Court Opinion

ID: 4580485
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2020-10-26 15:10:38.195575+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:28:16.544471
License: Public Domain

[Cite as Crum v. Yoder, 2020-Ohio-5046.]

             IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO
                            SEVENTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
                                 MONROE COUNTY

                                BETTY MORRIS CRUM et al.,

                                       Plaintiffs-Appellants,

                                                 v.

                                    ADEN M. YODER et al.,

                                     Defendants-Appellees.

                       OPINION AND JUDGMENT ENTRY
                                       Case No. 20 MO 0005

                                    Civil Appeal from the
                        Court of Common Pleas of Monroe County, Ohio
                                     Case No. 2018-502

                                       BEFORE:
                  Carol Ann Robb, Gene Donofrio, Cheryl L. Waite, Judges.

                                           JUDGMENT:
                                             Affirmed.
[Cite as Crum v. Yoder, 2020-Ohio-5046.]

 Atty. Aaron Bruggeman, Atty. Craig Sweeney, Bricker & Eckler LLP, 258 Front Street,
 Marietta, Ohio 45750 for Plaintiffs-Appellants and

 Atty. Melissa Schumacher, Atty. Richard Yoss, Yoss Law Office, LLC, 122 North Main
 Street, Woodsfield, Ohio 43793 and Atty. J. Fraifogl, Atty. Timothy Pettorini, Roetzel &
 Andress, LPA, 222 South Main Street, Suite 400, Akron, Ohio 44308 for Defendants-
 Appellees

                                      Dated: October 26, 2020

 Robb, J.

         {¶1}   Plaintiffs-Appellants Betty Morris Crum et al. (“the Morris heirs”) appeal the
decision of the Monroe County Common Pleas Court denying their motion for summary
judgment. Seeking a declaratory judgment, they asked the trial court to find their mineral
interest was not abandoned under the 2006 Dormant Mineral Act. Specifically, the Morris
heirs argued the mineral interest was not abandoned because the 2011 notice of
abandonment was invalidly served by publication and/or there was a savings event in a
1994 deed. In denying their summary judgment motion, the trial court issued legal
holdings rejecting these arguments and essentially issued a declaratory judgment against
the Morris heirs and in favor of Defendants-Appellees Aden Yoder, LL&B Headwater I,
LP, and Doubledown LLC. We therefore find the trial court issued a final appealable
order.
         {¶2}   For the reasons expressed herein, the assignments of error set forth by the
Morris heirs are overruled, the trial court’s judgment is affirmed, and judgment is entered
in favor of Appellees.
                                           STATEMENT OF THE CASE
         {¶3}   Ernie Morris conveyed approximately 60 acres in Monroe County to himself
and his wife, Louise I. Morris, “for their joint lives, remainder to the survivor thereof” in a
quit-claim deed recorded on January 21, 1987. (Vol. 192, P. 818). On July 25, 1990,
Ernie and Louise I. Morris recorded a deed transferring the surface of the property with a
clause stating: “Grantors except and reserve for theirselves and their heirs and assigns
all oil and gas royalty, all oil and gas, together with all leasing rights.” (Vol. 201, P. 833).
                                                                                         –3–

       {¶4}   The six grantees listed in the 1990 surface deed were Robert E. Morris,
Sara Lallathin, Betty Crum, Byron Morris, Kenneth Morris, and Rodney Morris; their tax
mailing address was a Belmont County address (c/o one of the grantees). The grantees
were the children of Ernie and Louise Morris, but this was not specified in the deed. With
his wife still living, Ernie Morris died intestate in Monroe County on March 12, 1994.
       {¶5}   In a deed recorded June 13, 1994, the Morris children conveyed the subject
property to the Kuhns; this deed contained a word-for-word recitation of the aforequoted
mineral reservation from the 1990 deed. (Vol. 6, P. 83). In a deed recorded on May 21,
1997, the Kuhns conveyed the property to Aden and Emma Yoder; the 1990 mineral
reservation was repeated. (Vol. 31, P. 849). Louise Morris died intestate in 2001.
       {¶6}   In May 2011, the Yoders’ attorney researched the title of the mineral interest
underlying the property owned by the Yoders and found it was reserved by Ernie and
Louise Morris in the 1990 deed. The names of Ernie and Louise Morris were used to
search the Monroe County deed records, lease records, preservation notice indexes,
official records, and probate records.
       {¶7}   On May 12, 2011, the Yoders published a notice of abandonment in the
local newspaper addressed to Ernie Morris and Louise I. Morris and their “unknown heirs,
devisees, executors, administrators, relicts, next of kin, and assigns” stating the described
mineral interest was abandoned due to lack of activity. See R.C. 5301.56(E)(1) (2006
Dormant Mineral Act). On June 20, 2011, the Yoders filed an affidavit of abandonment
with the county recorder. See R.C. 5301.56(E)(2). No timely response (by claim to
preserve or affidavit) was filed. See R.C. 5301.56(H)(1) (within 60 days of publication).
In a July 13, 2011 letter, the Yoders instructed the recorder to memorialize the
abandonment by making a notation in the margin of the 1990 deed.                  See R.C.
5301.56(H)(2).
       {¶8}   Thereafter, the Yoders transferred one-half of the mineral interest
underlying the subject 60 acres (and an unrelated 9 acres) to LL&B Headwater I, LP
(“LL&B”). This deed was recorded on July 23, 2013. (Vol. 248, P. 118). In a deed
recorded September 9, 2016, the Yoders transferred 10 acres of the mineral interest
under the subject property to Doubledown, LLC (“Doubledown”). (Vol. 341, P. 106).

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       {¶9}    The Yoders then transferred the property to Anthony and Kathy Gentile in
a deed recorded on September 19, 2016. This deed contained no reservation in favor of
the Yoders and noted their transfers of one-half of the mineral interest to LL&B and 10
acres of the mineral interest to Doubledown. (Vol. 341, P. 721).
       {¶10} In 2015, the Morris heirs recorded mineral leases with Antero Resources
Corporation regarding the mineral interest which the Morris children inherited from their
parents. Lease ratification and amendment documents were recorded in 2017. On July
13, 2018, Betty Crum Morris recorded an “Affidavit of Claim to Preserve Mineral Interests”
on behalf of herself and the other Morris children (or the heirs of those who had died).
       {¶11} In a complaint filed in December 2018 and amended twice in 2019,1 the
Morris heirs asked for a declaration that the mineral interest was not abandoned because
the notice of abandonment was invalidly served and/or the 1994 deed (wherein the Morris
heirs sold the property with language reserving the minerals) was a savings event as the
minerals were the subject of a recorded title transaction. (The complaint mentioned quiet
title in the heading of a section on deficient notice.) The complaint named the following
defendants (who are the Appellees herein): Aden Yoder (who published the notice of
abandonment and recorded the affidavit of abandonment along with his wife who had
since died); LL&B (who purchased one-half of the minerals from Yoder); and Doubledown
(who purchased 10 acres of the mineral interest from Yoder).
       {¶12} The Gentiles (who purchased the property from Yoder) were also named as
defendants; however, they thereafter relinquished any mineral interest which may have
transferred when Yoder conveyed the property to them. They conceded in a January 2,
2020 agreed judgment entry that the Morris heirs still owned the minerals because the
notice of abandonment was statutorily deficient.
       {¶13} Yoder filed a counterclaim seeking an opposing declaratory judgment and
asserted a slander of title claim (due to the recording of the 2018 affidavit). LL&B filed a
similar counterclaim against the Morris heirs seeking declaratory relief and quiet title as

1We note, if the plaintiff amends the complaint, the defendant must answer the amended complaint but
need not refile a counterclaim or cross-claim to maintain such claim. See, e.g., American Outdoor
Advertising Co. v. P&S Hotel Group Ltd., 10th Dist. Franklin No. 09AP-221, 2009-Ohio-4662, ¶ 29, citing
Abram & Tracy Inc. v. Smith, 88 Ohio App. 3d 253, 263-264, 623 N.E.2d 704 (10th Dist.1993).

Case No. 20 MO 0005
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to the one-half portion of the minerals obtained from Yoder in the 2013 deed and alleging
slander of title (citing the recording of the 2018 affidavit and the 2015 and 2017 lease
documents). LL&B asserted a cross-claim against Yoder for breach of warranty of title
(in the event the Morris heirs were successful).2
       {¶14} The Morris heirs filed a motion for summary judgment on all claims and
counterclaims. They alleged the 2011 notice of abandonment was deficient because
Yoder did not attempt service by certified mail and did not engage in reasonable diligence
in identifying heirs. It was noted that the 1990 deed from Ernie and Louise Morris, which
first reserved the minerals, transferred the property to six grantees, four of whom had the
same last name as the grantors. It was urged that a reasonable person would have
researched these grantees to ascertain if they were the heirs of Ernie and Louise Morris.
       {¶15} An affidavit of Betty Morris Crum confirmed the grantors’ parental
relationship to the surface grantees in the 1990 deed, the dates of death for Ernie and
Louise Morris, and the fact that they died intestate. She attached the obituaries, which
she said were published in the local newspaper, and pointed out that the heirs were
identified in those obituaries. The Morris heirs also submitted the affidavit of a title
examiner who said: she noticed how four of the six surface grantees shared the same
last name as the grantors; she conducted a general internet search in 2016 on Google
for Ernie and Louise Morris in Monroe County; and within minutes, she found their
obituaries in the local newspaper which contained “the names and potential locations for
their children, being those same individuals identified as grantees in the 1990 Deed.”
       {¶16} The Morris heirs attached Yoder’s discovery responses which said: Yoder’s
attorney conducted the title work as to the mineral interest in May 2011; before publishing
the notice of abandonment, they attempted to identify heirs by searching the name of
Ernie Morris and the name of Louise Morris in the Monroe County deed records, lease
records, preservation notice indexes, official records, and probate records; the names of
Ernie and Louise Morris were also used to search the Belmont County probate records;
no research was performed as to the surface grantees in the 1990 deed; the deed did not

2The trial court dismissed a common law abandonment count in the counterclaim on April 25, 2019. LL&B
named Antero Resources as a defendant due to the recorded leases; however, the action against Antero
was dismissed by agreed entry on January 21, 2020.

Case No. 20 MO 0005
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indicate they were heirs; no internet search was conducted to identify potential heirs of
Ernie or Louise Morris; and certified mail was not attempted at the address of Ernie and
Louise Morris set forth in the 1990 deed.
       {¶17} The summary judgment motion filed by the Morris heirs alternatively argued
that the 1994 deed, wherein they transferred the property to Yoder’s predecessor,
constituted a savings event occurring within twenty years of the 2011 notice of
abandonment. Although the 1994 deed repeated the original 1990 mineral severance
word-for-word, the Morris heirs argued it was more than a mere repetition as they
inherited a portion of the minerals when Ernie died earlier in 1994 under the laws of
intestacy at that time. A footnote claimed that although Ernie and Louise held the property
as joint tenants with right of survivorship, they did not retain the mineral interest in the
same manner because the 1990 deed transferring the property did not use words of
survivorship in reserving the minerals.
       {¶18} Yoder and Doubledown filed a joint opposition to summary judgment, which
LL&B incorporated by reference into its summary judgment response. They said Yoder’s
search of the public records to identify the name and address of an heir for Ernie or Louise
Morris was sufficient to satisfy the reasonable diligence standard, asserting there is no
requirement to search surface grantees when researching a mineral reservation retained
by the grantors or to conduct a general internet search for heirs. They also noted the
2016 search was a “later-conducted search” and the title examiner’s affidavit did not attest
the obituaries would have been available online in 2011, when the notice of abandonment
was being prepared.
       {¶19} An affidavit from Yoder’s attorney confirmed the aforementioned discovery
response, attesting that an examination of the Monroe County public records was
conducted in 2011 to determine ownership of the subject mineral interest severed in 1990
but no transfers could be located. He also said the search failed to reveal any address
for the mineral holders or the name or address of any heirs of the mineral holders and
therefore notice was served on the heirs by publication in May of 2011.
       {¶20} As to the 1994 deed, the defense argued the Morris heirs did not own any
minerals when they conveyed the surface. They explained that at the time Ernie and
Louise Morris owned the mineral interest in joint tenancy with right of survivorship and

Case No. 20 MO 0005
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therefore retained their minerals in the same manner. This would mean that title to the
entire mineral interest vested in Louise Morris via survivorship when Ernie Morris died in
1994 and it was not until Louise Morris died in 2001 that the minerals were inherited by
intestacy. The defense concluded the recitation of the mineral reservation in the 1994
deed was a mere repetition of the prior severance, and therefore, the 1994 deed does not
contain a savings event.
       {¶21} The Morris heirs filed a reply in support of their summary judgment motion.
They complained the affidavit of Yoder’s attorney (about the 2011 examination of the
public records) did not specify what documents were reviewed.               They also said it
contradicted evidence in the 1990 deed which contained the last known address for Ernie
and Louise Morris. As Yoder admitted he did not attempt certified mail at this address,
the Morris heirs argued Yoder proceeded straight to publication in violation of the statute.
On the issue of a savings event, the Morris heirs claimed a portion of the title to the
minerals merged prior to their execution of the 1994 deed so that the mineral reservation
in that deed was more than a mere repetition of a prior reservation.
       {¶22} On February 19, 2020, the trial court issued its decision denying the motion
for summary judgment filed by the Morris heirs. The court found that Yoder exercised
reasonable due diligence before serving notice by publication because Yoder conducted
a title search of the property and used the grantors’ names to search the Monroe County
deed records, lease records, official records, probate records, and preservation notice
indexes, which failed to reveal an address for Ernie or Louise Morris or the identities of
their heirs. The court rejected the argument that Yoder should have researched the
grantees because some of them had the same last names as the grantors. As for the
argument about a savings event, the court ruled that the 1994 deed contained a mere
repetition of a prior reservation and did not affect title to the mineral interest.
       {¶23} The trial court concluded: “Plaintiffs Motion for Summary Judgment is
Denied in its entirety. The Court further finds that there is no just reason for delay, and
that this ‘Judgment Entry Incorporating Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law’ is a final
appealable order, as defined under Civil Rule 54.” The court assessed costs to the
Plaintiffs (and granted judgment for the clerk of courts).
                               FINAL, APPEALABLE ORDER

Case No. 20 MO 0005
                                                                                       –8–

       {¶24} Initially, this court will evaluate the trial court’s decision which denied the
motion for summary judgment filed by the Morris heirs, but the trial court did not expressly
grant summary judgment for the defendants. To reiterate: the Morris heirs filed a motion
for summary judgment; the three defendants filed responses in opposition without moving
for summary judgment; and the Morris heirs filed a reply.
       {¶25} Under the appropriate circumstances, a court that is denying a motion for
summary judgment can grant summary judgment to the opposing party even if that party
did not file a cross-motion for summary judgment. Salem Community Hosp. v. Sankovic,
7th Dist. Columbiana No. 96-CO-91 (Dec. 31, 1997). The entry of summary judgment
under Civ.R. 56 against the movant does not prejudice the movant’s due process rights
“where all the evidence material to the issue being litigated is before the court, and the
record shows that no genuine issue as to any material fact exists and that the nonmoving
party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Houk v. Ross, 34 Ohio St. 2d 77, 296
N.E.2d 266 (1973), paragraph one of syllabus (upholding the appellate court’s grant of
summary judgment for the non-movant where all parties submitted material evidence to
the court and the issue was sufficiently argued to show there existed no genuine issue as
to any material fact).
       {¶26} This procedure was reaffirmed in an original action filed in the Ohio
Supreme Court where the Court decided to grant summary judgment in favor of the non-
movant. State ex rel. Cuyahoga Cty. Hosp. v. Ohio Bur. of Workers' Comp., 27 Ohio
St.3d 25, 28, 500 N.E.2d 1370 (1986) (“an entry of summary judgment against the moving
party does not prejudice his due process rights where all relevant evidence is before the
court, no genuine issue as to any material fact exists, and the non-moving party is entitled
to judgment as a matter of law”). Compare Marshall v. Aaron, 15 Ohio St. 3d 48, 472
N.E.2d 335 (1984) (where the plaintiff did not file a summary judgment motion, some
defendants sought summary judgment, and the Supreme Court found the entry of
summary judgment for a non-moving defendant was improper because the issues related
to that defendant were different and were not addressed in any motion). The rule in Houk
is an exception to the Marshall holding. Todd Dev. Co. v. Morgan, 116 Ohio St. 3d 461,
2008-Ohio-87, 880 N.E.2d 88, ¶ 17. See also Ohio State Bar Assn. v. Watkins Glob.

Case No. 20 MO 0005
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Network, 159 Ohio St. 3d 241, 2020-Ohio-169, __ N.E.3d __, ¶ 22 (granting summary
judgment in favor of non-moving respondents on various claims).
       {¶27} Many facts were undisputed by the parties, and the trial court was asked to
apply the law to those facts. The Morris heirs argue the issues are purely legal, with
nothing to be tried. The trial court concluded that Yoder exercised reasonable due
diligence before serving the notice of abandonment by publication and the 1994 deed did
not contain a savings event as it was a mere repetition of previously reserved minerals.
These are final legal holdings.
       {¶28} Nevertheless, the trial court did not specifically state that it was granting
summary judgment for the defendants. It is also noted that the trial court said the
evidence was construed most favorably for the defendants, which would not be the case
when the court decides to grant summary judgment in favor of a non-movant, who the
court essentially places in the position of movant. See Houk, 34 Ohio St. 2d at 83-84 (on
granting summary judgment to non-movant “after construing the evidence strictly against
both parties”). Yet, the trial court’s statement to this effect was part of a collection of
summary judgment law set forth in an introductory section of the court’s judgment entry.
       {¶29} An appellate court has no jurisdiction over non-final orders. CitiMortgage
Inc. v. Roznowski, 139 Ohio St. 3d 299, 2014-Ohio-1984, 11 N.E.3d 1140, ¶ 10. A
judgment is a final appealable order only if it meets the requirements of R.C. 2505.02
and, if applicable, Civ.R. 54(B). Id. Pursuant to Civ.R. 54(B): “When more than one
claim for relief is presented in an action whether as a claim, counterclaim, cross-claim, or
third-party claim, and whether arising out of the same or separate transactions, or when
multiple parties are involved, the court may enter final judgment as to one or more but
fewer than all of the claims or parties only upon an express determination that there is no
just reason for delay.”
       {¶30} Adding Civ.R. 54(B) language can permit an appellate court to hear an
appeal of a summary judgment entered on a declaratory judgment decision even if a
slander of title claim remains pending. See Potts v. Unglaciated Industries Inc., 2016-
Ohio-8559, 77 N.E.3d 415, ¶ 38 (7th Dist.) (where the issue of property rights is an
underlying question in the slander of title action which does not answer the additional
elements of the claim including publication of a disparaging false statement on title in

Case No. 20 MO 0005
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reckless disregard of its falsity causing damages). However, the addition of Civ.R 54(B)
language cannot convert an order that is non-final under R.C. 2505.02 into a final order.
Noble v. Colwell, 44 Ohio St. 3d 92, 96, 540 N.E.2d 1381 (1989). The issue here is
whether the court’s judgment entry, which specifically concluded by denying a summary
judgment motion, was a final order under R.C. 2505.02.
       {¶31} Pursuant to the final, appealable order statute, an order is final if it “affects
a substantial right made in a special proceeding.”        R.C. 2505.02(B)(2).     A “special
proceeding” is defined as “an action or proceeding that is specially created by statute and
that prior to 1853 was not denoted as an action at law or a suit in equity.”             R.C.
2505.02(A)(2). A declaratory judgment action is a special proceeding. See General Acc.
Ins. Co. v. Insurance Co. of N. America, 44 Ohio St. 3d 17, 22, 540 N.E.2d 266, 270
(1989). “[T]herefore, an order entered therein which affects a substantial right is a final
appealable order.” Id.
       {¶32} A “substantial right” is a right that a person is entitled to protect or enforce
pursuant to the federal or state constitution, a statute, the common law, or a rule of
procedure. R.C. 2505.02(A)(1). See also General Acc. Ins., 44 Ohio St. 3d 17 (where
cross-motions disputed whether the insurer had a duty to defend and the trial court
declared there was no duty with Civ.R. 54(B) language, the Supreme Court found the
declaration affected a substantial right in the special proceeding of a declaratory judgment
action). A substantial right would be affected where a trial court issues a declaration on
property rights. See Potts, 2016-Ohio-8559 at ¶ 33-34 (declaration of continued lease
validity resolved the entire declaratory action).
       {¶33} The actual effect of the court’s judgment in a declaratory action must be
considered to ascertain if a substantial right was affected. The denial of summary
judgment is generally not a final, appealable order. Hubbell v. Xenia, 115 Ohio St. 3d 77,
2007-Ohio-4839, 873 N.E.2d 878, ¶ 9. The fact that this court applies a de novo standard
of review to summary judgment decisions does not overcome jurisdictional issues and
allows us to rule on the mere denial of summary judgment. Where a statutory exception
exists, however, the denial of summary judgment can be appealed. See id. (order
denying a political subdivision immunity). The declaratory judgment statute provides:
“The declaration has the effect of a final judgment or decree.” R.C. 2721.02(A). See also

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Potts, 2016-Ohio-8559 at ¶ 33 (but where the trial court granted summary judgment on
the claim for declaratory relief).
       {¶34} While a denial of summary judgment is usually not a final appealable order,
an appellate court may address the denial when the trial court has entered final judgment
in the matter and the case turns on undisputed facts and purely legal questions. Seoane-
Vazquez v. Rosenberg, 10th Dist. Franklin No. 19AP-16, 2019-Ohio-4997, ¶ 20 (where
the trial court granted an opposing motion for summary judgment which was the final
order on appeal), citing Celebrezze v. Netzley, 51 Ohio St. 3d 89, 90, 554 N.E.2d 1292
(1990) (the denial of summary judgment was not a final appealable order; distinguishing
a declaratory judgment action from a standard civil action).
       {¶35} “[I]n declaratory actions, we treat a denial of summary judgment as a
resolution of the action if the trial court sets forth the rights and responsibilities of the
parties in its denial of summary judgment.” Griewahn v. United States Fid. & Guar. Co.,
160 Ohio App. 3d 311, 2005-Ohio-1660, 827 N.E.2d 341, ¶ 8 (7th Dist.). See also Shops
at Boardman Park LLC v. Target Corp., 7th Dist. Mahoning No. 13 MA 0188, 2016-Ohio-
7283, ¶ 9 (order was final where “the court completely analyzed the narrow proposition
put before it in the declaratory judgment action and made a very clear and specific ruling”).
“[A]n order entering judgment in a declaratory judgment action which fails to declare the
parties' rights and obligations is not final and appealable. Where the denial of a motion
for summary judgment in the context of declaratory judgment gives rise, however, to the
reasonable and logical inference that one party has in fact prevailed, the requirements of
finality are satisfied.” (Citation omitted). Lexington Ins. Co. v. DunnWell LLC, 2016-Ohio-
5311, 69 N.E.3d 1066, ¶ 10 (9th Dist.).
       {¶36} We conclude that the trial court adequately declared that the defendants
prevailed on the legal issues under consideration. As to the notice issue, the trial court
said “Yoder exercised reasonable due diligence” and found the actions taken before
serving the notice of abandonment by publication were consistent with Seventh District
case law. As to the savings event issue, the trial court specified that the 1994 deed did
not affect title to any mineral interest and “thus is not a title transaction precluding
abandonment under the 2006 Dormant Mineral Act.” Although it would have been much
preferable had the trial court specified that it was granting judgment in favor of the defense

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or that it was issuing a declaratory judgment in accordance with its legal holdings, we can
draw “a reasonable and logical inference” that the trial court was entering a declaratory
judgment that the notice of abandonment was properly served and the 1994 deed was
not a savings event and that these legal holdings essentially result in a judgment in favor
of the defendants. See id. at ¶ 10.
       {¶37} Considering the legal issues raised to the trial court and the trial court’s
holdings on those issues, this court concludes there was nothing remaining to be tried,
and the trial court issued a final, appealable order.        We proceed to address the
assignments of error.
                                   DORMANT MINERAL ACT
       {¶38} Under the Dormant Mineral Act (DMA), a mineral interest held by any
person other than the surface owner “shall be deemed abandoned and vested” in the
surface owner if the requirements in division (E) are satisfied and there were no timely
division (B)(3) savings events. R.C. 5301.56(B) (unless the mineral interest is coal or is
owned by the government). The possible savings events include the following if they
occurred in the 20 years preceding the notice: (a) the mineral interest was the subject of
a title transaction which was filed in the county recorder’s office; (b) the holder engaged
in production; (c) the holder engaged in underground gas storage; (d) an affidavit
concerning a drilling or mining permit was recorded; (e) a claim to preserve was filed in
accordance with division (C) of the statute; or (e) a tax parcel number was created. R.C.
5301.56(B)(3)(a)-(e).
       {¶39} Only the first type of savings event is at issue in this case. The Morris heirs
set forth three assignments of error. Their third assignment of error deals with whether
there was a savings event under division (B)(3)(a). Their first two assignments of error
deal with the notice requirement of division (E)(1).
       {¶40} Pursuant to division (E), before a mineral interest becomes vested in the
surface owner under division (B), the surface owner shall perform two tasks: (1) serve
notice of abandonment; and (2) file an affidavit of abandonment with the county recorder.
R.C. 5301.56(E)(1), (2) (file the affidavit between 30 and 60 sixty days after the (E)(1)
notice was “served or published, as applicable”).          As for serving the notice of
abandonment, division (E)(1) states that the surface owner “shall”:

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       Serve notice by certified mail, return receipt requested, to each holder or
       each holder's successors or assignees, at the last known address of each,
       of the owner's intent to declare the mineral interest abandoned. If service of
       notice cannot be completed to any holder, the owner shall publish notice of
       the owner's intent to declare the mineral interest abandoned at least once
       in a newspaper of general circulation in each county in which the land that
       is subject to the interest is located. The notice shall contain all of the
       information specified in division (F) of this section.

R.C. 5301.56(E)(1). Among other items, the notice must contain the “name of each holder
and the holder's successors and assignees, as applicable * * *.” R.C. 5301.56(F)(1). A
holder is defined as “the record holder of a mineral interest, and any person who derives
the person's rights from, or has a common source with, the record holder and whose claim
does not indicate, expressly or by clear implication, that it is adverse to the interest of the
record holder.” R.C. 5301.56(A)(1).
                                  ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR 1:
                      LAST KNOWN ADDRESS OF RECORD HOLDERS
       {¶41} The first assignment of error set forth by the Morris heirs alleges:
       “The trial court erred in holding that Appellee Aden Yoder was not required to
attempt service by certified mail prior to publishing a Notice of Abandonment pursuant to
R.C. 5301.56.”
       {¶42} The Morris heirs initially complain the affidavit submitted by the defense
failed to specify and incorporate the precise documents that were reviewed in searching
the public records and failed to specify when the search was conducted. First, there was
evidence before the court sufficiently identifying when the search was performed. The
defense affidavit discloses that the examination of the public records occurred in 2011
before Yoder published notice of abandonment. According to the evidence presented by
the Morris heirs, notice of abandonment was published on May 11, 2011. The Morris
heirs also attached Yoder’s discovery responses to their motion for summary judgment,
thus allowing the court to review this evidence as well. Therein, it was attested that the
title work on the mineral interest was conducted in May of 2011, before the notice of

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abandonment was published. Therefore, the evidence showed the search occurred
within the first ten days of May of 2011. The date the search was conducted was
sufficiently identified for the trial court.
       {¶43} In addition to the end date for the records searched, the affidavit submitted
for the defense said the search of the public records started with 1990, which is when the
minerals were originally severed. The defense affidavit specified that the public records
searched included the Monroe County deed records, lease records, preservation notice
indexes, official records, and probate records. The evidence submitted by the Morris
heirs showed the names of Ernie and Louise Morris were used in Yoder’s search of the
aforementioned Monroe County records, and their names were also used to search the
Belmont County probate records. The defense affidavit attested that the search failed to
reveal any address for the mineral holders (and failed to reveal heirs). There is no
requirement to attach documents to show the absence of information. The Morris heirs
do not indicate what record could have been attached to confirm the lack of information
on the record holders. Moreover, the Morris heirs do not contend that the search of the
aforementioned public records should have revealed an address for the record holders or
the identity of the heirs (besides the information within the 1990 deed itself, upon which
they base their notice arguments as discussed infra).
       {¶44} Although the Morris heirs admit that both Ernie and Louise Morris died long
before the 2011 search of the public record, they insist that certified mail should have
been attempted on those record holders at the address listed for them in the 1990 deed
before notice was served by publication. They note the opposition to their summary
judgment motion did not say Yoder knew the record holders were deceased at the time
they decided not to serve them by certified mail at the address in the 1990 deed.
       {¶45} The Morris heirs emphasize the language in (E)(1) requiring the surface
owner to attempt to serve notice by certified mail on the holder at the holder’s “last known
address” before resorting to publication and urge that the last known address of the record
holders was reasonably ascertainable by the public record. They assert that the 1990
deed transferring the surface and reserving the minerals specifically provided the last
known address of Ernie and Louise Morris, the record holders of the mineral interest.
They therefore claim that the affidavit submitted by the defense falsely stated that there

Case No. 20 MO 0005
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was no address for the record holders in the public records examined before serving
notice by publication. The Morris heirs conclude that the failure to attempt to serve
certified mail on Ernie and Louise Morris at the address in the 1990 deed violated R.C.
5301.56(E)(1), which they say should be interpreted as following the constitutional due
process law requiring service if the address is “reasonably ascertainable.”
        {¶46} Inexplicably, this argument propounded by the Morris heirs fails to
acknowledge that the address for Ernie and Louise Morris in the 1990 deed is the address
of the property at issue in this case. Although the address for the grantors (Ernie and
Louise Morris) was listed immediately after their names in the 1990 deed as 32999
Miltonsburg-Calais Road, Woodsfield, Ohio 43793, that was the address of the property
being transferred in that very deed. When the property was later transferred to the Kuhns,
that 1994 deed listed the tax mailing address for grantors (the Morris children) as 32999
Miltonsburg-Calais Road, Woodsfield, Ohio 43793.3 Then, when the Kuhns conveyed
the property to the Yoders in 1997, that deed listed the tax mailing address for the Yoders
as 32999 Miltonsburg-Calais Road, Woodsfield, Ohio 43793.
        {¶47} Clearly, when the Yoders searched the public records for the record holders
or heirs in 2011, the Yoders were the surface owners of 32999 Miltonsburg-Calais Road
and were attempting to reunite the minerals with this very surface. It would be absurd for
the Yoders to send certified mail to their own property and address it to the two people
who sold the property (to the predecessor of the Yoders’ predecessor) in 1990.
Consequently, this assignment of error is overruled.
                                        ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR 2:
                DILIGENGE IN SEARCHING FOR HEIRS BEFORE PUBLICATION
        {¶48} The second assignment of error set forth by the Morris heirs provides:
        “The trial court erred in holding that Appellee Aden Yoder exercised reasonable
diligence in attempting to locate the heirs and assigns of Ernie Morris and Louise Morris.”
        {¶49} The Morris heirs emphasize that the DMA requires the surface owner to
serve the notice of abandonment by certified mail to each holder “or each holder's

3 Therefore, according to this later document in the relevant chain of title, the last known address reported
by the 1990 surface grantees (the Morris children) was no longer the Belmont County address set forth in
the 1990 deed but was the address of the property they sold the Kuhns in that 1994 deed (which the Kuhns
sold to the Yoders in 1997).

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successors or assignees” at the last known address of each. R.C. 5301.56(E)(1). The
notice can only then be served by publication if service cannot be completed to any holder
which, by statutory definition, includes those who derive their rights from or have a
common source with the record holder. R.C. 5031.56(A) (if their claim does not indicate
expressly or by clear implication that it is adverse to the record holder), (E)(1) (using
mandatory language of “shall” in describing the surface owner’s service obligations). The
Morris heirs also point out how the notice, whether served by certified mail or publication,
must contain “the name of each holder and the holder's successors and assignees, as
applicable * * *.” R.C. 5301.56(F)(1).
        {¶50} Initially, the Morris heirs suggest Yoder failed to set forth evidence of his
efforts to locate heirs. However, an affidavit attested that an heir could not be found after
reviewing the Monroe County deed records, lease records, official records, probate
records, and preservation notice indexes.                    And, the Morris heirs themselves
supplemented this summary judgment evidence by submitting for the trial court’s review
Yoder’s discovery responses, which included a statement that the probate records in
Belmont County were searched as well.                  Therefore, there was summary judgment
evidence on the efforts taken by Yoder to identify heirs of the record holders. Compare
Miller v. Mellott, 2019-Ohio-504, 130 N.E.3d 1021, ¶ 31-32 (7th Dist.) (where this court
said the surface owner failed to file an affidavit in opposition to summary judgment in
order to refute the holder’s claims that they failed to search for the holders, distinguishing
Shilts and Sharp where summary judgment affidavits were filed explaining the search
efforts)4; with Soucik v. Gulfport Energy Corp., 7th Dist. Belmont No. 17 BE 0022, 2019-
Ohio-491, ¶ 41, 51 (where there was no affidavit or other summary judgment evidence
on the efforts to identify heirs and the non-movant showed that heirs could be identified
in the probate records of the county where the property is located).
        {¶51} The Morris heirs then argue Yoder’s effort to locate heirs was not legally
sufficient as they failed to use reasonable diligence. They complain Yoder failed to

4 A different topic was clarified on reconsideration. See Miller v. Mellot, 7th Dist. Monroe No. 18 MO 0004,
2019-Ohio-4084, 146 N.E.3d 1184. The Ohio Supreme Court declined to accept the surface owner’s
appeal of the invalidation of their notice of abandonment and accepted a cross-appeal on a different issue
in Miller v. Mellot, Ohio St.3d 1562, 2020-Ohio-313, 138 N.E.3d 1163.

Case No. 20 MO 0005
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conduct a general internet search, which they believe would have revealed the heirs of
Ernie and Louise Morris; they submitted an affidavit from a title examiner who searched
those names on Google in 2016 and found their obituaries containing the names of the
heirs (and their former general locations) within minutes. They say reasonable diligence
required the surface owner to research whether the heirs of the grantors may have been
the grantees in the surface deed first severing the minerals in a case where four of the
six grantees have the same last name as the grantors (and the two with different last
names were females).
        {¶52} The parties agree the surface owner must use “reasonable due diligence”
in locating the holders of the mineral interest. The parties and the trial court reviewed the
case law set forth by this appellate district. In Shilts, this court concluded the surface
owner conducted a “reasonable search” or “took reasonable measures” to find heirs and
opined: “It would be absurd to absolutely require an attempt at notice by certified mail
when a reasonable search fails to reveal addresses or even the names of potential heirs
who must be served.” Shilts v. Beardmore, 7th Dist. Monroe No. 16 MO 0003, 2018-
Ohio-863, ¶ 12, 15 (where the surface owner argued it met a “reasonable diligence”
standard). In that case, the surface owner searched the public record including the chain
of title and probate records, conducted an online search, and reviewed records at the
Ohio Department of Natural Resources. Id. at ¶ 14. We did not say the online search
was necessary or specify what the online search entailed.
        {¶53} In Sharp, this court concluded that the “public record search constituted
reasonable due diligence” after the heirs complained the surface owners only searched
the probate and deed records and did not conduct a general internet search. Sharp v.
Miller, 2018-Ohio-4740, 114 N.E.3d 1285, ¶ 18, 21 (7th Dist.).5 While noting the search
upheld in Shilts included an online search, this court said the surface owner’s efforts must

5  In Sharp, the surface owner also submitted the affidavit of an expert who conducted a search after the
litigation was filed, including a search of certain genealogy websites, in order to show the heirs could not
all be discovered even after an extreme search. Sharp, 2018-Ohio-4740 at ¶ 19. In addressing an
argument that an attorney cannot argue at a hearing that the expert spent 80 hours where the expert’s
affidavit failed to so state, we noted the relevant search was the one conducted before the notice at issue,
not a “later-conducted search.” Id. at ¶ 20. Contrary to a suggestion by the Morris heirs, a search of the
listed websites was not part of the effort undertaken prior to publishing the notice of abandonment.

Case No. 20 MO 0005
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be viewed depending on the circumstances of each case. Id. at ¶ 17 (in response to an
argument that the exact efforts upheld in Shilts should be construed as requirements in
every case). It is noted that we additionally observed that there was no evidence that a
general internet search would have revealed the heirs. Id. at ¶ 21 (and noted the relevant
deed listed the record holders with only initials before their last names). The Morris heirs
say their case is distinguishable as they demonstrated that a general internet search in
2016 quickly revealed some heirs (in 1994 and 2001 obituaries). The defense notes
these results may not have been obtainable by a search in 2011, and there is no indication
this would have led to addresses for the heirs (as opposed to general locations).
       {¶54} In a subsequent case, we ruled on the issue of whether the surface owners
“performed due diligence in finding the mineral interest heirs” and reiterated that “if
reasonable efforts do not disclose any names or addresses, notice can be completed by
publication.” Hutchins v. Baker, 7th Dist. Monroe No. 19 MO 0005, 2020-Ohio-1108, ¶ 1,
34. We upheld a search of the records of the recorder’s office, where it failed to reveal a
non-conforming affidavit which was not connected to the property through a reasonable
title search. Id. at ¶ 3, 35-36 (where the record holder and her children died intestate in
West Virginia).
       {¶55} In a Fifth District case, a surface owner served notice by publication after
unsuccessfully attempting to serve a notice of abandonment by certified mail at the last
known address for the record holder as listed in the 1965 chain of title (when a certificate
of transfer issued by the probate court was recorded). The Fifth District found reasonable
diligence was used where the surface owner’s search of the records of the recorder’s
office and the probate court in the county where the property was located failed to reveal
a new address or the identities of heirs. Gerrity v. Chervenak, 2019-Ohio-2771, 140
N.E.3d 164, ¶ 18 (5th Dist.) (the surface owners also searched the records of the county
where unsuccessful service was attempted).
       {¶56} The court also noted the heir’s affidavit did not establish the precise
availability of the record holder’s 1997 obituary when she said the obituary “was readily
available and discoverable through an internet search.” Id. at ¶ 25. In any event, in
addressing the heir’s argument that a general internet search or a paid-subscription
genealogy online search was required, the court said: “We do not find that the ODMA

Case No. 20 MO 0005
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contemplates a worldwide exhaustive search” for a holder. Id. at ¶ 23-25. An appeal was
accepted in Gerrity v. Chervenak, 157 Ohio St. 3d 1440, 2019-Ohio-4211, 132 N.E.3d
700.
       {¶57} The Morris heirs cite examples of an attorney’s reasonable diligence in
locating an address by using “common and readily available sources in his search.” See
Sizemore v. Smith, 6 Ohio St. 3d 330, 332, 453 N.E.2d 632 (1983) (but stating it was
providing examples, not a mandatory checklist; where counsel only consulted his own
client and the post office). The Court said: “Reasonable diligence requires taking steps
which an individual of ordinary prudence would reasonably expect to be successful in
locating a defendant's address.” Id., applying Civ.R. 4.4(A) (which applies to service of
process when “the residence of the party to be served cannot be ascertained with
reasonable diligence”).    However, that case dealt with the standard when filing a
complaint in court, rather than a case involving a statute providing for notice of
abandonment when the record holders or their heirs had 20 years to file a claim to
preserve or otherwise ensure a savings event existed. Moreover, without a name for an
heir, the issue of the heir’s address does not arise.
       {¶58} The Morris heirs are essentially insisting that a surface owner of “ordinary
prudence would reasonably expect to be successful” in finding a record mineral holder’s
heir by researching a predecessor in title to the surface to see if the grantees in the deed
(that first severed and reserved the minerals while conveying the surface) may have been
the children of the grantors. In addition to the records of the recorder’s office, the probate
records of Monroe County were searched with the grantors’ names, and no heirs were
found. Nor were heirs found when a probate search was extended to Belmont County.
Notably, there is no indication that a search of the public records using the names of the
1990 surface grantees would have demonstrated they were the heirs of the 1990 surface
grantors (and record mineral holders).
       {¶59} Essentially, this argument on identifying heirs by matching last names is an
extension of the argument on whether an internet search was required. That is, the Morris
heirs are alternatively arguing that even if a general internet search for heirs is not always
required, it should be required as a matter of law where the mineral severance conveys

Case No. 20 MO 0005
                                                                                        – 20 –

the surface to six grantees and four of those grantees have the same last name as the
grantors.
       {¶60} The DMA “shall be liberally construed to effect the legislative purpose of
simplifying and facilitating land title transactions by allowing persons to rely on a record
chain of title.” R.C. 5301.55. The term “records” includes “probate and other official public
records, as well as records in the office of the recorder of the county in which all or part
of the land is situated.” R.C. 5301.47(B). See also R.C. 5301.47(C) (when applied to the
official public records of the probate or other court, the term “recording” includes filing).
       {¶61} Regarding general online searches, the information available on the internet
is not always reliable. Furthermore, it changes continually. Previously printed information
is gradually put on the internet, but the date of internet publication does not necessarily
match the date of print publication for purposes of ascertaining what information was
available years ago when statutory abandonment proceedings were utilized as to a
property. Additionally, the availability of information may vary depending on the search
engine used, the exact search terms employed, the use of quotation marks, and even the
searcher’s geographic location and past search history. Accordingly, the re-creation of a
general internet search conducted years in the past is difficult. A search of the official
public records does not engender these same difficulties.
       {¶62} We conclude the surface owners engaged in reasonable efforts by using
the names of the record holders to search the public records of Monroe County and the
probate records of Belmont County (as well as Monroe County). It is undisputed that no
heirs were revealed by these searches. A general internet search is not a mandate in
determining the identity of the heirs of a record holder, and our position is not changed
based on the last names of some of the surface grantees in the deed severing and
retaining the minerals in favor of the grantor-record holders. This assignment of error is
overruled.
                                  ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR 3:
                   SAVINGS EVENT BY RECORDED TITLE TRANSACTION
       {¶63} The third assignment of error presented by the Morris heirs provides:
       “The trial court erred in holding that abandonment was not precluded by the
existence of a preserving event outlined by R.C. 5301.56(B).”

Case No. 20 MO 0005
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       {¶64} If the notice of abandonment is not invalidated under one of the prior two
assignments of error, then the Morris heirs contend that abandonment of the mineral
interest was not valid due to the existence of a savings event under subdivision (a) of
R.C. 5301.56(B)(3).      Pursuant to (B)(3), the mineral interest will only be deemed
abandoned and vested in the surface owner if within the 20 years immediately preceding
the date on which notice is served or published, there were no savings events.
       {¶65} The savings event in (B)(3)(a) occurs if: “The mineral interest was the
subject of a title transaction filed in the county recorder’s office.” R.C. 5301.56(B)(3)(a).
A “title transaction” is “any transaction affecting title to any interest in land, including title
by will or descent, title by tax deed, or by trustee's, assignee's, guardian's, executor's,
administrator's, or sheriff's deed, or decree of any court, as well as warranty deed, quit
claim deed, or mortgage.” R.C. 5301.47(F).
       {¶66} When a recorded deed conveys the surface and merely repeats a prior
mineral reservation without reserving any new mineral interest, the deed was not one
“affecting title” to the minerals and the mineral interest was not the “subject of” the title
transaction. Dodd v. Croskey, 7th Dist. Harrison No. 12 HA 6, 2013-Ohio-4257, ¶ 48 (“In
order for the mineral interest to be the “subject of” the title transaction the grantor must
be conveying that interest or retaining that interest.”), affirmed on other grounds, 143 Ohio
St.3d 293, 2015-Ohio-2362, 37 N.E.3d 147. See also Sharp, 2018-Ohio-4740 at ¶ 28;
Shilts, 2018-Ohio-863 at ¶ 9-10 (both from this district). The Morris heirs acknowledge
and do not take issue with this precedent.
       {¶67} They argue that although it appears they merely transferred the surface and
repeated the 1990 mineral reservation in the 1994 deed conveying the property, they
actually owned some of the minerals at that time under the laws of intestacy. To reiterate,
Ernie and Louise Morris owned the property jointly with right of survivorship. In a 1990
deed, they transferred the property to the Morris children while severing and retaining all
minerals. On March 12, 1994, Ernie Morris died intestate. At the time, the intestacy laws
provided the surviving spouse would receive the first $60,000 plus 1/3 of the balance of
the intestate estate and the children would receive the remaining 2/3 of the intestate
estate.   R.C. 2105.06(C) (eff. 12/17/1986 until amended 3/22/2001).               Applying this
intestacy law, the Morris heirs contend they inherited minerals upon the death of Ernie

Case No. 20 MO 0005
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Morris in March of 1994. They conclude that these mineral thus merged with the surface
before they sold the property in the June of 1994 deed. As such, they say that the mineral
reservation in the 1994 deed, although a word-for-word repetition of the one in the 1990
deed, actually reserved some minerals. They reason that their inherited mineral interest
would have been conveyed to Kuhn in 1994 if they had not included the mineral
reservation clause.
       {¶68} Initially, it must be pointed out that the Morris heirs did not attest to the value
of the relevant estate of Ernie Morris in 1994; i.e., they did not state that there was more
than $60,000. Nor did they attest that they inherited a certain percentage of the minerals
upon the death of Ernie Morris. The affidavit submitted by one of the heirs merely states
that they inherited all the minerals upon the death of Louise Morris in 2001. They make
an argument that they suggest is a legal issue but fail to set forth summary judgment
evidence of the necessary facts first.
       {¶69} Secondly, even if the Morris heirs inherited a full intestacy share of the
subject minerals upon the death of Ernie Morris, this would only give them 2/3 of the 1/2
mineral interest owned by Ernie Morris.          That is to say, the Morris heirs do not
acknowledge that their argument could only apply to 1/3 of the minerals (2/3 of the 1/2
they allegedly inherited from Ernie Morris). Even under their theory, Louise Morris had
her original 1/2 plus the 1/3 she allegedly inherited under intestacy laws from Ernie Morris
in March 1994 (if the minerals were not held joint and survivor). The Morris heirs would
not have inherited Louise’s portion until she died intestate in 2001, which is after the June
of 1994 deed which they attempt to use as savings event.
       {¶70} In addition to pointing this out, Appellees also respond with an argument
that merger would not apply.

       Pursuant to the doctrine of merger, a lesser estate will be absorbed into a
       greater estate when they meet and coincide in the same person.                To
       constitute a merger, the two estates must be in one and the same person,
       at one and the same time, and in one and the same right. The question of
       whether there will be a merger of a lesser and greater estate under
       circumstances which might permit a merger is a matter of intention and
       substantial justice.

Case No. 20 MO 0005
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(Citations omitted). Headley v. Ackerman, 7th Dist. Monroe No. 16 MO 0010, 2017-Ohio-
8030, ¶ 32 (finding intent where a deed specified it was conveying “the same interests
conveyed” and used the word “reconvey” the real estate in the same “proportion to each
as was conveyed” in a prior deed).
       {¶71} Appellees say that merger requires unity of ownership, and they suggest
this would not exist where only a portion of the minerals became owned by the surface
owners. The Morris heirs reply that unity of ownership does not require a surface owner
to own the entire mineral interest and that a certain percentage of a mineral interest can
merge with the surface. In fact, some cases cited by Appellees involve less than the
entire interest. See, e.g., Pabin v. Eberle, 7th Dist. Monroe No. 18 MO 0008, 2019-Ohio-
2728, ¶ 88-89 (where A owned the surface and then inherited 1/4 of the minerals, there
was no intent to merge where the mineral owner died intestate; however, A later showed
intent to merge when his will left this real estate to one person); Gallucci v. Freshour, 4th
Dist. Hocking No. 96CA18 (Aug. 22, 1997) (co-owner mortgaged his undivided one-half
interest in the property and later quit-claimed that interest to the mortgagee; when these
two estates coincided in the same person, the mortgage estate was absorbed into the
greater estate, the one-half of the fee estate).
       {¶72} In any event, Appellees also use these cases to point out that merger
requires intent and urge there was no intent expressed here. See id. Contrary to the
initial suggestion of the Morris heirs, it is difficult to comprehend the argument that there
exists an intent to merge by a mere undocumented inheritance of minerals under
intestacy when such transfer was not memorialized in any manner. (Apt.Br. 25, stating
the mineral interest they inherited “was merged with their ownership of the surface estate
when Ernie Morris died” and “was merged with the surface estate prior to the execution
and recordation of the 1994 Deed”). See Pabin, 7th Dist. No. 18 MO 0008 at ¶ 88 (where
the surface owner inherited 1/4 of the minerals reservation, there was no intent to merge
as the mineral owner died intestate).
       {¶73} In their reply brief, the Morris heirs alter the argument, stating the intent to
merge can be found in the 1994 deed (wherein they transferred the surface) because
they recited the clause from the 1990 deed which excepted and reserved all minerals
(and because they owned some of the minerals). The Morris heirs provide no support for

Case No. 20 MO 0005
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the contention that in a deed conveying the surface, a word-for-word repetition of a prior
reservation of an entire mineral interest shows intent to merge 1/3 of the minerals (prior
to that conveyance of the surface).       They essentially argue that a surface owner’s
recitation in a surface deed of a prior mineral reservation shows the surface owner’s intent
to maintain any minerals they may have inherited through intestacy after that prior
reservation. Appellees counter this by citing our case of McAuley v. Brooker, 2017-Ohio-
9222, 101 N.E.3d 1118, ¶ 39 (7th Dist.) (finding the repetition of reservation language
from a prior deed “shows intent for the surface and mineral estates to remain separate”).
         {¶74} Regardless, the threshold issue presented by the Morris heirs revolves
around how Ernie and Louise Morris held the property. This assignment of error relies
on the argument of the Morris heirs that although Ernie and Louise Morris owned the
property jointly with right of survivorship, they did not retain the minerals in the same
manner. They emphasize: Ernie Morris conveyed the property to himself and Louise
Morris “for their joint lives, remainder to the survivor thereof” in a 1987 quit-claim deed,
but the 1990 surface conveyance by Ernie and Louise Morris did not mention survivorship
in the clause reserving and excepting the minerals.
         {¶75} First, the Morris heirs cite general law stating that survivorship is not
presumed and that property is held as tenants-in-common if there is no survivorship
language.     See In re Estate of Shelton, 154 Ohio App. 3d 188, 2003-Ohio-4593, 796
N.E.2d 955, ¶ 9 (11th Dist.). However, “where the words of the instrument of conveyance
clearly show the parties' intent to create a right of survivorship, courts will give effect to
those words.” Id. at ¶ 20 (for a deed executed prior to the enactment of a statute). The
Shelton case addressed a deed executed prior to the enactment of statutory survivorship
(addressed further infra). See R.C. 5302.17 (setting forth the language for a survivorship
deed).
         {¶76} The Morris heirs then note that the 1990 deed transferring the surface
stated that the grantors (Ernie and Louise Morris) “except and reserve” the mineral
interest. The Morris heirs argue this clause did not “except” the minerals but actually
“reserved” the minerals, reasoning that a new property right was being created since the
minerals had never been severed in the past. Finally, the Morris heirs reason that if the
1990 deed “reserved” the minerals and created a new property right (rather than

Case No. 20 MO 0005
                                                                                          – 25 –

excepting and retaining the minerals), then words of survivorship would be required in
order to hold the new right jointly with right of survivorship.
       {¶77} The Morris heirs cite no law directly holding: while a clause “excepting” from
the grant of property does not require survivorship language as to the retained property if
the property was originally held in survivorship, a clause “reserving” a property right
requires survivorship language regardless of how the property was originally held. We
have found a Pennsylvania case stating: “the issue of survivorship turns on whether the
clause involves an exception or a reservation.” See Bastian v. Sullivan, 2015 Pa. Super.
123, 117 A.3d 338, 346 (2015). In response to the argument that words of survivorship
were needed in the mineral reservation, the court held the clause “excepting and
reserving” minerals was an exception “and as such, retained the nature of the estate as
it was granted,” which was joint tenancy with right of survivorship. Id. at 346. (The court
also found no intent to “sever” the joint tenancy with right of survivorship where the joint
tenants listed their spouses as grantors in the sale of the surface. Id. at 344-345.)
       {¶78} Before addressing the argument about whether the 1990 deed excepted or
reserved the mineral, we review three statutory provisions, although the parties do not.
A statute provides: “If any interest in real property is conveyed or devised to two or more
persons, such persons hold title as tenants in common and the joint interest created is a
tenancy in common.” R.C. 5302.19. However, the mineral interest was not conveyed or
devised in the 1990 surface deed.
       {¶79} Another statute states: “A deed conveying any interest in real property to
two or more persons, and in substance following the form set forth in this section * * *
creates a survivorship tenancy in the grantees * * *.” R.C. 5302.17. The form is then set
forth as follows: “[the grantors] grant * * * to [the grantees], for their joint lives, remainder
to the survivor of them * * *.” Id. The 1987 deed from Ernie Morris to himself and Louise
Morris contained this language and they owned the property for their joint lives, remainder
to the survivors. Their 1990 deed conveying the surface did not convey the minerals but
retained them. As the statute refers to the contents of a deed creating a survivorship
tenancy “in the grantees” to whom a grantor is “conveying” a real property interest, it
would not govern the grantors in the 1990 deed; the statute deals with how the property
actually being conveyed would be titled among the grantees.

Case No. 20 MO 0005
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      {¶80} “A conveyance from all of the survivorship tenants to any other person or
from all but one of the survivorship tenants to the remaining survivorship tenant
terminates the survivorship tenancy and vests title in the grantee.”            R.C. 5302.20.
However, the minerals were not conveyed “to any other person” and it is undisputed that
only the surface vested in the grantee via the 1990 deed.
      {¶81} We turn to the arguments on whether the clause “excepting and reserving”
the minerals from the surface actually excepted the minerals or reserved the minerals.
Although the terms “reserve” and “except” are often now used interchangeably, the term
“except” means to retain an existing right, while the term “reserve” means to create a new
right. See Talbot v. Ward, 2017-Ohio-9213, 102 N.E.3d 544, ¶ 62 (7th Dist.). This court
has explained:

      An exception exists when the grantor retains a part of the estate that can
      be enjoyed separate from the estate conveyed to the grantee; the grantor
      retains title to the excepted part of the realty. * * * A reservation is said to
      be the mere right or privilege, reserved by the grantor, to use the estate
      which is not part of the realty itself but issues out of it (such as rent or the
      right to timber as it is cut); the title to the whole estate passes to the grantee,
      but it is burdened by the right reserved.

Rubel v. Johnson, 2017-Ohio-9221, 101 N.E.3d 1092, ¶ 20 (7th Dist.), citing Clark v.
Guest, 54 Ohio St. 298, 303-304, 43 N.E. 862 (1896).
      {¶82} A main reason for distinguishing between the two concepts when
confronted with an old deed was because the law previously stated that a reservation
must use words of inheritance to be perpetual (otherwise it expired upon the death of the
owner), while an exception did not require words of inheritance to ensure the property
could be conveyed in the future. Gill v. Fletcher, 74 Ohio St. 295, 304, 78 N.E. 433 (1906)
(but the intent rather than the label governs). In other words, if the language in the deed
constituted an “exception,” then words of inheritance were not necessary for the grantor
to retain an interest he could convey in the future because the grantor retained a portion
of his former estate; but if the language was a “reservation,” then words of inheritance
were necessary because the reservation created a new property interest. See id.

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       {¶83} We note the 1990 surface deed and mineral severance said the grantors
“except and reserve for theirselves and their heirs and assigns” the mineral interest.
Regardless, the deed was not subject to the words of inheritance test which was replaced
by statute in 1925. See R.C. 5301.02 (words of inheritance are not necessary to create
a fee simple estate). Nevertheless, we are asked to consider the law distinguishing the
terms in conjunction with the argument set forth by the Morris heirs that an exception
retains a property right and would thus carry forward the survivorship characteristic of the
property, whereas a reservation creates a new property right and would require new
survivorship language to be held jointly with right of survivorship.
       {¶84} Concluding the minerals were “excepted” from the grant of property even
though the deed said the grantor was “reserving” the minerals, the Supreme Court
explained:

       It is true, the intention of the grantor was expressed by the word ‘reserving,’
       which technically saves only a right to some use or benefit in the thing
       granted, instead of excluding or excepting from the operation of the deed a
       part of the thing embraced in the general description.          But while this
       technical distinction between a reservation and an exception may exist, it is
       quite clear, from the subject-matter, that ‘reserving’ was here used in the
       sense of ‘excepting.’ The ‘minerals underlying the soil’ being a part of the
       land described in the deed, and not a mere future benefit or interest therein,
       there can be no doubt the grantor intended to retain the fee-simple title to
       the minerals.

Sloan v. Lawrence Furnace Co., 29 Ohio St. 568, 569 (1876).
       {¶85} In Gill, the grantor conveyed the property while “reserving the one-half of
the plaster or the profits thereof which may hereafter be found on said land” and the deed
then described the conveyance by parenthetically adding, “the half of plaster as above
described only excepted.” Although the deed initially said “reserving” and failed to use
words of inheritance, the Court noted the deed also used the word “excepted” and found:

       it can only mean that the grantor excepted out of the estate granted and
       retained in himself the fee simple, which he already had, in the one-half of

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       the plaster. It cannot be maintained that the plaster was not in esse at the
       time of the conveyance. With good reason it was at that time believed to
       exist, although it had not been ‘found‘; and hence the reservation or
       exception. * * * The case is not at all like cases in which an estate is granted
       and at the same time some new right or privilege is reserved out of it to the
       grantor, as, for example, a right of way or other easement.

Gill, 74 Ohio St. at 303-304.
       {¶86} Thus, where the deed used the term “reserving” and then the term
“excepting” in a parenthetical, the Court found the mineral reservation to be an exception
and a retention of a fee simple which he already owned. Id. See also Headley, 7th Dist.
No. 16 MO 0010 at ¶ 49 (where a sheriff’s deed said the grantors were “excepting and
reserving” a royalty interest, this appellate court found the grantors “would not have been
creating a new interest that they did not previously possess. Instead, they were retaining
an existing interest that they wished to hold onto despite selling the rest of their interest
in the Property” and concluded the grantors “retained an exception rather than created a
reservation”); Holdren v. Mann, 7th Dist. Monroe No. 592 (Feb. 13, 1985) (where the deed
said, “reserving all oil and gas with the right to operate therefor,” this court concluded:
“Very obviously, the grantor intended to keep all oil and gas, in esse; not an interest in
the oil and gas, but the oil and gas as physical property. Thus, he created an exception,
leaving in himself and his heirs a fee simple estate in the gas and oil. No words of
inheritance were necessary.”).
       {¶87} Applying the above-reviewed law, the grant of the property by Ernie and
Louise Morris to the grantees but “reserving and excepting” the minerals was clearly
intended to “except” part of the land being transferred from the grant by retaining those
minerals. The minerals already existed as corporeal parts of the property and were
already owned by Ernie and Louise Morris, joint and survivor, at the time they sold the
surface; it is undisputed that Ernie and Louise owned the property jointly with right of
survivorship.
       {¶88} As the argument set forth by the Morris heirs wholly depends on our finding
the 1990 deed “reserved” the minerals (and created a new right) and did not “except” the
minerals (by retaining them), our holding that the deed “excepted” the minerals from the

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grant would mean that the remainder of their argument fails. The Morris heirs do not
argue that even if the clause was an exception, the minerals cannot be held as joint
tenants with right of survivorship without specific language in the exception. Rather, they
seem to concede that an exception to a land conveyance in a deed is a mere retention of
property which remains in the same ownership form.
       {¶89} In other words: Because Ernie and Louise Morris held the property jointly
with right of survivorship, their exception of their minerals from the sale of the surface in
the 1990 deed resulted in them retaining their minerals in the same manner as they held
the property -- jointly with right of survivorship. Accord Bastian, 117 A.3d at 346 (where
the Pennsylvania court held the clause “excepting and reserving” minerals was an
exception “and as such, retained the nature of the estate as it was granted,” which was
joint tenancy with right of survivorship). See also Israel v. Jones, 97 W. Va. 173, 124 S.E.
665, 666 (1924) (where the West Virginia Supreme Court suggested that if the grantors
owned the land jointly with right of survivorship, then their mineral royalty reservation for
15 years was also owned in that manner, without even addressing whether the
reservation was actually an exception).
       {¶90} Following this theory, when Ernie died in 1994, Louise, as the survivor,
became the sole owner of 100% of the minerals underlying the property. Therefore, when
the surface owners sold the property in 1994, the word-for-word repetition of the mineral
reservation in the 1990 deed was merely a recital of the prior reservation so that: the
minerals were not the subject of the 1994 surface deed; the title of the minerals was not
affected by the recording of that deed; and that deed did not contain a savings event
under R.C. 5301.56(B)(3)(a). Accordingly, this assignment of error is overruled.
       {¶91} For the foregoing reasons, the trial court’s judgment is affirmed and
judgment is hereby entered in favor of Appellees.

Donofrio, J., concurs.

Waite, P.J., concurs.

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       For the reasons stated in the Opinion rendered herein, the assignments of
error are overruled and it is the final judgment and order of this Court that the
judgment of the Court of Common Pleas of Monroe County, Ohio, is affirmed. Costs
to be taxed against the Appellant.
       A certified copy of this opinion and judgment entry shall constitute the mandate
in this case pursuant to Rule 27 of the Rules of Appellate Procedure. It is ordered that
a certified copy be sent by the clerk to the trial court to carry this judgment into
execution.

                               NOTICE TO COUNSEL

       This document constitutes a final judgment entry.

Case No. 20 MO 0005