Baker & Taylor Drilling Co. v. R. W. Stafford, Trustee

369 F.2d 551
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 13, 1967
Docket20071
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 369 F.2d 551 (Baker & Taylor Drilling Co. v. R. W. Stafford, Trustee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baker & Taylor Drilling Co. v. R. W. Stafford, Trustee, 369 F.2d 551 (9th Cir. 1967).

Opinion

TAVARES, District Judge:

Appellee Stafford is the Trustee in reorganization of Tri-State Petroleum, Inc.; Appellant Baker and Taylor Drilling Company has filed a mechanics lien against a Texas gas well in which appel-lee claims an undivided interest on behalf of Tri-State. J. D. Amend also owns an undivided interest in the gas well in question, which is referred to as the Wilbanks Well, or the Section 2 well.

Baker & Taylor Drilling Company drilled the Wilbanks well and its lien is for approximately $27,000.00 which it claims is due for part of the drilling costs. While the Wilbanks well was being drilled, Baker & Taylor received three $20,000.00 checks from Tri-State, but it applied about $30,000.00 of that $60,000.00 to a pre-existing debt that Tri-State owed Baker & Taylor, as the balance due for drilling costs of a “dry hole” (referred to as the Nusbaum well or Section 54 well). The trustee claims that Baker & Taylor should have applied the full $60,000.00 to the cost of drilling the Wilbanks well.

Baker & Taylor has preserved its objection to the jurisdiction of the Court over the subject matter of the dispute and over Baker & Taylor as a party.

During 1962 Tri-State entered into a series of informal agreements with J. D. Amend regarding the drilling of wells on certain Texas properties controlled by Amend. Generally, each agreement was that Amend would transfer to Tri-State an undivided three-fourths interest in the petroleum lease acquired or to be acquired by him, if Tri-State would pay the drilling cost of the well, plus three-fourths of the cost of completing the well if it was a producer. In each case the drilling costs amounted to about $60,000.00.

In May of 1962 Baker & Taylor contracted with Amend to drill a well, known as the Section 56 well, for a price of $58,000.00. The drilling costs of that well were paid by Tri-State, and since the well was a producer, Tri-State also paid three-fourths of the completion costs, whereupon Amend assigned a three-fourths interest in the lease and the well to Tri-State (and to Tri-State’s nominees).

In August, 1962, Baker & Taylor contracted with Tri-State to drill the Nus-baum well, or Section 54 well, for a price of $60,000.00. Tri-State mailed to Amend its check for $30,000.00 payable to Baker & Taylor, and Amend delivered it to Baker & Taylor. That check was returned unpaid by the bank on which it was drawn, but thereafter it did clear when it was redeposited. Tri-State mailed two more checks to Amend, each in the sum of $5,000.00, made payable to Amend, and he endorsed them and delivered them to Baker & Taylor. Some extra work was done on the Nusbaum Well and Baker & Taylor’s final bill was about $70,000.00. Since the Nus-baum Well was a dry hole, Tri-State paid no completion costs, and Amend did not assign any interest to Tri-State. Nothing more was paid to Baker & Taylor by Tri-State until drilling was under way for the Wilbanks, or Section 2 well. After the drilling of the Nusbaum dry hole, Tri-State and Amend made a further informal agreement for the drilling of the Wilbanks or Section 2 well. Again Tri-State agreed to pay the drilling costs and three-fourths of the completion costs (if any) in return for an undivided three-fourths interest in the well and its lease.

*553 Amend signed the written drilling contract with Baker & Taylor, dated December 1, 1962, for the drilling of the Wil-banks Well, for $58,000.00 plus a specified amount per day for certain additional work that might be required. Payment was due within thirty days after completion of drilling.

On December 13, Baker & Taylor received by mail a $20,000.00 post-dated check from Tri-State, referred to as check #127. Although that check was dated December 17, by Tri-State, Baker & Taylor deposited it the day it was received, December 13, and it was paid by the bank on which it was drawn, on December 18. Check #127 had no written designation regarding the manner in which it should be applied by Baker & Taylor.

The next $20,000.00 Tri-State check received by Baker & Taylor, check #142, was delivered by Amend on or about December 19. That check bore the notation “On account of Section 2.” Amend handed it to Roy Bulls, Secretary of Baker & Taylor, and told him that TriState had agreed to pay the $60,000.00 drilling cost of the Wilbanks well, and that if Tri-State failed to do so, Amend wanted to know it; because he was not in a position to pay it himself, and if Tri-State did not pay the drilling cost, he would sell their interest elsewhere. Bulls agreed to tell Amend whether or not Baker & Taylor received the balance of the drilling costs from Tri-State. Drilling of the Wilbanks well, a successful producer, was completed on December 22, 1962.

On December 27 Baker & Taylor received by mail the third $20,000.00 TriState check, #156, dated December 20. Bulls then phoned Amend, telling him that Baker & Taylor had received the last of the checks, for a total of $60,-000.00. In fact, however, Baker & Taylor had not credited the full $60,000.00 to the Wilbanks well, but had credited all of check #127, and about one half of check #156, to Tri-State’s outstanding indebtedness for the Nusbaum dry hole.

But it was not until May or June of 1963, that Baker & Taylor personnel revealed to Amend and to Tri-State that about half of the $60,000.00 received by Baker & Taylor during December, 1962, had been credited to the account for the Nusbaum dry hole, rather than to the account for the Wilbanks well. On June 17, 1963, Tri-State filed its petition for corporate reorganization. On June 20, 1963, Baker & Taylor recorded a lien against the Wilbanks well for the amount it claimed was due for drilling costs.

Baker & Taylor claims that the court in reorganization lacked personal jurisdiction of Baker & Taylor and lacked jurisdiction of the subject of the dispute. It argues that the trustee should be required to proceed by way of a plenary action and that he had no right to proceed summarily, as he did. Appellant correctly cites the applicable law as follows:

“A bankruptcy court has the power to adjudicate summarily rights and claims to property which is in the actual or constructive possession of the court. Thompson v. Magnolia Petroleum Co., 309 U.S. 478, 481, 60 S.Ct. 628, 629, 84 L.Ed. 876. If the property is not in the court’s possession and a .third person asserts a bona fide claim adverse to the receiver or trustee in bankruptcy, he has the right to have the merits of his claim adjudicated ‘in suits of the ordinary character, with the rights and remedies incident thereto.’ Galbraith v. Vallely, 256 U.S. 46, 50, 41 S.Ct. 415, 416, 65 L.Ed. 823; Taubel-Scott-Kitzmiller Co. v. Fox, 264 U.S. 426, 44 S.Ct. 396, 68 L.Ed. 770.” Cline v. Kaplan, 323 U.S. 97, (1954) 98-99, 65 S.Ct. 155, 156, 89 L.Ed. 97.

The real thrust of appellant’s argument is that the lower court did not have possession of the property in question. We do not agree.

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Bluebook (online)
369 F.2d 551, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baker-taylor-drilling-co-v-r-w-stafford-trustee-ca9-1967.