Allen v. Greenland Oil Co.

254 P. 1047, 123 Kan. 292, 1927 Kan. LEXIS 125
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedApril 9, 1927
DocketNo. 27,282
StatusPublished

This text of 254 P. 1047 (Allen v. Greenland Oil Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allen v. Greenland Oil Co., 254 P. 1047, 123 Kan. 292, 1927 Kan. LEXIS 125 (kan 1927).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Dawson, J.:

This was an action to secure an adjudication of plaintiffs’ claim of right to an undivided one-fourth interest in an oil and gas lease on one hundred and sixty acres of land in Greenwood county and for other equitable relief.

The land in question, S. W. ti, 25-23-8, belongs to Rachel M. Craft and her brother and mother, all of whom are residents of Washington, Pa. In the summer of 1925, an oil boom was in progress in Greenwood county in the vicinity of Mrs. Craft’s land; an oil well which promised large production was nearing completion; and a lease of Mrs. Craft’s property was much desired by plaintiffs, defendants, and others.

Plaintiffs in this action are four Greenwood county men, Allen, Troxall, Ladd, and Raymond E. Smith. Defendants are the Greenland Oil Company, a corporation, Bitler its president, and Deane Gill, its treasurer, assistant secretary and office manager.

Early in June, 1925, plaintiffs authorized one of their number, Smith, to go to Pennsylvania and endeavor to obtain a lease of Mrs. Craft’s land or an interest in it. He called on Mrs. Craft at her home. She told him she expected Deane Gill and would not set a price on the lease until he arrived. A day or so later, Gill appeared and called on Mrs. Craft. He and Smith also called together. Mrs. Craft was then receiving rising bids from various parties, and decided to have her lawyer sell the lease at auction in his office. Smith proposed to Gill that he and Gill should buy the lease together. Gill [294]*294said he could not do that because the company he represented had two partners, Hays and Robinson, and that his authority to bid on the lease was limited; but he added that he had not come to Pennsylvania “to be made a monkey of,” and indicated an intention not to be bound by his instructions. About that time Gill was advised that his corporation's partners, Hays and Robinson, had decided the bidding would be too high to suit them and that they need not be considered. Gill wired Bitler to ask Ladd, one of these plaintiffs and Bitler’s uncle, to call Smith home, but nothing came of that request. About the time that telegram was received, these rival groups of litigants were in conference in Eureka arranging to buy the lease together and avoid competition; and they did agree to have their respective agents in Pennsylvania, Smith and Gill, make a joint bid up to $40,000 for the lease. Bitler for the oil company wired Gill to that effect, and Troxall similarly notified Smith. Troxall’s telegram to Smith read:

“Exhibit I.
“4 p. m. 6-9, 1925.
“Raymond Smith, George Washington Hotel, Washington, Pa.:
“Make lease to yourself and Gill up to forty thousand. Troxall.”

The substance of this $40,000 agreement and Bitler’s instructions to Gill concerning it were testified to by Troxall,one of the plaintiffs:

“Mr. Bitler said, ‘We will go ahead and instruct Gill to go to forty thousand dollars.’ He said, ‘We have a call in for him now. We will instruct him to go to forty thousand. You also instruct Smith to go in with Gill and buy the lease up to forty thousand.’
“Just a few minutes after that, they got a call through to Mr. Gill. Mi\ Bitler talked to Mr. Gill there in my presence and I heard his end of the conversation. He told Mr. Gill that we were in his office at that time, and that Robertson and Hayes were out of it, that it had got too high for them and they had dropped out, and for him and Raymond to get together and buy the lease together. . . .
“The Court: Q. Did you testify as to the notice to be sent to Gill? A. Yes, sir; Mr. Bitler talked to Mr. Gill, and instructed him to go in with Mr. Smith, and to buy the lease for forty thousand dollars. He said, ‘We have agreed down here among ourselves to go to that, to buy it for forty thousand dollars together.’
“Q. At whose request was this telegram, exhibit 1, sent? A. Well, Mr. Bitler had talked to Mr. Gill, and he requested that we send Mr. Smith the same instructions.”

These negotiations were without result, however, for the bidding in Pennsylvania had already gone beyond $40,000, which was the [295]*295sum the agents were authorized to bid on plaintiffs’ and defendants’ joint account; and indeed the record shows virtually beyond dispute that certain members of both groups of principals knew that fact before the $40,000 agreement was made. Very shortly afterwards Bitler instructed Gill to bid up to $50,000, and Troxall had already instructed Smith to go to $50,000 before the $40,000 agreement was made. On cross-examination Troxall admitted:

“I had learned that the lease was going to be that high in the morning when Mr. Smith called me up. He said, T believe it will be fifty thousand dollars.’ . . .
“Q. Now, then, Mr. Troxall, did you, at that interview you had in the bank, or at Bitler’s office, did you or Allen or Ladd tell Mr. Bitler that you had given Smith the privilege of going to $50,000, if he wanted to?” [No answer.]
“Q. Did you tell Mr. Bitler that you had given.Smith authority to go to any amount that he wanted to go to, to buy that lease? A. There wasn’t a word said in regard to that.
“We never informed Bitler of that, that I know of, I didn’t. In compliance with our agreement down there with Mr. Bitler we were to send a telegram to Smith and we wired Smith to make the lease to ourselves and Gill, up to $40,000. We did not say he could not go any higher for us. That was as high as he could go for them. . . .
“The last time I heard from the Greenland Oil Company they said that $40,000 was as high as they were going. We were willing to go higher. . . .
“Q. Did you understand that the Greenland Oil Company was in on their account, the same way? ... A. I don’t know anything about that.
“That was the end of that proposition and interview.
“Q. Now, then, Mr. Troxall, did you leave the table right then and there, after that interview, and after that telephone message to Mr. Gill by Mr. Bitler, did you leave the table and go to the telephone office and telephone your man Smith to bid $50,000 for that lease?” [No answer.]
“Q. Do you say that you did not telephone that — after that meeting— to Smith, to bid $50,000? A. I phoned him in the morning.
“Q. After that first interview, when Mr. Bitler telephoned to Gill the forty thousand dollar limit, didn’t you say, or didn’t you go to the telephone and telephone Smith to make it fifty thousand? A. I phoned him that in the morning. . . .
“Q. Now, then, Mr. Troxall, isn’t it a fact that Smith had telephoned you before you had this interview with Mr. Bitler and the Greenland Oil Company people, at their office, that Smith had telephoned you that it would take fifty thousand dollars to get this lease? And when I say you, I mean you and your associates, Mr. Allen and Mr. Ladd? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. So that you knew, when you were making’ this contract up here with Mr. Bitler and the Greenland Oil Company people, when Mr.

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254 P. 1047, 123 Kan. 292, 1927 Kan. LEXIS 125, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allen-v-greenland-oil-co-kan-1927.