O'Malley v. Adams , 2023 IL App (5th) 220206 ( 2023 )


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  •                                         
    2023 IL App (5th) 220206
    NOTICE
    Decision filed 09/13/23. The
    text of this decision may be                 NO. 5-22-0206
    changed or corrected prior to
    the filing of a Peti ion for
    IN THE
    Rehearing or the disposition of
    the same.
    APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS
    FIFTH DISTRICT
    ______________________________________________________________________________
    PATRICK J. O’MALLEY JR., as Trustee Under Trust        ) Appeal from the
    Agreement Dated January 1, 2006,                       ) Circuit Court of
    ) Crawford County.
    Plaintiff and Counterdefendant,                )
    v.                                                     ) No. 16-CH-9
    )
    MARCIA P. ADAMS, as Successor Trustee of the           )
    Almyra M. Prather Revocable Trust Agreement            )
    dated December 15, 1967, and Individually,             )
    and LAWRENCE P. LUBY, Executor                         )
    of the Estate of Betty P. Luby, Deceased,              )
    )
    Defendants, Counterplaintiffs, and Third-Party )
    Plaintiffs-Appellees                           )
    )
    ) Honorable
    (Chicago Title Insurance Company and Walter Adams,     ) Sonja L. Ligon,
    Third-Party Defendant-Appellants).                     ) Judge, presiding.
    ______________________________________________________________________________
    JUSTICE CATES delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.
    Justices Welch and McHaney concurred in the judgment and opinion.
    OPINION
    ¶1       The third-party plaintiffs, Marcia P. Adams, both individually and as successor trustee of
    the Almyra M. Prather Revocable Trust Agreement dated December 15, 1967, and Lawrence P.
    Luby, executor of the estate of Betty P. Luby, deceased, 1 (collectively, the Prather Trust) brought
    1
    Marcia Adams and Betty Luby were successor trustees and the only income beneficiaries of a trust
    created by their mother, Almyra M. Prather, and referred to as the Prather Trust. During the pendency of
    the litigation, Betty Luby passed away, and Lawrence Luby was named as the executor of her estate.
    1
    a third-party action against Chicago Title Insurance Company and Walter Adams 2 (collectively,
    Chicago Title), alleging that the third-party defendants conspired to slander title to the Prather
    Trust’s 50% interest in a mineral estate 3 and to convert the Prather Trust’s share of the proceeds
    from the sale of minerals extracted from the mineral estate. Chicago Title moved for summary
    judgment, arguing that the Prather Trust’s claims failed as a matter of law because the removal
    and sale of minerals by a tenant in common, without the consent of its cotenant, did not constitute
    a tort under Illinois law. The trial court denied the motion for summary judgment. Thereafter, the
    trial court certified three questions of law involving the interests and obligations of cotenants, and
    Chicago Title filed an application for leave to appeal under Illinois Supreme Court Rule 308(a)
    (eff. Oct. 1, 2019). This court initially denied Chicago Title’s application, but pursuant to a
    supervisory order from the Illinois Supreme Court (Adams v. Chicago Title Insurance Co., No.
    128586 (Ill. Sept. 28, 2022) (supervisory order)), we vacated that order and allowed the
    interlocutory appeal.
    ¶2      This case began in March 2016, when the plaintiff, Patrick J. O’Malley Jr., as trustee under
    a trust agreement dated January 1, 2006 (O’Malley Trust), filed an action for adverse possession.
    The O’Malley Trust and the Prather Trust each held a 50% interest in the mineral estate in farmland
    located in Crawford County. In the complaint, the O’Malley Trust alleged that it had acquired the
    Prather Trust’s 50% interest in the mineral estate by adverse possession. The Prather Trust filed
    an answer and affirmative defenses and successfully defended its interests, eventually obtaining a
    summary judgment in its favor on the O’Malley Trust’s claim for adverse possession.
    2
    Walter Adams was an associate regional counsel for Chicago Title Insurance Company at the time
    of these events.
    3
    The term “mineral estate” is a generic term used herein to describe the oil, gas, and other minerals
    available for extraction from the land.
    2
    ¶3        In the same case, the Prather Trust filed a counterclaim for an accounting against the
    O’Malley Trust and third-party claims against several defendants, including Chicago Title. The
    Prather Trust alleged that since 2008, its cotenant, the O’Malley Trust, had contracted with a third
    party to remove and sell the oil and natural gas from the mineral estate, without the knowledge or
    consent of the Prather Trust. The Prather Trust further alleged that the Chicago Title defendants
    conspired to slander title to the Prather Trust’s interests in the mineral estate and to convert its
    share of the natural gas proceeds from the mineral estate by issuing a title policy that falsely
    declared that the O’Malley Trust had merchantable title to 100% of the minerals in the mineral
    estate.
    ¶4        Chicago Title moved for summary judgment, arguing that the Prather Trust’s claims failed
    as a matter of law because the removal and sale of minerals by a tenant, without the permission of
    its cotenant, was not a tort under Illinois law. The trial court denied Chicago Title’s motion for
    summary judgment. In a detailed order, the trial court examined the applicable statutes and the
    case law and provided the basis for its decision. Subsequently, the trial court certified three
    questions for interlocutory review under Rule 308(a). All of the certified questions were derived
    from the issues discussed in the summary judgment order regarding the interests and obligations
    of cotenants to a mineral estate.
    ¶5        Rule 308(a) authorizes the appellate court, in its discretion, to permit an appeal of an
    interlocutory order when the trial court has made a written finding that “the order involves a
    question of law as to which there is substantial ground for difference of opinion and that an
    immediate appeal from the order may materially advance the ultimate termination of the
    litigation.” Ill. S. Ct. R. 308(a) (eff. Oct. 1, 2019). Generally, appellate review under Rule 308 is
    limited to the specific questions of law identified by the trial court. Rozsavolgyi v. City of Aurora,
    3
    
    2017 IL 121048
    , ¶ 21. A reviewing court will decline to answer a certified question where the
    answer is dependent upon the underlying facts of a case or where the question calls for an answer
    that is advisory or provisional. Rozsavolgyi, 
    2017 IL 121048
    , ¶ 21. Rule 308 was not intended to
    provide a mechanism for expedited review of an order that merely applies the law to the facts of a
    particular case, and it does not generally permit the reviewing court to analyze the propriety of the
    underlying order entered by the trial court. In re Estate of Luccio, 
    2012 IL App (1st) 121153
    , ¶ 17.
    A question certified under Rule 308 presents a question of law that is reviewed de novo. Moore v.
    Chicago Park District, 
    2012 IL 112788
    , ¶ 9.
    ¶6     In this case, the trial court certified the following three questions for permissive
    interlocutory review under Rule 308:
    “1. Whether, in light of Illinois Supreme Court cases such as Reward
    Oil Co. v. White, 
    333 Ill. App. 241
     (1948)[,] and Pure Oil Co. v. Byrnes, 
    388 Ill. 26
     (1944), Illinois law provides a tenant in common owning at least half of
    the mineral interest in land with an unfettered right to drill for oil and gas
    without cotenant permission?
    2. Whether 765 ILCS 520/2, which provides that the owners of at least
    half of a mineral interest ‘desiring to drill for and remove oil and gas may file
    a complaint … asking the court for permission to drill…’:
    a. imposes a mandatory requirement that a cotenant must always
    seek court permission prior to drilling for oil and gas; and,
    b. necessarily subjects a drilling party to tort claims if they do not
    follow the statutory procedure?
    3. Does the Supreme Court of Illinois’ holding in Pure Oil Co. v.
    4
    Byrnes, 
    388 Ill. 26
     (1944), which provides ‘[t]he stern rule of liability of a
    cotenant, who commits waste or damage to the common property, has been
    relaxed where the profit taken from the land is of a fugacious nature and liable
    to be exhausted by adjacent operators’:
    a. preclude a nondrilling cotenant from bringing a conversion
    claim against a drilling cotenant when the latter removes oil and gas
    from property without the former’s permission; and
    b. preclude a nondrilling cotenant from bringing a slander of title
    claim against their cotenant following the cotenant’s decision to grant
    a lease to a third party to drill for oil and gas on the property?”
    (Emphasis in original.)
    ¶7     All three certified questions concern the rights and obligations of tenants in common.
    Chicago Title asserts that a tenant in common who owns at least one-half of the mineral interest in
    land has “an unfettered right” to drill for, remove, and sell the minerals from the mineral estate,
    without the permission of the other cotenants, and that the nondrilling cotenants’ only remedy is
    an accounting. Chicago Title further asserts that the Oil and Gas Rights Act (765 ILCS 520/0.01
    et seq. (West 2020)) does not require an owner of at least one-half of the mineral interests in land,
    who does not have consent of its cotenants, to follow the procedures outlined in the Oil and Gas
    Rights Act as a precondition to drilling for oil and gas and that the failure to follow the statutory
    procedure does not constitute a tort. In response, the Prather Trust argues that, under Illinois law,
    one cotenant cannot remove and sell minerals from a mineral estate without either (a) the
    permission of the other cotenants or (b) a court order obtained after complying with the statutory
    procedures in the Oil and Gas Rights Act. It further argues that when a cotenant extracts and sells
    5
    minerals from a mineral estate, without first obtaining either the permission of the cotenants or a
    valid court order, the cotenant is liable for trespass to the nonconsenting tenants’ interests and for
    conversion of their respective shares of the proceeds. 4
    ¶8      In Illinois, it has been long held that each tenant in common has the same right as all other
    tenants in common to use and enjoy the property. Fyffe v. Fyffe, 
    292 Ill. App. 539
    , 548 (1937). A
    tenant in common may not prejudice the rights of his cotenants by a conveyance of any specific
    part or of any interest, right, or license in any specific part of the common property. Zeigler v.
    Brenneman, 
    237 Ill. 15
    , 23 (1908); Murray v. Haverty, 
    70 Ill. 318
    , 320 (1873). Thus, a tenant in
    common could not lawfully commit waste on or destroy the common property or do any act that
    would work a permanent injury to the inheritance, and therefore, he could not grant that right to a
    stranger. Murray, 
    70 Ill. at 320
    ; Fyffe, 292 Ill. App. at 549. 5 At the time the Murray case was
    decided, an Illinois statute 6 authorized a tenant to maintain an action for “trespass or trover” against
    a cotenant who took, destroyed, lessened in value, or otherwise injured the common property. See
    Murray, 
    70 Ill. at 320
    . The statutory provision was amended in 1935. See 
    1935 Ill. Laws 936
     (§ 1)
    (amending 
    1919 Ill. Laws 633
     (§ 4)). The current version of the statute is found in section 4 of the
    Joint Tenancy Act and provides:
    “If any person shall assume and exercise exclusive ownership over, or take away, destroy,
    lessen in value, or otherwise injure or abuse any property held in joint tenancy or tenancy
    4
    Pursuant to leave of this court, the Illinois Oil & Gas Association filed an amicus curiae brief in
    opposition to the brief of Chicago Title and incorporated the arguments made by the Prather Trust.
    5
    In Fyffe, 292 Ill. App. at 549, the court found that, although there was a conflict among some
    authorities about the right of a tenant in common to grant a third party the right to take oil and gas from a
    common property, “no such right rests in a tenant in common in this state.” The court did not consider other
    common-law actions, as the issue before the court was in reference to the accounting portion of the
    litigation.
    6
    The statute was initially enacted in 1821 and subsequently amended. It is a predecessor to what is
    now called the Joint Tenancy Act (765 ILCS 1005/0.01 (West 2020)). See generally Svenson v. Hanson,
    
    289 Ill. 242
    , 246 (1919).
    6
    in common, the party aggrieved shall have his civil action for the injury in the same manner
    as he would have if such joint tenancy or tenancy in common did not exist.” 765 ILCS
    1005/4 (West 2020) (formerly Ill. Rev. Stat. 1991, ch. 76, ¶ 4).
    The 1935 amendments also added a provision for the accounting of profits or benefits. 
    1935 Ill. Laws 936
     (§ 1). The current version of the provision is found in section 4a of the Joint Tenancy
    Act and provides:
    “When one or more joint tenants, tenants in common or co-partners in real estate, or any
    interest therein, shall take and use the profits or benefits thereof, in greater proportion than
    his or their interest, such person or persons, his or their executors and administrators, shall
    account therefor to his or their cotenants jointly or severally.” 765 ILCS 1005/4a (West
    2020) (formerly Ill. Rev. Stat. 1991, ch. 76, ¶ 5).
    ¶9     In 1939, the Illinois legislature passed the Oil and Gas Rights Act of 1939 (Act) (
    1939 Ill. Laws 805
     (§ 1)). The Act provided an orderly statutory process by which the owners of a majority
    interest in land could petition the circuit court for an order permitting them to drill for and produce
    oil or gas for the use and benefit of all cotenants where the interests of their cotenants was in
    imminent danger of being drained of its oil or gas by wells on an adjoining premises. Pure Oil Co.
    v. Byrnes, 
    388 Ill. 26
    , 29 (1944). In such cases, the owners of a majority interest were required to
    account to the cotenants for their respective proportions of the net value of the oil produced, “which
    is its market value, less the cost of extracting and marketing it.” See Pure Oil, 
    388 Ill. at 39
    .
    ¶ 10   Under the current version of the Act, the circuit court may authorize the majority holders
    of joint interests in land to drill and extract oil to protect the land “in the manner hereinafter
    provided.” 765 ILCS 520/1 (West 2020). Section 2 of the Act provides:
    7
    Ҥ 2. The owners of such interest desiring to drill for and remove oil and gas may
    file a complaint in the Circuit Court of the county in which such lands, or some part thereof,
    are located, asking the court for permission to drill for and remove oil and gas therefrom
    for the use and benefit of all the owners of the right to drill for and remove oil and gas from
    such lands, and setting forth the relevant facts and the interests of all persons owning the
    right to drill for and remove oil and gas under such lands, so far as the same are known to
    the plaintiffs.” 765 ILCS 520/2 (West 2020).
    ¶ 11    The Act further requires the plaintiff to name all other cotenants, including unknown
    owners, as defendants and to summon or notify all defendants in the same manner as known or
    unknown defendants may be summoned or notified in other civil cases. 765 ILCS 520/3, 4 (West
    2020). The circuit court is authorized to investigate and determine all questions regarding
    conflicting titles, remove clouds from titles, and confirm the title to the right to drill for and remove
    oil and gas from the lands. 765 ILCS 520/6 (West 2020). If the circuit court finds that the material
    averments in the complaint are true and that the plaintiffs own a one-half interest or more in the
    right to drill for and remove the oil and gas from the land as joint tenants, tenants in common, or
    coparceners, the circuit court shall enter an order authorizing the plaintiffs “to drill for and remove
    oil and gas from such lands so as to realize the full value thereof for the benefit of the parties
    entitled thereto.” 765 ILCS 520/7 (West 2020). The circuit court shall also order the plaintiffs to
    provide for payment to nonconsenting cotenants their respective shares of the oil or gas produced,
    after deductions for their proportionate share of the costs of drilling for, producing, and disposing
    of the oil or gas. 765 ILCS 520/7 (West 2020). Section 9 of the Act provides that the Civil Practice
    Law and the Illinois Supreme Court rules apply to suits filed under the Act. 765 ILCS 520/9 (West
    2020). Thus, the Act sets forth an orderly process through which a cotenant who does not have the
    8
    consent of the other cotenants may obtain the permission of the circuit court to remove minerals
    from the mineral estate, while also protecting due process rights and property interests of
    nonconsenting cotenants.
    ¶ 12   The above-referenced legal principles regarding the Act and the obligations of cotenants
    were discussed in Pure Oil, 
    388 Ill. at 39
    , and Reward Oil Co. v. White, 
    333 Ill. App. 241
    , 245
    (1948). Notably, in each of those cases, the majority owners of joint interests in the land, or their
    lessees, followed the statutory procedures in the 1939 version of the Act. In each case, the majority
    owners or their lessees filed a complaint, seeking a court decree authorizing drilling on the
    property, with summons and notice to the cotenants. Pure Oil, 
    388 Ill. at 29
    ; Reward Oil, 333 Ill.
    App. at 242.
    ¶ 13   In Pure Oil, our supreme court noted that, prior to the enactment of the oil and gas rights
    statute in 1939, one cotenant could not remove oil and gas from a common property without the
    permission of its cotenants and that any cotenant who commenced drilling and production without
    the consent of the nondrilling cotenants became liable to account for damage to the inheritance
    and was not entitled to deduct the expenses incurred in taking profit from the land. Pure Oil, 
    388 Ill. at 39
    . The supreme court further noted that this “stern rule of liability” to account for damages
    had been relaxed where the profit taken from the land was of a fugacious nature and where the oil
    and gas were being drained, or in imminent danger of being drained away, through wells on
    adjacent land. Pure Oil, 
    388 Ill. at 39
    . In those cases, the applicable rule allowed a deduction for
    the money spent in protecting, preserving, and marketing the oil and gas and required the cotenant
    who took the oil or gas to account to his cotenants for their respective proportions of the market
    value, less the costs of removal and marketing. Pure Oil, 
    388 Ill. at 39
    . The supreme court then
    found the same relaxed rule of accounting was provided in the oil and gas statute of 1939. Thus,
    9
    where the trial court, acting pursuant to the statute of 1939, entered a decree authorizing the owner
    of a majority of the joint interest to drill, produce, and market oil from common property to protect
    it from being drained by adjacent wells, the statutory accounting rule required that owner to
    account to his cotenants for their respective proportions of the market value of the oil produced,
    less the costs of extracting and marketing it. Pure Oil, 
    388 Ill. at 39
    . The same rules were applied
    in Reward Oil, 333 Ill. App. at 245-46.
    ¶ 14     Contrary to the contention of Chicago Title, the courts in Pure Oil and Reward Oil did not
    hold that a tenant in common owning at least one-half of the mineral interest in land had “an
    unfettered right” to drill for oil and gas without the permission of cotenants. Accordingly, the
    answer to the first certified question is no.
    ¶ 15     Under Illinois law, a tenant in common does not have a legal right to take oil and gas from
    a common property without the permission of the cotenants, and the nondrilling cotenants may file
    a civil action and seek damages to redress the injuries to their respective interests. See 765 ILCS
    1005/4 (West 2020); Pure Oil, 
    388 Ill. at 39
    . In a case where a cotenant with a one-half interest or
    more wants to drill for and remove oil from the mineral estate and where he does not have the
    consent of the cotenants, he may seek relief under the Act. 765 ILCS 520/1 (West 2020). In order
    to obtain a court order granting permission to drill and remove the oil or gas, the cotenant-plaintiff
    must follow the proper statutory procedures, including filing a complaint, providing summons
    and/or notice to his cotenants, and proving that the material averments in his complaint are true;
    he must also account to the nonconsenting cotenants as provided in the Act. 765 ILCS 520/7 (West
    2020).
    ¶ 16     Accordingly, the answers to the second and third certified questions are similar to the first.
    The owner of a one-half interest or more in a mineral estate does not have an unfettered right to
    10
    remove and market the minerals from the mineral estate. The owner of a one-half interest or more
    in a mineral estate may, with the permission of the cotenants, remove and market the minerals
    from the mineral estate. The owner must then account to the cotenants for their respective shares
    of the market value of the oil or gas produced, less the costs of extracting and marketing it. When
    the owner of a one-half interest or more in a mineral estate does not have the permission of the
    cotenants, he may seek an order from the circuit court to obtain permission to remove and market
    the oil and gas from the mineral estate in compliance with the Act. In that case, the court shall
    provide by order for the payment and distribution of the net proceeds from the disposition of the
    oil and gas, after deduction of the proportionate costs of extracting and marketing of the oil and
    gas. When the owner of a one-half interest or more in a mineral estate removes and markets the
    minerals from the mineral estate, without either the permission of his cotenants or an order of the
    circuit court obtained in compliance with the Act, the owner is subject to an action in tort for any
    injuries to the respective interests of the cotenants, and the owner may invoke appropriate defenses.
    ¶ 17   Having answered the certified questions, we remand this case to the circuit court for further
    proceedings.
    ¶ 18   Certified questions answered; cause remanded.
    11
    O’Malley v. Adams, 
    2023 IL App (5th) 220206
    Decision Under Review:     Appeal from the Circuit Court of Crawford County, No. 16-CH-
    9; the Hon. Sonja L. Ligon, Judge, presiding.
    Attorneys                  Michael T. Reagan, of Ottawa, and Gerard T. Carmody (pro hac
    for                        vice), Kevin M. Cushing, and Ryan M. Prsha, of Carmody
    Appellant:                 MacDonald P.C., of St. Louis, Missouri, for appellants.
    Attorneys                  A. Courtney Cox, of Sandberg Phoenix & von Gontard, P.C., of
    for                        Carbondale, and David M. Foreman, of Foreman & Kessler,
    Appellee:                  Ltd., of Salem, for appellees.
    Amicus Curiae:             J. Nelson Wood, of Illinois Oil & Gas Association, of
    Mt. Vernon, amicus curiae.
    12
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 5-22-0206

Citation Numbers: 2023 IL App (5th) 220206

Filed Date: 9/13/2023

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 9/13/2023