Barker v. SMITH AND BARKER OIL AND GAS CO.

294 S.E.2d 919, 170 W. Va. 502, 1982 W. Va. LEXIS 823
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1982
Docket14834
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 294 S.E.2d 919 (Barker v. SMITH AND BARKER OIL AND GAS CO.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barker v. SMITH AND BARKER OIL AND GAS CO., 294 S.E.2d 919, 170 W. Va. 502, 1982 W. Va. LEXIS 823 (W. Va. 1982).

Opinion

McGRAW, Justice:

Dutch M. Barker, executrix of the estate of Creed Barker, plaintiff below, appeals from the final order of the Circuit Court of Calhoun County in a civil action instituted by the decedent against Smith and Barker Oil and Gas Company, Inc., Walter E. Smith and Edward M. Smith. The plaintiff below alleged that he was a general partner with the appellees in an oil and gas development enterprise and that the appel-lees had breached their fiduciary duty to him by diverting business opportunities for their own gain. The circuit court found that no partnership existed between the parties and that if a partnership had existed a claim for relief thereon would have been barred by the statute of limitations. The court concluded that the appellees had committed no wrong nor violated any fiduciary trust, and entered judgment for the appellees. We reverse the judgment of the circuit court and remand the case for further proceedings.

In 1955 1 the appellant’s now deceased husband, Creed Barker, entered into an oil and gas development business with Edward M. Smith and, his son, Walter E. Smith. A *504 formal partnership agreement was never executed, but the parties conducted business in the name of “Smith and Barker Oil and Gas Company.” Although the appel-lees apparently denied at trial that they were partners with the decedent, they now admit that a partnership existed at this time. The business in which the parties were engaged was a promotional partnership. They would obtain oil and gas leases, sometimes in the names of the individuals, but most commonly in the name of Smith and Barker Oil and Gas Company, and would then promote the leases by selling or “stocking out” to subscribing investors working interests in proposed wells. The promoters would then drill and, once the wells started producing, make assignments of shares in each well to each subscriber. This arrangement gave rise to a number of “well partnerships” between the promotional partners and the individual investors, which are not in question in this case. The wells were promoted to the fullest extent possible, and any unsold interest was divided equally among the three promoters.

The three promoters jointly managed each completed well, supervising maintenance, production, marketing of the oil and gas, collection of income, payment of taxes, and disbursement of profits. Although their duties overlapped in some cases, each partner had primary responsibility for a different aspect of the business. Edward Smith obtained most of the leases, using knowledge gained from his employment with Cabot Corporation. Creed Barker conducted and supervised field operations, drilling and servicing wells and placing the product on the line. Walter Smith performed the office paperwork, and kept the books. The partnership business was usually conducted through daily, informal meetings among the three partners.

The sale of working interests to investors often did not fully cover completion costs, so each partner paid one-third of the balance of the costs. The income from their shares in the well partnerships was deposited in a “capital account,” which was used to pay the payroll and other business expenses of the partnership and to finance new investments. If it became necessary to obtain a loan to cover costs, a note was executed in the names of the three individual partners, which was signed by each partner or by Walter Smith, using a power of attorney provided him for that purpose. By 1957, the partners had obtained five leases, and promoted and drilled approximately 18 wells.

On January 23, 1958, on the advice of their accountant, the Smiths and Barker formed Smith and Barker Oil and Gas Company, Inc., a West Virginia corporation. Edward Smith, Walter Smith and Creed Barker were the sole stockholders in the corporation, each receiving 50 shares of stock for which he paid nothing. Partnership assets, in the form of tools and equipment were transferred to the corporation. The leases and well holdings owned by the Smiths and Barker, as partners, were not transferred to the corporation. At the only formal stockholders’ meeting, held in 1958, 2 Edward Smith was named president, Creed Barker vice-president, and Walter Smith secretary and treasurer. For the tax year 1957, Smith and Barker Oil and Gas Company filed a partnership income tax return; thereafter, the business filed corporate tax returns.

From 1958 to 1960, the parties obtained eight leases in the corporate name. These leases were promoted in the same manner as the partnership leases had been, and the unsold working interests in the wells promoted under these leases continued to be divided equally among Edward Smith, Walter Smith and Creed Barker. During the same period and until 1961, the Smiths and Barker continued to obtain leases together in their individual names and in the name of the partnership. The corporation did not obtain any leases after 1960, but wells con *505 tinued to be promoted and drilled under several of the existing corporate leases up to as late as 1971. Unsold interests in these wells were divided among the Smiths and Barker in the same manner.

The business of the corporation was conducted in an informal manner. Decisions as to the stocking out and drilling of wells on corporate leases were made by informal meetings of the Smiths and Barker. All records of the corporation, the promotional partnership and the well partnerships were kept in the same office in a building owned by Walter E. Smith, for which the corporation paid no rent. Equipment owned by the corporation was used to service and drill wells promoted by the promotional partnership and equipment owned by the Smiths and Barker as individuals was used for corporate purposes without payment of rent. The secretary employed to keep records on all of the well partnerships used the corporate offices and was paid by the corporation.

At no time did the corporation own any working interests in the wells produced under any of the leases. It was intended to operate as a funnel through which income was received, expenses were paid and profits were divided. According to the testimony of the parties, the corporation was never intended to be a profit-making venture and the income it derived from servicing wells just barely exceeded operating expenses from the beginning. The Smiths and Barker did not receive a salary for their promotional efforts or a dividend on their corporate stock. Instead they deposited the profits they received from their interests in producing wells into a corporate account which was supplemented by revenues from the stocking-out of working interests and from loans obtained by the individuals to offset the deficit between the drilling costs and promotional revenue.

Most of the money in the corporate account was plowed back into promotion and production for use to pay debts, but a portion of it was used to pay monthly fees to the individuals as compensation for their shares in the well partnership profits. This practice apparently originated prior to 1958, when each partner placed his income from the well partnerships in an operating fund or capital account. At that time Creed Barker and Walter Smith received $250 per month. After the incorporation, the parties continued the practice with each individual receiving a payment of $500 per month, less taxes, from the corporate account.

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Bluebook (online)
294 S.E.2d 919, 170 W. Va. 502, 1982 W. Va. LEXIS 823, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barker-v-smith-and-barker-oil-and-gas-co-wva-1982.