Dellit v. Schleder ( 2022 )


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  •                                                                                        10/11/2022
    DA 21-0631
    Case Number: DA 21-0631
    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA
    
    2022 MT 196
    ROBERT DELLIT, FRANCES DELLIT, RAYMOND F.
    MESSER, MATRIN G. MESSER, and CHARLES J. MESSER,
    Plaintiffs and Appellants,
    v.
    LEONARD SCHLEDER, CULVER PROPERTIES LLP,
    CHARLES D. BUTTS, KIRBY MINERALS, AN
    OKLAHOMA GENERAL PARTNERSHIP, C/O MINERAL
    ACQUISITION PARTNERS, INC., GENERAL
    PARTNER, TUCKER GARNER O&G LLC, MARY ANN
    MOSS, CHERRON MUNSON, GAYLE ROSKI, MARY ANNE
    GARNER FRISONE REVOCABLE TRUST U/A DATED
    SEPTEMBER 17, 1993, JAMES E. MUNSON AND CHERRON
    G. MUNSON, TRUSTEES OF THE JAMES E. & CHERRON G.
    MUNSON REVOCABLE TRUST U.A. DATED AUGUST 24,
    1993, GAYLE GARNER ROSKI, TRUSTEE OF THE GAYLE
    GARNER ROSKI REVOCABLE TRUST U/A DATED
    NOVEMBER 16, 1993, TRIO PETROLEUM CORP., THE
    HOME-STAKE OIL & GAS COMPANY, THE HOME-STAKE
    ROYALTY CORPORATION, and all other persons, unknown,
    claiming or who might claim any right, title, estate, or interest in,
    or lien or encumbrance upon, the real property described in the
    Complaint adverse to plaintiffs’ ownership, or any cloud upon
    Plaintiffs’ title, whether the claim or potential claim is present or
    contingent, inchoate or accrued,
    Defendants and Appellees.
    APPEAL FROM:          District Court of the Sixteenth Judicial District,
    In and For the County of Rosebud, Cause No. DV 20-01
    Honorable Nickolas C. Murnion, Presiding Judge
    COUNSEL OF RECORD:
    For Appellants:
    Patrick G.N. Beddow, Morgan E. Tuss, Patten, Peterman, Bekkedahl &
    Green, PLLC, Billings, Montana
    For Appellee Culver Properties, LLP:
    Emily Jones, Jones Law Firm, PLLC, Billings, Montana
    For Appellee Leonard Schleder:
    Brian D. Lee, David J. Lee, Lee Law Office PC, Shelby, Montana
    For Appellees Tucker Garner O&G LLC, Mary Ann Moss, Cherron Munson,
    Gayle Roski, Mary Anne Garner Frisone Revocable Trust, James E. & Cherron
    G. Munson Revocable Trust, and Gayle Garner Roski:
    Loren J. O’Toole II, O’Toole Law Firm, Plentywood, Montana
    Submitted on Briefs: June 29, 2022
    Decided: October 11, 2022
    Filed:
    __________________________________________
    Clerk
    2
    Justice Laurie McKinnon delivered the Opinion of the Court.
    ¶1     Appellants Robert Dellit, Frances Dellit, Raymond F. Messer, Martin G. Messer,
    and Charles J. Messer appeal from the November 12, 2021 Order of the Sixteenth Judicial
    District Court, Rosebud County, granting Leonard Schleder (Leonard) summary judgment
    and declaring Leonard the owner of the contested mineral rights. We affirm.
    ¶2     We restate the issues on appeal as follows:
    1. Whether the District Court correctly interpreted the deed language to reserve to
    Leonard all his mineral interests in the property?
    2. Whether the District Court properly considered the chain of title in its
    interpretation of the deed language?
    3. Whether the District Court correctly determined that estoppel by deed did not
    apply?
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    ¶3     Prior to March 10, 1950, Leonard was the record owner of an interest in the surface
    and mineral interests in the following described property located in Rosebud County,
    Montana (Property):
    Township 9 North, Range 33 East, MPM:
    Section 4: Lots 1, 2, 3, 4, S½N½, (N½), S½
    Section 8: S½N½, S½
    Section 9: All
    ¶4     Leonard held surface and mineral interests in the Property consisting of an
    undivided 1/2 interest in the minerals and surface in the N½ (also described as Lots 1-4,
    S½N½) of Section 4 (Tract 1); an undivided 2/3rds interest in the surface and mineral estate
    3
    in the S½ of Section 4 (Tract 2); an undivided 2/3rds interest in the surface and mineral
    estate in the S½N½ and S½ of Section 8 and all of Section 9 (Tract 3).
    ¶5    Leonard’s interests in the Property derive from his parents, Raymond N. Schleder
    (Raymond) and Elizabeth Schleder (Elizabeth), who operated a ranch covering the
    Property. Raymond was the sole owner of the Property’s surface and mineral estate except
    for the N½ of Section 4, which he owned in equal shares and as tenants in common with
    Elizabeth.
    ¶6    As a result of probate proceedings following his death, Leonard’s father’s interests
    in the Property were devised to Leonard, Leonard’s sister Irene Messer, and their mother
    Elizabeth in equal shares pursuant to the Decree Settling Final Account of Administrator
    and Final Distribution. This resulted in ownership of the Property’s mineral estate as
    follows:
    [Tract 1]                           [Tracts 2 and 3]
    Elizabeth Schleder = 66.666666%       Elizabeth Schleder = 33.333334%
    Irene Messer = 16.666667%              Irene Messer = 33.333333%
    Leonard = 16.666667%                   Leonard = 33.333333%
    ¶7    Leonard’s mother subsequently conveyed an undivided 1/3rd interest in the
    Property to Leonard pursuant to a warranty deed. As a result, ownership of the Property’s
    mineral estate was held as follows:
    [Tract 1]                          [Tracts 2 and 3]
    Elizabeth Schleder = 33.333333%            Elizabeth Schleder = 0%
    Irene Messer = 16.666667%             Irene Messer = 33.333333%
    Leonard = 50.000000%                  Leonard = 66.666667%
    4
    There were two chains of title: one for the mineral estate and one for the surface estate.
    Leonard owned the same percentage interest in the surface estate by virtue of these
    conveyances as he did to the mineral estate.
    ¶8     By warranty deed executed and recorded on March 10, 1950, in Rosebud County
    (the “Warranty Deed”), Leonard conveyed and warranted to Irene Messer and her husband
    Phillip Messer (the “Grantees”) as joint tenants with right of survivorship, all interest in
    the Property, subject to the following exception and reservation:
    Excepting and reserving unto the party of the first part, himself, his heirs, and
    assigns, an undivided two thirds of all oil, gas and minerals in, upon or under
    said lands together with the right of ingress and egress, to and from said lands
    for the purpose of drilling, exploring and in every way operating for such
    minerals and removing the same, excepting, however from this reservation,
    the N½NW and N½NE of Section 8, Township 9 North, Range 33 East MPM
    Rosebud County, Montana. [(Emphasis added.)]
    The Warranty Deed further provided that “(t)his conveyance is also subject to all easements
    and reservations in the chain of title.”
    ¶9     The covenant of warranty in the Warranty Deed provided:
    And the said party of the first part and his heirs, does hereby covenant that
    he will forever warrant and defend all right, title and interest in and to the
    said premises, and the quiet and peaceable possession thereof, unto the said
    parties of the second part, as joint tenants with right of survivorship (and not
    as tenants in common) and to the heirs and assigns of the survivor of said
    named Joint Tenant, against all acts and deeds of the said party of the first
    part, and all and every person and persons whomsoever lawfully claiming or
    to claim the same.
    ¶10    Through mesne conveyances, Robert Dellit, Frances Dellit, Raymond F. Messer,
    Martin G. Messer, and Charles J. Messer (Appellants) are successors in interest to the
    Grantees. Leonard filed a motion for summary judgment for a decree that he reserved all
    5
    his mineral interests in the Property under the Warranty Deed. Appellants filed a cross
    motion for summary judgment, contending that the Warranty Deed transferred to the
    Grantees an undivided 1/3rd mineral interest in the entire Property.
    ¶11    The District Court granted summary judgment to Leonard, determining that the
    unambiguous language of the Warranty Deed reserved to Leonard a 2/3rds interest in the
    surface and mineral estates in Tracts 2 and 3 and a 1/2 interest in the surface and mineral
    estates in Tract 1. When the Warranty Deed was executed, Leonard’s sister, Irene Messer,
    owned a 1/3rd interest in the surface and mineral estates in Tracts 2 and 3 and a 1/6th
    interest in the surface and mineral estates in Tract 1. The District Court held that Leonard
    could not convey more of the surface and mineral interests than he owned at the time, and
    he retained his mineral interests through the reservation clause. Further, the District Court
    determined that estoppel by deed did not preclude consideration of the circumstances
    surrounding the Warranty Deed’s execution, and that because Irene Messer owned the
    other 1/3rd of the surface and minerals in the Property, the Warranty Deed’s reservation of
    2/3rds of the minerals did not mislead her into believing she was receiving an additional
    1/3rd of the minerals. Appellants appeal the District Court’s summary judgment order.
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    ¶12    We review a district court’s grant of summary judgment de novo, applying the
    criteria outlined in M. R. Civ. P. 56. Broadwater Dev., LLC v. Nelson, 
    2009 MT 317
    , ¶ 15,
    
    352 Mont. 401
    , 
    219 P.3d 492
     (citation omitted). We review a district court’s conclusions
    6
    of law for correctness. Libby Placer Mining Co. v. Noranda Minerals Corp., 
    2008 MT 367
    , ¶ 26, 
    346 Mont. 436
    , 
    197 P.3d 924
    .
    DISCUSSION
    ¶13    1. Whether the District Court correctly interpreted the deed language to reserve to
    Leonard all his mineral interests in the property?
    ¶14    The parties agree that the Warranty Deed is unambiguous but disagree on the
    percentage interest of the reserved mineral rights. Appellants contend that the Warranty
    Deed, which reserved 2/3rds of the mineral interests in the Property to Leonard, impliedly
    granted to Irene Messer and Phillip Messer, the Grantees, the outstanding 1/3rd of the
    mineral interests. Appellants contend that a warranty deed’s grant takes precedence over
    a reservation, and that because the Warranty Deed plainly reserved 2/3rds of the mineral
    interests, the Deed cannot be read to convey any less than the implicit 1/3rd still subject to
    the grant. Appellants further contend that if Leonard had intended to reserve all his mineral
    interests, the Warranty Deed’s reservation clause could have simply reserved all the
    mineral interests in the Property.
    ¶15    Leonard contends that the Warranty Deed plainly withheld from the grant 2/3rds of
    the entire mineral estate underlying the Property. Because Leonard owned 2/3rds of the
    mineral interests in Tracts 2 and 3, he argues he reserved all his mineral rights and did not
    convey any portion to Appellants. Although Leonard only owned 1/2 of the minerals in
    Tract 1, he argues that because his reservation of 2/3rds of all the mineral rights is sufficient
    to cover this amount, he reserved his entire 1/2 share under the Warranty Deed. Leonard
    further asserts that because the Warranty Deed’s reservation clause must be interpreted in
    7
    favor of the grantor pursuant to § 70-1-516, MCA, the reservation of 2/3rds of the mineral
    estate takes precedence over any grant.
    ¶16    Deeds are governed by the rules of contract interpretation. Contracts are interpreted
    according to their plain meaning, and “must be interpreted in such a way as to give effect
    to the mutual intention of the parties as it existed at the time of contracting . . . .” Murray
    v. BEJ Minerals, LLC, 
    2020 MT 131
    , ¶ 20, 
    400 Mont. 135
    , 
    464 P.3d 80
     (citations omitted).
    The “intention[s] of the parties to a deed [are] to be ascertained, if possible, from its
    language, not as it is presented in particular sentences or paragraphs, but according to its
    effect when viewed as an entirety.” Wyrick v. Hoefle, 
    136 Mont. 172
    , 174, 
    346 P.2d 563
    ,
    565 (1959) (quoting Musselshell Valley Farming & Livestock Co. v. Cooley, 
    86 Mont. 276
    ,
    294, 
    283 P. 213
    , 218 (1929)). A contract’s language “govern[s] its interpretation if the
    language is clear and explicit and does not involve an absurdity.” Section 28-3-401, MCA.
    ¶17    “The extent of the interest conveyed, reserved, or excepted by a grant, reservation,
    or exception of a fractional interest in minerals or mineral rights depends on the particular
    terms of the instrument.” Libby Placer Mining Co., ¶ 43 (quoting 58 C.J.S. Mines and
    Minerals § 178). Unless an instrument’s language “expressly provide[s] or necessarily
    implie[s]” otherwise, “a conveyance of real property transfers to the grantee all title and
    interest then held by the grantor.” Ash v. Merlette, 
    2017 MT 305
    , ¶ 14, 
    389 Mont. 486
    ,
    
    407 P.3d 304
     (quoting § 70-1-519, MCA).
    ¶18    The parties agree that the Warranty Deed is unambiguous. It grants an interest in
    the Property, and then “except[s] and reserve[s] . . . an undivided two thirds of all oil, gas
    8
    and minerals in, upon or under said lands.” A deed reservation “is some right, interest or
    estate retained by the grantor in the granted premises. It creates a right and privilege for
    the benefit of the grantor in the land described as granted and withholds it from the
    operation of the grant.” Missoula v. Mix, 
    123 Mont. 365
    , 369, 
    214 P.2d 212
    , 214 (1950)
    (citation omitted). When a grantee receives the surface lands with the minerals reserved
    or excepted from the grant, the grantee “gets title to all the surface, and the grantor has a
    fee simple in the minerals retained.” Libby Placer Mining Co., ¶ 39 (quoting 53A Am. Jur.
    2d Mines and Minerals § 181). Further, “[w]hatever is excluded from the grant by
    exception or reservation remains in the grantor as of his former right or title and never
    passes to the grantee.” Mix, 
    123 Mont. at 372
    , 
    214 P.2d at 216
    . Finally, “[a] grant is to be
    interpreted in favor of the grantee, except that a reservation . . . is to be interpreted in favor
    of the grantor.” Section 70-1-516, MCA.
    ¶19    Appellants contend that the Warranty Deed did not specify Leonard only owned a
    2/3rds interest in the surface estate of the Property and therefore his reservation of a 2/3rds
    interest in the mineral estate had the legal effect of warranting the remaining 1/3rd interest
    in the minerals to Appellants, thus leaving Leonard with a 1/3rd interest in the mineral
    estate of Tracts 2 and 3 and a 1/6th interest in the minerals in Tract 1. However, this
    interpretation is contrary to the foregoing general principles of deed interpretation and
    disregards the plain language of the Warranty Deed reserving 2/3rds of all the minerals to
    Leonard. Additionally, it favors the Grantees by placing an implied grant above an explicit
    reservation. This interpretation devalues the reservation of “an undivided two-thirds of
    9
    all” mineral rights by holding the explicit fractional interest retains only as much meaning
    as remains after the implicit 1/3rd grant is satisfied. As this Court has previously stated,
    “[t]his we may not do.” Wyrick, 
    136 Mont. at 173, 175
    , 
    346 P.2d at 564-65
     (holding that
    a deed of land followed by the language “including one-half of all oil and gas rights owned
    by the parties” constituted a reservation of one-half of the minerals to the grantor, and that
    “[t]o rule otherwise we would be obliged to hold that the clause commencing with the word
    ‘including’ had no meaning whatsoever and that it must be disregarded. This we may not
    do.”). See also Cedar Lane Ranch, Inc. v. Lundberg, 
    1999 MT 299
    , ¶ 24, 
    297 Mont. 145
    ,
    
    991 P.2d 440
     (“This Court will ‘neither put words into a deed which are not there, nor put
    a construction on words directly contrary to their obvious meaning.’” (citation omitted)).
    ¶20    Conversely, Leonard’s interpretation gives full meaning to the Warranty Deed’s
    language. The Warranty Deed reserved to Leonard 2/3rds of “all” mineral interests under
    the Property. Because his share of the mineral interests at the Warranty Deed’s execution
    was 2/3rds, he reserved his entire mineral estate and severed it from the grant. To the
    extent that he reserved a greater share of the mineral interests than he owned—he reserved
    2/3rds but only owned 1/2 of Tract 1—Leonard argues the reservation only has the effect
    of reserving his existing 1/2 interest encompassed within the reservation.               This
    interpretation does not disregard the Warranty Deed’s express language, nor does it elevate
    a mere implication above an express clause.
    ¶21    Further, Leonard’s interpretation of the Warranty Deed is consistent with the
    statutory rule of construction that a reservation in a grant should be interpreted in favor of
    10
    the grantor.   Section 70-1-516, MCA.         We relied in part on this statutory rule of
    construction in Wicklund v. Sundheim, 
    2016 MT 62
    , ¶ 38, 
    383 Mont. 1
    , 
    367 P.3d 403
    , to
    interpret an oil and gas royalty reservation. We applied § 70-1-516, MCA, to assist in
    construing extrinsic evidence brought in to resolve an ambiguity in a deed’s language, and
    ultimately interpreted the reservation in favor of the original grantors. Wicklund, ¶¶ 27-29,
    38. In our analysis of § 70-1-516, MCA, we explained the history and long-standing usage
    of the statute, noting that “[t]his section has been part of the Montana Code since 1895.”
    Wicklund, ¶ 28 (citation omitted). This Court has consistently recognized “that the rule of
    construction for reservations in a grant is governed by this statute, whether the grantor is a
    public entity or a private individual.” Wicklund, ¶ 28. See Mix, 
    123 Mont. at 372
    , 
    214 P.2d at 215
     (“By statutory rule the language of a reservation in a grant is to be interpreted in
    favor of the grantor, which is a different rule from that which existed at common law and
    under many other state statutes.”); Ferriter v. Bartmess, 
    281 Mont. 100
    , 103, 
    931 P.2d 709
    ,
    711 (1997) (“While a grant of property is to be interpreted in favor of the grantee, any
    reservation is to be interpreted in favor of the grantor.”).
    ¶22    We agree with the District Court that based on the unambiguous, express language
    in the Warranty Deed reserving and withholding from the grant 2/3rds of all mineral
    interests—the same fractional interest owned by Leonard in Tracts 2 and 3—and
    considering § 70-1-516, MCA, Leonard reserved and retained his entire mineral estate
    under the Warranty Deed.
    11
    ¶23    2. Whether the District Court properly considered the chain of title in its
    interpretation of the deed language?
    ¶24    Appellants contend that the unambiguous language of the Warranty Deed conveyed
    to the Grantees 1/3rd of the mineral interests in the Property. Because the Warranty Deed
    is unambiguous, they argue that extrinsic evidence of the parties’ intent may not be
    considered to contradict or diminish that grant. Accordingly, Appellants argue the District
    Court improperly relied on subjective evidence contained in the chain of title to illuminate
    the circumstances of Irene Messer’s ownership and to conclude that Irene Messer knew
    what Leonard owned because she received her interests through the same instruments,
    namely their father’s estate and deeds from their mother. Appellants assert that evidence
    of Irene Messer’s expectations—what she knew or should have known—constitutes a
    subjective inference rather than objective evidence, and moreover it was improper to then
    impute these assumptions to Phillip Messer, her husband and co-grantee under the
    Warranty Deed, because he had no interest in the Property prior to the Warranty Deed’s
    execution.
    ¶25    Leonard contends that the District Court did not rely on the chain of title to the
    Property, but rather it reached its conclusion by interpreting the plain language of the
    Warranty Deed. After reaching its conclusion, the District Court then considered the chain
    of title and the parties’ relationships for context to reinforce its conclusion. Further,
    Leonard argues that the chain of title is an objective public record illustrating the context
    surrounding the extent of the Warranty Deed’s grant and reservation. He argues this
    information, including the conveyance from Leonard’s father’s estate to Leonard, Irene
    12
    Messer, and their mother Elizabeth, under which all three received equal interests in the
    Property, provides objective context demonstrating the parties’ ownership interests when
    the Warranty Deed was executed. Additionally, Leonard argues he could not have intended
    to convey 1/3rd of the mineral interests in the Property when Irene Messer herself owned
    the outstanding 1/3rd interest.
    ¶26    As discussed above, under the Warranty Deed’s express language, Leonard reserved
    his entire mineral estate in the Property. The District Court arrived at this same conclusion
    before addressing other extrinsic evidence which the court noted supported its analysis.
    Generally, “an unambiguous deed must be interpreted according to its language as written,
    without resort to extrinsic evidence of the grantor’s intent.” Ferriter, 
    281 Mont. at 103
    ,
    
    931 P.2d at 711
    . However, the objective circumstances of an unambiguous instrument may
    be considered to provide context and clarify the nature of particular obligations. Simpson
    v. Simpson, 
    2013 MT 22
    , ¶ 22, 
    368 Mont. 315
    , 
    294 P.3d 1212
    . A court does not have “to
    conduct its analysis in a vacuum . . . . Evidence of the surrounding circumstances, including
    the situation of the property and the context of the parties’ agreement, may be shown so
    that the judge is placed in the position of those whose language the judge is to interpret.”
    Broadwater Dev., LLC, ¶ 22 (citing § 1-4-102, MCA).
    ¶27    Here, the relevant objective context surrounding the Warranty Deed’s execution
    includes the public records in the Property’s chain of title. See § 70-21-302(1), MCA
    (“Every conveyance of real property acknowledged or proved and certified and recorded
    as prescribed by law, from the time it is filed with the county clerk for record, is
    13
    constructive notice of the contents thereof to subsequent purchasers and mortgagees.”).
    When the Warranty Deed was executed, Irene Messer owned 1/3rd and Leonard owned
    2/3rds of the undivided surface and mineral interests in Tracts 2 and 3. The Warranty Deed
    conveyed to the Grantees all of Leonard’s surface interest. Not only could Leonard not
    convey more of the surface estate than he owned, which was 2/3rds, but the Grantees could
    not assume the Warranty Deed conveyed more than 2/3rds of the surface when Irene
    Messer herself owned the outstanding 1/3rd interest. The Warranty Deed then reserved to
    Leonard 2/3rds of the Property’s entire mineral estate. Leonard’s reservation of 2/3rds of
    the mineral interests matched the 2/3rds of the surface rights he conveyed to the Grantees.
    As such, Leonard’s reservation of 2/3rds of the mineral interests severed that portion from
    the surface in Tracts 2 and 3, withholding it from the conveyance.
    ¶28    Next, as to Tract 1, when the Warranty Deed was executed, Irene Messer owned
    1/6th and Leonard owned 1/2 of the surface and mineral estates. As with Tracts 2 and 3,
    Leonard conveyed to the Grantees all his surface rights—his full 1/2 share—and reserved
    2/3rds of all the mineral interests of the Property. However, Leonard could not convey a
    greater share of the mineral interests than he owned in the surface rights. Because his 1/2
    ownership in the mineral interests was encompassed in the 2/3rds interest he reserved,
    Leonard effectively reserved and retained his entire 1/2 of the mineral estate in Tract 1.
    ¶29    We agree with the District Court that this objective context supports Leonard’s
    interpretation of the unambiguous Warranty Deed. The District Court properly considered
    14
    these circumstances to support its determination that Leonard reserved and retained his
    entire mineral estate in the Property.
    ¶30    3. Whether the District Court correctly determined that estoppel by deed did not
    apply?
    ¶31    Appellants contend that the doctrine of estoppel by deed prevents Leonard from
    denying the Warranty Deed’s plain language granting the Grantees 1/3rd of the mineral
    interests in the Property. Appellants argue the District Court erred by not applying this
    doctrine, and improperly premised its decision on extrinsic evidence of the context and
    circumstances surrounding the Warranty Deed’s execution. They assert that under estoppel
    by deed, the plain language of a deed dictates the result. Because it is improper to consider
    the equities between the parties, the Grantees’ pre-existing mineral interests and knowledge
    are irrelevant when applying the doctrine. Finally, Appellants ask this Court to extend the
    doctrine of estoppel by deed by adopting the Texas Supreme Court’s rule in Duhig v.
    Peavy-Moore Lumber Co., 
    144 S.W.2d 878
    , 880 (Tex. 1940), which favors the grant when
    a grant and a reservation conflict.
    ¶32    Leonard contends the District Court properly declined to apply estoppel by deed and
    correctly considered the context and circumstances because estoppel by deed is an
    equitable doctrine requiring an examination of the equities between the parties. Leonard
    further contends that estoppel in pais is the correct doctrine to apply to the Warranty Deed,
    which includes an element of detrimental reliance. Leonard argues that because the
    Grantees owned the outstanding interest, estoppel in pais fails, and he is not estopped from
    asserting title to the mineral interests.
    15
    ¶33    The doctrine of estoppel by deed prohibits “one party to a deed from asserting as
    against the other party any right or title in derogation of the deed, or from denying” the
    terms of the deed. Norman v. State, 
    182 Mont. 439
    , 443, 
    597 P.2d 715
    , 718 (1979) (citation
    omitted). Estoppel by deed stops “the competent parties to a valid sealed contract, and
    their privies” from “deny[ing] its force and effect by any evidence of inferior solemnity”
    and “it applies as against the grantor because of recitals in a deed . . . .” Hart v. Anaconda
    Copper Mining Co., 
    69 Mont. 354
    , 358, 
    222 P. 419
    , 421 (1924) (citation omitted). Estoppel
    by deed enforces the plain language of a deed, preventing the other party from denying the
    meaning and effect of that language.
    ¶34    Appellants contend that estoppel by deed precludes consideration of the
    circumstances of the Warranty Deed’s execution because the Deed’s express language
    controls the outcome. However, Appellants’ argument assumes that the plain language of
    the Warranty Deed supports their interpretation; it does not. Instead, the Warranty Deed’s
    express language reserved to Leonard 2/3rds of the Property’s entire mineral estate; thus,
    Appellants’ estoppel by deed argument fails. Nevertheless, and as Appellants themselves
    described it, estoppel by deed is founded on equitable principles preventing parties from
    “tak[ing] advantage of [their] own wrong.” Mitchell v. Pestal, 
    123 Mont. 142
    , 150, 
    208 P.2d 807
    , 811 (1949). The doctrine “‘concludes the truth in order to prevent fraud and
    falsehood, and imposes silence on a party only when in conscience and honesty he should
    not be allowed to speak.’” Midland Realty Co. v. Halverson, 
    101 Mont. 49
    , 55, 
    52 P.2d 159
    , 161 (1935) (quoting Van Rensselaer v. Kearney, 
    52 U.S. 297
    , 326 (1851)). Both the
    16
    Warranty Deed’s plain language and the equities support Leonard’s position. Leonard and
    Irene Messer originally received their interests through the same instruments from their
    father’s estate and from deeds by their mother. The Grantees had knowledge of Leonard’s
    existing interest because Irene Messer was the owner of the outstanding interest not
    encompassed by the Warranty Deed’s reservation.
    ¶35       Appellants ask this Court to adopt the rule from the Texas Supreme Court’s decision
    in Duhig as a logical extension of estoppel by deed and to apply it to the Warranty Deed.
    The Duhig rule states that when full effect cannot be given to both the reserved interest and
    the granted interest, the court will fulfill the granted interest first. Duhig, 144 S.W.2d
    at 880.     In other words, if the grantor over-conveys through a warranty deed, the
    over-conveyance will be taken from the grantor’s reserved interest. In Duhig, a grantor
    acquired a parcel of land, except for a reservation of 1/2 of the mineral interests by the
    previous owner. Duhig, 144 S.W.2d at 878. The grantor subsequently conveyed the
    property to another party but reserved a 1/2 interest in the minerals for himself. The Texas
    Supreme Court determined that the grantee reasonably believed that the deed granted all
    the surface estate and all but 1/2 of the minerals. The court applied the rule preferring the
    grant over the reservation—based on the doctrine of estoppel by deed—to prevent the
    grantor from keeping the 1/2 of the minerals he attempted to reserve. Duhig, 144 S.W.2d
    at 880.
    ¶36       We have not yet addressed whether the Duhig rule applies in Montana, and we need
    not do so here. The circumstances surrounding the Warranty Deed are not analogous to
    17
    those in Duhig. In Duhig, the grantee was not a party to the deed in which the grantor first
    received their surface and mineral interests. As such, the grantee was unaware that the
    grantor did not own the entire mineral estate and could not both convey 1/2 of the minerals
    and reserve that same amount. Here, Irene and Leonard both received their interests
    through the same instruments at the same time.
    ¶37    The North Dakota Supreme Court rejected the Duhig rule in similar circumstances
    where the grantees had knowledge of the grantors’ mineral interests.           Gilbertson v.
    Charlson, 
    301 N.W.2d 144
    , 145, 148 (N.D. 1981). In Gilbertson, three children became
    cotenants after inheriting all their father’s interest in a tract of land. Each sibling owned
    31.67% of the minerals with the state owning the remaining 5%. Gilbertson, 301 N.W.2d
    at 145. Two of the siblings conveyed their shares to the third, Pauline, under a single
    warranty deed, reserving and excepting 50% of the mineral interests. Pauline claimed the
    deed thus conveyed the other 50% of the mineral interests. She further contended that her
    siblings—the grantors—were estopped from claiming any part of the minerals ostensibly
    conveyed and asked the court to apply the Duhig rule to grant her the full 50% of the
    mineral estate. Gilbertson, 301 N.W.2d at 145-46.
    ¶38    The court declined to apply the Duhig rule to the deed because the grantors and
    grantees were co-owners. Gilbertson, 301 N.W.2d at 148. Unlike Duhig, where the
    outstanding interest was in a stranger uninvolved in the deed execution, in Gilbertson the
    outstanding interest was in the grantee herself. Instead, the court turned to the doctrine of
    estoppel in pais to determine if the grantors should be precluded from asserting their rights.
    18
    Estoppel in pais is an equitable doctrine which prevents a party from asserting a right or
    title if the other party detrimentally relied on its intentional misrepresentations regarding
    the state of the title and had no way to independently discover the true state of the title. See
    Gilbertson, 301 N.W.2d at 147. The court found estoppel in pais did not preclude the
    grantors from asserting title to the minerals because the grantees had actual knowledge
    about the grantors’ mineral interests. Pauline knew the grantors together owned only
    63.33% of the minerals because she owned the outstanding interest. Accordingly, the
    grantees “were clearly made aware” that the grantors could not reserve 50% of the minerals
    and convey the other 50%. Gilbertson, 301 N.W.2d at 148. The court held that in “these
    circumstances, there can be no implied warranty that the grantors are warranting what they
    have reserved”; therefore, the grantors retained the full 50% of the minerals they reserved
    under the deed. Gilbertson, 301 N.W.2d at 148.
    ¶39    As in Gilbertson, the parties here were co-owners of the surface land and mineral
    interests. The outstanding interest not explicitly encompassed by the Warranty Deed’s
    2/3rds reservation was held not by a stranger, but rather by the Grantees themselves. Like
    the North Dakota Supreme Court, this Court has adopted the doctrine of estoppel in pais.
    In Montana, under estoppel in pais, “the person estopped is considered as having by his
    admission, declaration, or conduct, misled another to his prejudice, so that it would work
    a fraud to allow the true state of facts to be proved.” Scott v. Jardine Gold Mining &
    Milling Co., 
    79 Mont. 485
    , 495, 
    257 P. 406
    , 410 (1927). A person is not estopped if they
    “did not intend to mislead and the other is not actually misled.” Scott, 
    79 Mont. at 496
    , 257
    19
    P. at 410. Like the grantees in Gilbertson, Appellants contend that by reserving 2/3rds of
    the minerals, the Warranty Deed also conveyed 1/3rd of the mineral interests. However,
    as in Gilbertson, the Grantees owned 1/3rd of the outstanding interest in Tracts 2 and 3,
    and 1/6th of the outstanding interest in Tract 1. The Grantees were clearly aware that
    Leonard could not warrant title to 1/3rd of all the minerals and reserve 2/3rds of all the
    minerals when the Grantees themselves owned the outstanding 1/3rd of the minerals not
    encompassed by the reservation.
    ¶40    We agree with the District Court that estoppel by deed does not preclude Leonard
    from asserting title to the minerals under the Warranty Deed. Both the Warranty Deed’s
    express language and the equities support Leonard’s interpretation of the mineral
    reservation. Neither estoppel by deed nor estoppel in pais prevent Leonard from asserting
    title to the minerals because the Grantees, as co-owners of the surface and mineral interests
    in the Property, were not misled by the Warranty Deed’s reservation clause.
    CONCLUSION
    ¶41    The District Court correctly determined that the Warranty Deed reserved to Leonard
    his entire mineral interest consisting of 2/3rds of all the minerals in Tracts 2 and 3 and 1/2
    of all the minerals in Tract 1.
    ¶42    Affirmed.
    /S/ LAURIE McKINNON
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    We Concur:
    /S/ BETH BAKER
    /S/ INGRID GUSTAFSON
    /S/ DIRK M. SANDEFUR
    /S/ JIM RICE
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