owns the entire surface estate, the share of the mineral 
interest purchased by the Juzwiaks in 1954, and now, by operation of the MTA’s 
extinguishment process, the mineral interests once retained by the Winland-Dermot 
families and by Joseph Russell.  At issue is whether George Russell’s heirs can 
claim a portion of the mineral interest by virtue of the “exception” language in the 
1954 deed.  The answer comes down to a couple basic questions of property law: 
Was George Russell’s 1954 exception of a 1/4-share mineral interest void at the time 
it was made because it was impossible for him to retain that interest and to also give 
effect to the conveyance he made?  Or does application of the MTA overcome the 
fact that in 1954, George Russell transferred all the mineral interest he owned? 
1.  George Russell purported to convey more than he owned 
{¶ 45} The majority launches right into a pseudo-MTA analysis.  But before 
we get to the MTA, we need to understand the contemporaneous legal effect of 
George Russell’s conveyance to the Juzwiaks in the 1954 deed.  To gather the 
meaning of that written instrument, “it is the plain language of the deed that 
matters.”  Koprivec v. Rails-to-Trails of Wayne Cty., 153 Ohio St.3d 137, 2018-
Ohio-465, 102 N.E.3d 444, ¶ 23. 
{¶ 46} The 1954 deed conveyed the property to the Juzwiaks, “[e]xcepting 
and reserving to George W. Russell, his heirs and assigns, one-fourth (1/4) of all oil 
and gas in and underlying the above described property.”  (Capitalization deleted.)  
Two points from this language warrant clarification. 
SUPREME COURT OF OHIO 
 
20 
{¶ 47} First, although it is commonplace for parties to a deed to “use the 
words ‘reserve’ and ‘except’ together,” LRC Realty, Inc. v. B.E.B. Properties, 160 
Ohio St.3d 218, 2020-Ohio-3196, 155 N.E.3d 852, ¶ 20, their meanings bear a 
“technical distinction,” Gill v. Fletcher, 74 Ohio St. 295, 303, 78 N.E. 433 (1906).  
A reservation creates “a new property right,” whereas an exception excludes from 
the conveyance a preexisting interest.  Peppertree Farms, L.L.C. v. Thonen, 167 
Ohio St.3d 52, 2022-Ohio-395, 188 N.E.3d 1061, ¶ 17-18.  When, as here, a deed 
uses both labels, we look to “all the words of the instrument” to determine whether 
the parties intended to agree on a reservation or an exception.  See Gill at 304.  The 
1954 deed makes apparent that George Russell and the Juzwiaks were not using the 
words in their technical sense, or else the phrase “excepting and reserving” would 
squarely contradict, see Peppertree Farms at ¶ 18-19, but rather in their 
commonsense meanings to explain that George Russell intended to retain a 
preexisting mineral interest.  Consistent with an unbroken line of cases from Gill 
to Peppertree Farms, the retention of an existing interest is an exception, not a 
reservation.  The 1954 conveyance therefore did not “create” a mineral interest for 
George Russell and his heirs. 
{¶ 48} Second, George Russell purported to convey to the Juzwiaks the 
entire mineral estate, except for a 1/4 share.  The deed spells out the metes and 
bounds of the entire property being conveyed before it notes the exception.  
Although courts should attempt to reconcile granting and excepting language in a 
deed so that “effect will be given to both,” 23 American Jurisprudence 2d, Deeds, 
Section 63 (2022), reconciliation is not possible for the 1954 deed.  Sound deed 
construction requires that “when the deed reserves a fraction of the minerals under 
the land ‘described,’ then the deed reserves a fraction of the minerals under the 
entire tract of land, regardless of the part of the mineral estate actually conveyed.”  
(Emphasis supplied.)  3A Summers Oil and Gas, Section 39:6 (3d Ed.2008).  The 
defendants argued in the lower courts that George Russell had purported to convey 
January Term, 2022 
 
21 
to the Juzwiaks just a 1/8-share mineral interest (the difference between his 3/8 share 
and 2/8 exception), and that argument was rejected.  See 2019-Ohio-4387, 148 
N.E.3d 34, at ¶ 66, 68.  Rather—taking the deed’s language at face value—George 
Russell purported to convey a 6/8 share to the Juzwiaks, double what he owned. 
2.  The effect of George Russell’s overconveyance 
{¶ 49} It is foundational to property law that “a person cannot convey a 
greater interest in land than that person owns.”  Carr v. Veach, 244 W.Va. 73, 79, 
851 S.E.2d 519 (2020); see also Weber v. Eisentrager, 498 N.W.2d 460, 464 
(Minn.1993); Moulton v. Bassett, 1875 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 4, *13, 5 Ohio Dec.Rep. 
257 (Ohio Super.1875).  When George Russell purported to convey a 6/8 share of 
the mineral interest and keep for himself a 2/8 share, he did not disturb the interests 
retained by the Winland-Dermot families (2/8) or Joseph Russell (3/8).  That leaves 
two possibilities.  George Russell either conveyed his full 3/8-share mineral interest 
to the Juzwiaks or he kept his 2/8 share and conveyed to the Juzwiaks the 1/8-share 
remainder.  Put another way, because the conveyance and the exception cannot be 
given simultaneous effect, one must supersede the other.  Under established 
principles of property law, the answer is clear that the conveyance superseded the 
exception. 
{¶ 50} Nearly two centuries ago, this court provided guidance on such a 
situation.  In White’s Lessee v. Sayre, 2 Ohio 110 (1825), one joint tenant had 
attempted to convey more property than he owned.  We held that the “[t]he 
circumstance that the grantor has attempted to convey more land than he was 
possessed of, shall not prevent the deed from conveying that of which he was 
possessed.”  Id. at 114.  The “object” of a grant—that is, “the intention of the 
parties, apparent upon the face of the instrument”—“should be attained as far as is 
possible.”  Id. at 113. 
{¶ 51} This court in White added that a deed “is to be construed most 
strongly against the grantor.”  Id.  In the event of an overconveyance, “ ‘the risk of 
SUPREME COURT OF OHIO 
 
22 
loss is on the grantor.’ ”  Talbot v. Ward, 2017-Ohio-9213, 102 N.E.3d 544, ¶ 72 
(7th Dist.), quoting Peterson v. Simpson, 286 Ark. 177, 181, 690 S.W.2d 720 
(1985).  White accords with the general rule of overconveyance that when “the 
grantor’s interest is insufficient to give effect to both the grant and a reservation, 
the reservation must fail and the risk of title loss is on the grantor.”  23 American 
Jurisprudence 2d, Deeds, Section 63, citing Cole v. Minor, 518 So.2d 61, 62 
(Ala.1987); see also 1 Williams & Meyers, Oil and Gas Law, Section 311 (2021).  
The majority refers to this intuitive principle as the “Duhig rule,” majority opinion, 
¶ 1, which bears the name of a Texas court-of-appeals case, Duhig v. Peavy-Moore 
Lumber Co., 135 Tex. 503, 144 S.W.2d 878 (1940).  See also Morgan v. Roberts, 
434 So.2d 738, 740 (Ala.1983) (defendants’ “warranty obligations were superior to 
their reservation of rights in the mineral interests”).  Similarly, in Ohio, and in the 
context of escrow deeds, this court has long considered such deeds “to have been 
made at the grantor’s own risk, as to innocent purchasers for value without notice.”  
(Emphasis supplied.)  Micklethwait v. Fulton, 129 Ohio St. 488, 491, 196 N.E. 166 
(1935). 
{¶ 52} The majority attacks a strawman, claiming that this dissent 
“incorrectly frames the Duhig rule.”  Majority opinion at ¶ 23.  But as the above-
cited authorities make clear, the rule we rely on—that when it is not possible to 
give effect to both a conveyance and a reservation, then the conveyance prevails—
is one that is widely followed in jurisdictions across the United States (including 
Ohio) and one that applies well beyond the contours of the Duhig case.  Indeed, it 
is telling that the majority “merely disagree[s]” with this dissent and Senterra that 
this defect rendered George Russell’s exception or reservation void, majority 
opinion at ¶ 29, but fails to offer any plausible alternative understanding of George 
Russell’s 1954 conveyance. 
{¶ 53} Time-honored principles of property law establish that George 
Russell could have conveyed only what he owned and that he bore the risk of any 
January Term, 2022 
 
23 
overconveyance.  Thus, after the 1954 deed, the ownership of the property was as 
follows: the Juzwiaks owned the entire 86-acre surface estate and a 3/8 share of the 
mineral interest (formerly George Russell’s); Joseph Russell owned a 3/8 mineral-
interest share pursuant to his 1941 reservation or exception; and the Winland-
Dermot families owned a 2/8 mineral-interest share pursuant to its 1925 reservation 
or exception.  Because effect could not be given to both George Russell’s exception 
and his conveyance to the Juzwiaks, his exception was void. 
3.  The Marketable Title Act 
{¶ 54} Even though George Russell’s exception was a dead letter in 1954, 
we must still assess the MTA’s legal import on the fact that his 1/4-share exception 
carried through the chain of title from 1954 onward.  As I explain below, the MTA 
does not resuscitate George Russell’s void exception. 
{¶ 55} This court has repeatedly detailed the workings of the MTA.  See, 
e.g., West v. Bode, 162 Ohio St.3d 293, 2020-Ohio-5473, 165 N.E.3d 298, ¶ 15-17; 
Blackstone v. Moore, 155 Ohio St.3d 448, 2018-Ohio-4959, 122 N.E.3d 132, ¶ 7-
8.  The MTA generally allows a landowner who has an unbroken chain of title to a 
property interest for a 40-year period following the root of title to transfer title free 
of any interests that existed prior to the root of title.  Blackstone at ¶ 1.  “Root of 
title” is a title transaction “purporting to create the interest claimed” that was the 
most recent to be recorded as of a date 40 years prior to the time when marketability 
is being determined.  R.C. 5301.47(E).  The MTA “does not prescribe a flat period 
like a statute of limitations”; rather, a title examiner “must always extend his 
examination beyond 40 years to the root.”  1 Sherman, Ohio Residential Real 
Estate, Section 5.03 (2022). 
{¶ 56} The MTA operates to extinguish “interests and claims” that existed 
prior to the root of title, R.C. 5301.47(A), unless a designated saving event 
preserved the interest, R.C. 5301.49.  For example, “[a]ny interest arising out of a 
SUPREME COURT OF OHIO 
 
24 
title transaction which has been recorded subsequent to the effective date of the root 
of title” is not extinguishable.  Id. 
{¶ 57} Applying the MTA, the courts below quieted title to the Winland-
Dermot and Joseph Russell mineral interests.  2019-Ohio-4387, 148 N.E.3d 34, at 
¶ 29, 68, 73.  Because no saving events occurred in the 40-year period subsequent 
to the roots of title to those interests, the Winland-Dermot and Joseph Russell 
interests were extinguished.  Id.  Thereby, the interests reverted to the surface estate 
owned by Senterra.  See R.C. 5301.55; Peppertree Farms, L.L.C., 167 Ohio St.3d 
52, 2022-Ohio-395, 188 N.E.3d 1061, at ¶ 5 (citing the MTA as a “mechanism[] to 
reunite a surface estate with its severed mineral interest”). 
{¶ 58} As for the purported 1954 George Russell exception, the MTA has 
no impact.  No heir of George Russell has pursued a quiet-title action, nor has 
anyone presented a chain of title to the purported 1/4-share mineral interest.  
Moreover, the trial court entered a default judgment against George Russell’s heirs.  
So there is no occasion to analyze whether they could rely on the MTA to establish 
marketable title.  Nor is there any evidence in the record before us that allows us to 
conduct such an analysis.  Indeed, Senterra submitted an affidavit averring that a 
thorough investigation of the public records in Belmont County failed to identify 
any of George Russell’s heirs. 
{¶ 59} The only claim at bar is Senterra’s quiet-title claim.  The MTA does 
not extinguish the purported 1954 George Russell exception, because the exception 
was listed in the muniments of Senterra’s title.  Rather, the trial court properly 
found that the exception was never valid based on common-law principles.  The 
interest was void when it was recorded because George Russell could not except 
for himself what he had conveyed. 
{¶ 60} The result of all this is that Senterra owns the entire mineral estate.  
It obtained a 3/8 share by virtue of its purchase of what was at one time the Juzwiak’s 
January Term, 2022 
 
25 
interest in the property, and it obtained the remainder through operation of the 
MTA. 
{¶ 61} Sometimes pictures tell a story more easily than words.  The 
following chart shows the various conveyances and their ultimate legal effect on 
the ownership rights: 
 
SUPREME COURT OF OHIO 
 
26 
B.  The Majority Misapplies the MTA 
{¶ 62} The majority holds that the MTA resuscitates George Russell’s 
inoperative exception.  In a cursory analysis, the majority identifies a 40-year 
period from 1971 to 2011 in which George Russell’s exception was noted in 
Senterra’s chain of title.  Essentially, it reasons that even though George Russell 
did not own any mineral interest after the 1954 conveyance, because the Juzwiaks’s 
chain of title refers to a purported 1/4 interest, the MTA can be used to give effect 
to George Russell’s void 1954 exception.  But this misunderstands the MTA. 
1.  The MTA does not validate the inoperative 1954 George Russell exception 
{¶ 63} The majority holds that because “there is an unbroken chain of 
record title to the [purported George Russell 1/4-share exception] for at least 40 
years following the root-of-title deed to the property,” the MTA applies to preserve 
the interest.  Majority opinion at ¶ 2; see also id. at ¶ 24 (referring to “the more than 
40-year unbroken chain of record title that preserved George Russell’s one-quarter 
oil and gas interest under the MTA”); id. at ¶ 30 (“the heirs’ interest was preserved 
under the MTA”).  In doing so, the majority affirms the court of appeals’ holding 
that “[t]he MTA validates the 1/4 oil and gas interest claimed by George Russell’s 
heirs,” 2019-Ohio-4387, 148 N.E.3d 34, at ¶ 94.  See also majority opinion at ¶ 20 
(“We agree with the court of appeals * * *”). 
{¶ 64} But the MTA cannot validate defunct interests.  Rather, it operates 
to “extinguish” latent, severed “interests and claims,” R.C. 5301.47(A), rendering 
them “null and void,” R.C. 5301.50, in order to make a “record chain of title” more 
“rel[iable],” R.C. 5301.55. 
{¶ 65} The majority holds that through application of the MTA, George 
Russell’s heirs have marketable title to a 1/4-share mineral interest in the property.  
But it reaches this conclusion without engaging in any actual analysis under the 
MTA as it applies to any purported title claimed by the George Russell heirs. 
January Term, 2022 
 
27 
{¶ 66} Remember, this case involves a quiet-title claim filed by Senterra.  
Through application of the MTA, the trial court determined that the Winland-
Dermot and George Russell interests were extinguished in favor of Senterra 
because those interests were created prior to the root-of-title events and were not 
preserved in the muniments of title or by a saving event.  But the purported George 
Russell interest could not be extinguished under the MTA, because it was recorded 
in the post-root chain of title.  See Spring Lakes, Ltd. v. O.F.M. Co., 12 Ohio St.3d 
333, 334, 467 N.E.2d 537 (1984), quoting Toth v. Berks Title Ins. Co., 6 Ohio St.3d 
338, 342, 453 N.E.2d 639 (1983) (Celebrezze, C.J., dissenting) (“ ‘the Marketable 
Title Act does not bear upon interests affecting the realty which are created 
subsequent to the date of the root of title’ ”).  There was no need to rely on the MTA 
to extinguish that interest.  As the trial court properly found, the purported George 
Russell exception was void.  Thus, Senterra holds the property free and clear of all 
competing interests. 
{¶ 67} The majority proclaims that the MTA validates the inoperative 1954 
George Russell exception without any analysis of the MTA’s applicability to that 
interest.  In order to rely on the MTA, a party must be able to show an “unbroken 
chain of title” to the property.  R.C. 5301.48.  Here, none of George Russell’s heirs 
have identified a recorded title transaction that occurred subsequent to George 
Russell’s 1954 exception under which the heir claims an interest.  Indeed, no 
George Russell heir has appeared at all.  So nothing in the record suggests that any 
George Russell heir has an unbroken chain of title to the purported interest.  See id. 
{¶ 68} Furthermore, to establish that the MTA granted an heir of George 
Russell marketable title, one first has to identify the root of title for that interest.  
The majority says that “there is an unbroken chain of record title to the oil and gas 
interest at issue for at least 40 years following the root-of-title deed to the property,” 
majority opinion at ¶ 2—but it appears to be referring to the root of title for the 
interests claimed by Senterra, not the 1/4-share mineral interest claimed by George 
SUPREME COURT OF OHIO 
 
28 
Russell’s heirs.  Under the MTA, the root of title depends on the interest claimed; 
thus, different interests will have different roots.  See 1 Sherman, Ohio Residential 
Real Estate, Section 5.03. 
{¶ 69} Recall that under the MTA, the root of title must be a title transaction 
“purporting to create the interest claimed.”  R.C. 5301.47(E).  The interest claimed 
by the George Russell heirs is the 1/4-share mineral interest that George Russell 
attempted to “except[] and reserv[e]” in 1954.  One would be hard pressed to say 
that the 1954 deed “purport[ed] to create,” id., the interest claimed by the George 
Russell heirs.  As noted above, the better interpretation of the deed is that George 
Russell intended to except from the conveyance a portion of a previously created 
interest he then owned.  The 1954 deed did not convey anything to George Russell; 
he simply sought to acknowledge (albeit incorrectly) in the deed that he was not 
conveying a 1/4-share mineral interest in the property.  Thus, the 1954 deed cannot 
be the root of title. 
{¶ 70} A better candidate for the root of title is the 1925 deed transferring 
the Wilmot-Dermot interest to Joseph and George Russell.  This is the conveyance 
that first created the mineral interest at issue.  A title search conducted using the 
1925 conveyance as the root of title—and going forward 40 years—would 
demonstrate that George Russell’s purported 1954 exception was void.  Or even if 
one considers the 1941 conveyance (in which the Russells bifurcated their interest) 
the better root, one arrives at the same result.  Both the Joseph Russell interest and 
the Winland-Dermot interest are contained within the record chain of title.  And it 
is evident from these records of title that after giving effect to the conveyance to 
the Juzwiaks, there was no interest left for George Russell to retain.  The purported 
George Russell exception, then, is a defect “inherent in the muniments of which 
such chain of record title is formed.”  R.C.  5301.49(A).  Thus, regardless of 
whether the 1925 or the 1941 conveyance is the root of title, George Russell’s heirs 
cannot establish marketable title because they cannot identify a 40-year period 
January Term, 2022 
 
29 
following the root of title “with nothing appearing of record * * * purporting to 
divest [them] of such purported interest.”  R.C. 5301.48(B); see also 1 Sherman, 
Ohio Residential Real Estate, Section 5.08 (explaining that a “void deed” recorded 
after the root of title cannot constitute the basis for marketable title). 
{¶ 71} The mistake that the majority makes is to assume that simply 
because an interest appears in a chain of title for a 40-year period, then the interest 
is validated by the MTA.  See majority opinion at ¶ 24 (referring to “the more than 
40-year unbroken chain of record title that preserved George Russell’s one-quarter 
oil and gas interest”).  But that is not the way the MTA works.  Under the MTA, 
one must trace each claimed interest back to the root of title for the interest and 
determine whether the putative holder of that interest has marketable title.  The 
majority posits that the 1971 conveyance is the root of title for the George Russell 
heirs.  But by definition, the root must “purport[] to create the interest claimed,” 
R.C. 5301.47(E), which logically must predate George Russell’s reservation or 
exception.  One cannot reserve an interest yet to be created.  Nothing in the record 
demonstrates that any of the George Russell heirs has marketable title to the 
property. 
{¶ 72} The majority responds not with analysis, but with rhetoric: it accuses 
this dissent of “cherry-picking” a new root of title and being “nonsensical.”  
Majority opinion at ¶ 29.  But this merely underlines the majority’s 
misunderstanding of the MTA.  The point made by this dissent is simply that if the 
majority is going to use the MTA to effectively quiet title in favor of the George 
Russell heirs—despite the fact that they have never even appeared and claimed an 
interest—it must actually apply the MTA by identifying the correct root of title for 
the interest claimed.  See 1 Sherman, Ohio Residential Real Estate, Section 5.03.  
Yet the majority refuses to engage in any such analysis. 
 
 
SUPREME COURT OF OHIO 
 
30 
2.  Senterra has established its entitlement to all the mineral interests 
{¶ 73} Another way to see the majority’s error is to ask this question: Where 
does the mineral interest that the majority grants to George Russell’s heirs come 
from?  After all, in 1954, George Russell gave away all the mineral interest he 
owned, so if the MTA somehow revested any interest in George Russell’s heirs, it 
would have to come at the expense of some other interest. 
{¶ 74} So what mineral interest was extinguished in order to convert 
George Russell’s once-defunct exception into an interest with marketable record 
title?  The options, we know, are limited to the Winland-Dermot interest, the Joseph 
Russell interest, or the Juzwiak interest that Senterra eventually purchased—which 
collectively comprise the property’s complete mineral estate.  Let’s use the process 
of elimination. 
{¶ 75} First off, the Juzwiak-turned-Senterra 3/8 share is not a candidate for 
extinguishment.  The Juzwiak interest was created in the 1954 conveyance by 
George Russell and passed through the chain of title to Senterra.  With each 
successive conveyance, the Juzwiak interest was noted (with sufficient specificity) 
in the deeds to save it from extinguishment.  See Blackstone, 155 Ohio St.3d 448, 
2018-Ohio-4959, 122 N.E.3d 132, at ¶ 11.  Thus, the reference to the original 
Juzwiak interest “in the muniments” of each conveyance following the root of title 
“preserve[d Senterra’s] interest in the record title,” id. at ¶ 18, under R.C. 
5301.49(A) and (D).  Cross off that 3/8 share. 
{¶ 76} Next, we can discard the Winland-Dermot 2/8 share and the Joseph 
Russell 3/8 share, for this litigation has already established that those interests were 
extinguished in favor of Senterra.  See 2019-Ohio-4387, 148 N.E.3d 34, at ¶ 67-
68, 73 (affirming the trial court’s judgment as to those interests).  As the court of 
appeals held, Senterra “has an unbroken chain of title” to the Winland-Dermot 
interest, id. at ¶ 67, and “an unbroken chain of title and record marketable title to 
George Russell’s previously retained 1/8 oil and gas interest and Joseph Russell’s 
January Term, 2022 
 
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previously retained 3/8 oil and gas interest,” id. at ¶ 73.  That portion of the court of 
appeals’ judgment is not before this court. 
{¶ 77} In earlier stages of this litigation, the court of appeals determined 
that Senterra’s title of record had operated to extinguish the Winland-Dermot 2/8-
share mineral interest and the Joseph Russell 3/8-share mineral interest.  Id. at 
¶ 68, 73.  As for the remaining 3/8-share mineral interest—which George Russell 
conveyed to the Juzwiaks in 1954—Senterra purchased that share in 2012, along 
with the entire 86-acre surface estate.  The chain of title documents this history.  
George Russell’s heirs cannot claim an extinguished interest premised on a void 
exception at Senterra’s expense.  Senterra is entitled to an unencumbered 
marketable record title to the property. 
3.  The majority adopts a reading of the MTA at odds with the act’s text and 
purpose 
{¶ 78} Not only does the majority misread the MTA, but by doing so it 
arrives at a result that is contrary to the MTA’s purpose.  Extinguishment under the 
MTA is a “statutory mechanism[] that may be used to reunite severed mineral 
interests with the surface property subject to those interests.”  West, 162 Ohio St.3d 
293, 2020-Ohio-5473, 165 N.E.3d 298, at ¶ 2.  It was intended to “simplify[] and 
facilitat[e] land title transactions.”  R.C. 5301.55.  The surface estate at issue here 
has been severed from its underlying mineral interest for roughly a century.  The 
majority applies the MTA not to unify the surface- and subterranean-land 
interests—Senterra owns the full surface estate—but to entrench the bifurcation of 
those interests.  It would be one thing if the text of the MTA compelled a result so 
at odds with its codified purpose.  But here, the majority adopts a novel application 
of the MTA to reach a result contrary to its purpose. 
 
 
SUPREME COURT OF OHIO 
 
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III.  CONCLUSION 
{¶ 79} Under the plain terms of the MTA and the common law, Senterra 
owns all the mineral rights at issue in the property.  Because the majority misapplies 
the MTA and reaches a different conclusion, I respectfully dissent. 
KENNEDY and FISCHER, JJ., concur in the foregoing opinion. 
_________________ 
Krugliak, Wilkins, Griffiths & Dougherty Co., L.P.A., Matthew W. Onest, 
and Wayne A. Boyer, for appellee and cross-appellant. 
The White Law Office Co., Thomas D. White, and Katherine M.K. Kimble, 
for appellants and cross-appellees. 
_________________