Axelrod v. Pierron and Agee

297 S.W. 151, 222 Mo. App. 201, 1927 Mo. App. LEXIS 159
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 27, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 297 S.W. 151 (Axelrod v. Pierron and Agee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Axelrod v. Pierron and Agee, 297 S.W. 151, 222 Mo. App. 201, 1927 Mo. App. LEXIS 159 (Mo. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

ARNOLD, J.

— This is an action for specific performance of a written contract. There are two appeals from the judgment, numbered as above indicated, but as the cases were tried as one in the court below and submitted here under a joint abstract of the record and bill of exceptions, they will be considered and determined together.

The facts of record are that in the early part of the year 1919, defendant J. P. Pierron and one A. W. Ault were the owners of certain oil and gas leases in Dickinson county, Kansas, and elsewhere; that defendant Lee Agee was a member of the Agee-Block Realty Company and the Agee-Block Oil Company, with offices at 302 Commerce Building, Kansas City, Mo. Plaintiff lived in Bartlesville, Okla.., and was engaged .in buying and selling oil and gas well casings. It appears that one Martin Blumenfeld of many years’ acquaintance with defendant Agee, made his headquarters with the Agee-Block Realty Company in Kansas City.. Pierron and Ault desired to develop their oil and gas leases above referred to and entered into negotiations with plaintiff to procure from him casing to be used in the development of a well on one of their leases. A written contract was entered into which was prepared in the Agee-Block offices, in- which Pierron and Ault were named as first parties and plaintiff as second party. The contract was signed by Pierron and Ault in said offices, and in a day or two thereafter, below the names of Pierron and Ault and below the space left *203 for plaintiff’s signature, defendant Agee, in his office, and one H. E. Batterman, signed the following alleged guarantee, immediately below the signature of the contracting parties:

“We, the undersigned, hereby guarantee the carrying out of the above contract.

“Lee Agee

“H. E. Batterman.”

It appears that defendants sent Blumenfeld with the contracts signed in triplicate as above indicated, to Bartlesville, Okla., to procure the signature of plaintiff who there signed them; that after the signature of plaintiff had been procured to the contract in triplicate, Blumenfeld took all the copies away with him and later mailed to plaintiff a purported transcribed copy thereof. In a deposition, Blumenfeld identified the transcribed copy of the contract sent plaintiff and which was attached to the petition tiled herein, as a copy of the original contract. It appears that all of the said triplicate copies were lost, or could not be found, and none was introduced in evidence at the trial. The contract need not be set out here, but only so much thereof as may be necessary for the consideration of this appeal.

The contract provides, and the petition alleges, that defendants agreed, in the event of finding a producing well, that plaintiff should he paid for the casing at a price named in the contract, to-wit, $3.23 per linear foot for twelve inch casing, and $2.09 per foot for ten inch casing; the payment to be made, however, from the oil and gas produced from the well. After providing for the contingency of finding a producing well through the use of the casing, the contract provided,: “Tn case of a dry hole the parties of the first part .shall compensate the parties of the second part for loss or damage of any casing and other equipment, natural wear and tear excepted. Balance of casing and other equipment shall be delivered by parties of the first part F. O. B. cars at the nearest railroad station, free of expense to party of the second part, within sixty days after a dry hole is completed.” And the contract further provides:

“It is further agreed and made a part of this contract that the parties of the first'paid shall hold harmless and reimburse the second party for attorneys’ fees, costs or other expenses which they might be put to for reason of any litigation that might be commenced for any cause, whereby that property which is loaned to 'the first parties is involved, or any suit which they might be a party'to. ”

The agreement was that plaintiff, as a consideration for the furnishing of the casing in question, was to receive one-eighth interest in the first well drilled and equipped with said casing* to the top of the sand at the expense of Pierron and Ault; and an individual one-eighth interest in the oil and gas leases containing 160 acres upon which the well is to he located; the well to be drilled to a depth of 2500 feet unless oil or gas be found at a lesser deplh, and should the well be drilled *204 deeper than 2500 feet, the same shall be at the expense of Pierron and Ault.' The owners of the. leases were also to assign to plaintiff a lease on air additional .160 acres, other than the direct offsets to the lease on which the well is to he drilled; the offsets being reserved by the lease owners.

It appears that plaintiff, in the performance of his obligations tinder the contract, shipped to defendants 500 feet, twelve inch and 1500 feet ten inch casing, loaded upon cars at shipping points. It is not disputed that the casing so loaded and shipped ivas received by defendants and placed upon the acreage where the well was to he drilled. The contract for the drilling of the well was let to the Bankers Oil Company; but the well was never drilled and the casing was left on the site for a long period of time. Tn preparation for drilling the well the Bankers Oil Company employed E. C. Houser and C. J. Mowry, doing business under tbe firm name of Houser & Mowry, to do some work relating thereto, at a total expense of $431. In order to collect this amount, Houser & Mowry brought suit in which they attached all the equipment on the site, including the casing in question, secured judgment and the said easing with the other equipment was sold to satisfy said judgment. Tn the case at bar, on objection of plaintiff, the trial court refused to allow the record in the attachment suit to be introduced in evidence, and this ruling is the basis of a charge of error on this appeal. After the drilling of the well was abandoned, it is in evidence that plaintiff, on numerous occasions, came to Kansas City and demanded of Pierron the return of the casing or pay for the same, under the terms of the contract. No payment was ever made to plaintiff and none of the casing was ever returned to him.

The petition was filed in October, 1922, and pleads the contract forming the basis of this suit; alleges that, under the contract, plaintiff was entitled to recover $4750,.as the value of the casing, an attorney’s fee of- $500 and $100 expenses.

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Bluebook (online)
297 S.W. 151, 222 Mo. App. 201, 1927 Mo. App. LEXIS 159, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/axelrod-v-pierron-and-agee-moctapp-1927.