Court Opinion

ID: 7145593
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 15:34:05.238801+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:52:57.209292
License: Public Domain

Opinion of the Court by
William Rogers Clay, Commissioner
Affirming.
H. B. Hulett died in the year 1863, leaving a widow and twelve children. He was the owner of lands in West Virginia and also in Lawrence county, Kentucky. Shortly after his death, his lands were partitioned among Ms heirs and conveyed to them in severalty by commissioners’ deeds. Of Ms lands 'in Lawrence county, lot No. 5 *18was allotted to William Hulett, lot No. 6 to Mary J. Potter, and lot No. 7 to Mildred Blankenship. It also appears that Mary J. Potter and Mildred Blankenship were allotted lands in West Virginia, which in a short time they traded to William Hulett for lot No. 5, in Lawrence county, and about the same time, some kind of a trade was made by which Mary J. Potter and her husband acquired all of lot No. 5, and in consideration therefor agreed to convey to Mildred Blankenship, a portion of lot No. 6. ITowever, no deeds were then executed by the parties.
,0n April 5, 1865, Mary J. Potter and her husband, Robert Potter, sold and conveyed, by deed containing a covenant of warranty, to John B. Hatcher, John M. Rice and Jake Rice, “all the minerals, coal, oil, rock carbon or other oils, salt water or any and all other valuable oils or minerals except (coal) that has been or may be found in, upon or under the land of the parties of the first part, situated on the Big Sandy river, in the county of Lawrence, in the state of Kentucky, and particularly known and described as that part of the real estate of H. B. Hulett, deceased, which was set apart by the commissioners, S. K. Muncey and others to Mary J. Potter, wife of Robert Potter, and one of the heirs of the said H. B. Hulett, deceased, and containing one hundred and ninety acres, also that other portion of the said II. B. Hulett estate which the parties of the first part have acquired from William Hulett and other heirs of said H. B. Hulett, deceased, by purchase or exchange, making in the aggregate — acres.” At that time, the grantors, Mary J. Potter and Robert Potter, had no title of record to lot No. 5, but that lot was subsequently conveyed by William Hulett to the grantors, by deed dated August 24, 1876, and executed and acknowledged on that day and subsequently recorded in the Lawrence county clerk’s office. On September 7, 1876, Mary J. Potter and husband conveyed to Mildred Blankenship a portion of lor No. 6, and about the same time, Mary J. Potter and husband and Mildred Blankenship and husband conveyed to William Hulett certain lands in West Virginia.
In this action, appellees, Lyda Lackey and others, asserted title to the minerals in lots No. 5 and No. 6, under and by virtue of the deed of April 5, 1865, from Mary J. Potter and her husband to John B. Hatcher and *19others, and the subsequent deed executed by William Hulett to Mary J. Potter and her husband on August 24, 1876. On the other hand, appellants claim title by deeds claimed to have been executed by Mary J. Potter and her husband after they acquired title from William Hulett in 1876. On final hearing, the chancellor adjudged that appellees were the owners of the minerals in lots No. 5 and No. 6, and from that judgment this appeal is prosecuted. ' /
Appellants have abandoned their claim of title to the minerals by adverse possession, but insist that the court erred in adjudging that appellees were the owners of all the minerals in lot No. 5. The argument is as follows: When the deed to the minerals was made to the ancestors of appellees, Mary J. Potter and Mildred Blankenship, who had exchanged their West Virginia land for lot No. 5, were the joint owners of lot No. 5. Hence, when the mineral deed was made, the Potters were the owners of only an undivided one-half interest in the minerals, and therefore intended to convey, and did convey, only the interest which they then owned. That being true, their covenant of warranty included no other interest*, and the subsequent deed executed by William Hulett to the Potters inured to the benefit of the grantees in the mineral deed only to the extent of the interest therein conveyed. Hence, when the Potters, after acquiring the legal title to lot No. 5, conveyed that lot to appellants or their predecessors in title without reserving the minerals, the other one-half of the minerals passed to them. This contention, however, is not.borne out by the facts. The decided weight of the testimony is to the effect that the oral exchange between William Hulett on the one hand and Mrs. Potter and Mrs. Blankenship on the other, as well as the agreement by which lots 5, 6 and 7 were to be divided between the Potters and the Blankenships, was made before the execution of the mineral deed. Indeed, the language of the deed itself confirms this view of the question. The second tract is described as follows: “Also that other portion of the said H. B. Hulett estate, which the parties of the first part have acquired from William Hulett and others, heirs of said H. B. Hulett, deceased, by purchase or exchange, making in the aggregate — acres,” thus showing that the grantors intended to convey not only that portion of the estate of H. B. Hulett *20which they had acquired from William Hulett, but also from the other heirs of PI. B. Hulett, and therefore necessarily including Mrs. Blankenship, the only other heir of H. B. Hulett from whom they acquired any portion of the estate of H. B. Hulett. Since at the time of the execution of the mineral deed, the Potters had acquired by oral exchange all of lot No. 5, we conclude that it was their purpose to convey, and that they did convey, all the minerals in that lot with the exception of the coal, which was reserved, and since the deed contained a covenant of general warranty, the subsequent deed from William Hulett, vesting the Potters with the legal title to all of lot No. 5, inured to the benefit of the grantees in the mineral deed and perfected their title before the subsequent conveyances to appellants or their predecessors in title, who purchased from the Potters with constructive knowledge of the fact that the minerals underlying the land had theretofore been conveyed. It follows that the judgment was proper.
Judgment affirmed.