Affirming.
The question for decision is whether the word "minerals" in a reservation in a deed includes natural gas and oil.
John McHenry, in 1871, executed a deed conveying to Charles Maynard 410 acres of land in Lawrence county for a consideration of $80. The deed contained the following reservation:
"The party of the first part hereby reserves to himself and assigns the exclusive right to all minerals coal and oil privileges in or to said lands belonging with the right to enter thereon for the exploitation development and working of the same with all needful right of passway, etc."
The minerals have never been conveyed, and title to them is now in the heirs of John McHenry, who are the appellees. The title to the surface is now in Wayne Maynard and others, who are the appellants.
E.E. Cunningham obtained an oil and gas lease from the owners of the mineral estate and also from the owners of the surface. A dispute arose between the owners of the surface and the owners of the mineral estate over the royalties, and Cunningham brought an action under the Declaratory Judgment Act, Civil Code of Practice, sec. 639a-1 et seq., for a declaration of the rights of the parties. The owners of both the surface and the mineral estates were made defendants, and the case developed into a contest between these two sets of claimants. The circuit court adjudged that the heirs of John McHenry were the owners of the oil and natural gas in and under the land, by reason of the reservation in the deed from McHenry to Charles Maynard, and were entitled to the oil and gas royalties provided for in *Page 644 the lease executed by them to E.E. Cunningham. Wayne Maynard and the other defendants who trace their title from the deed from John McHenry to Charles Maynard have appealed, and are insisting that the natural gas passed under the McHenry deed and was not reserved. They also claim that they own the oil under the land, although oil is specifically named in the reservation in the McHenry deed. Their argument, in substance, is that natural gas was not known as a mineral having commercial value at the time the deed was executed, and that consequently it could not have been the intention of the parties to include it when the word "minerals" was inserted in the deed. As to the oil, it is argued that the parties to the deed intended oil produced or manufactured from coal and not oil produced from oil-bearing sands. Two witnesses were introduced who testified that in 1871, when the deed was executed, natural gas was unknown as a marketable commodity in that community. Evidence to the contrary was introduced, but we think this is beside the point.
The deed is not so ambiguous as to authorize resort to extrinsic evidence as an aid to its construction. The language used clearly imports an intention to convey only the surface rights and to reserve all minerals. In other words, the deed separated the mineral estate from the surface. "The word 'minerals' in a deed embraces oil and gas unless the language of the deed discloses an intention to exclude them." Kentucky West Virginia Gas Co. v. Preece,
"Since oil and gas are minerals, and there is nothing in the language of the deed in question which shows that the parties contemplated something less general than all substances legally cognizable as minerals, we conclude that the title to the oil and gas necessarily passed by the conveyance."
In Bolen v. Casebolt,
"The mineral and timber and oil heretofore sold is excepted and not conveyed."
As a matter of fact, the minerals had not been sold, and, in a contest over the ownership of the natural gas, it was held that the use of the words "heretofore sold" was not intended as limiting the estate reserved, and that the exception included natural gas; the court saying:
"Nothing appearing to show a contrary intent of the parties, the word 'mineral' included the gas as well as the oil which was specifically mentioned."
It is only where the language of the grant or exception is ambiguous that extrinsic evidence is admissible, and, if there are no restrictive words, a conveyance or exception of minerals will include oil and gas. Hudson Collins v. McGuire,
The mere fact that a particular mineral has not been discovered in the vicinity of the land conveyed or is unknown at the time the deed is executed does not alter the rule. Kentucky Diamond Mining Developing Co. v. Kentucky Transvaal Diamond Co., supra; Franklin *Page 646
Fluorspar Co. v. Hosick, supra; Armstrong v. Lake Champlain Granite Co.,
"Where there is a grant or reservation of minerals without other words of limitation or restriction, all minerals would be granted or reserved, and, if the ordinary and accepted meaning is to be changed or restricted, the language used to do so must be reasonably clear to show that intent."
The circuit court correctly adjudged that the exception in the McHenry deed included oil and natural gas, and the judgment is affirmed.