Barnsdall Oil Co. v. Willis

152 F.2d 824, 1946 U.S. App. LEXIS 3118
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 12, 1946
DocketNo. 11265
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 152 F.2d 824 (Barnsdall Oil Co. v. Willis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barnsdall Oil Co. v. Willis, 152 F.2d 824, 1946 U.S. App. LEXIS 3118 (5th Cir. 1946).

Opinion

WALLER, Circuit Judge.

Appellant, J. K. Wadley, in attempting to secure additional oil and gas leases in the Eylau area of Bowie County, Texas, secured the services of A. L. Willis, as his agent or broker from time to time during the year 1943, to buy certain specified oil leases, for which Mr. Willis was compensated by commission, generally, of fifty cents an acre. Willis purchased ten leases in the area for Wadley on the above basis, eight of which were acquired during the month of July, 1943 — one having been secured in January. During 1943 Willis was engaged in buying leases for others in Miller County, Arkansas, and his employment by Wadley was special, that is, it was only for the purpose of procuring leases from certain parties and within certain price lim-' its. He was not a general, or full-time employee, nor was he restricted by any express agreement from acting as a broker for whomsoever he chose. From time to time - until approximately September 28, 1943, he bought designated leases for Wad-ley, who was under contract to assign all leases obtained in the area to Barnsdall Oil Company and Standard Oil Company, the other Appellants.

In the center of the tract which Wadley was undertaking to block up there was a tract of 91 acres belonging to Louis Heil-bron. Mr. Wadley believed that a lease on this land was owned by the Texas Company and, therefore, did not commission Mr. Willis to acquire it until August 12, 1943. Some years before Willis had bought a lease on these lands for the Phillips Petroleum Company. He knew in June that Mr. Wadley believed this land was under lease to the Texas Company. On July 20, 1943, Mr. Willis, while in the office of the Phillips Petroleum Company, at Shreveport, made inquiry and learned that Phillips had recently allowed the Heilbron lease to lapse. Willis promptly returned to Texarkana and on the next day bought the lease from Heilbron for himself, but in the name of A. T. Brown, a brother-in-law, who lived in Dallas. On August 31, Willis wrote a letter in the name of A. T. Brown and mailed it at Longview, whereby he transmitted this lease to the Clerk át Texarkana for recordation.

On August 12, Mr. Valerius, a geologist in the employ of Barnsdall Oil Company, [826]*826one of the Appellants, who was looking after Mr. Wadley’s matters while the latter was in California, found that the Phillips lease on the Heilbron land was no longer in effect and on the same day engaged Mr. Willis to obtain a lease on this land. Notwithstanding the fact that Willis was then the owner of the lease, he failed to inform the Plaintiffs that he was such owner and agreed to undertake to get it for Wadley. For some time Willis pretended that he was unable to obtain definite information as to the owner of the lease, meanwhile holding his lease off the record until September 1. After recording his lease in the name of A. T. Brown, he claimed to be unable to locate A. T. Brown, and at one time advanced the information that Brown was a “jack-leg lawyer” who had once lived in Longview, Texas, but later had moved away. He once reported that there were four people interested in this lease. Later he advised that the lease was the property of A. T. Brown and O. R. Davis, and that they wanted $5,000, plus % of the % overriding royalty. This proposition not having been accepted promptly, the price, in a short while, was raised $2,000. In the end the Plaintiffs paid Willis $7,500 for the lease with the % of % over-riding royalty retained by him. O. R. Davis was another brother-in-law of Mr. Willis, but neither he nor Brown ever had any interest in the lease. In addition to paying Willis $7,500 for his lease, Plaintiffs, not having discovered the deception, also paid him $500 as a commission for buying the lease from himself.

The complaint alleged that Willis, while agent for Wadley, was told that he was undertaking to block up the leases in the Eylau area; that he was shown a map of the area on which the leases belonging to the Plaintiffs were delineated; that he knew that geophysical tests were being made and the results thereof; and that thus he became familiar with the “areas of mutual interest”; and that he knew that the Heilbron lease was in the center of the area which the Plaintiffs were seeking to block up and that they intended to drill in the area; that Willis, having gotten this confidential information by virtue of his employment, unfaithfully took advantage of the same and purchased the Heilbron lease in his own name, to his own profit and advantage, and to the great detriment of Plaintiffs ; that Willis collected a commission of $500 for buying the lease from himself; and that in law and in good conscience he should be stripped of all profit obtained by virtue of his breach of faith and confidence.

Willis asserted that he was informed that Mr. Wadley was only undertaking to checkerboard the area, that is, to get leases located in spots scattered about through the area, and that he was never informed that Wadley desired to get all the area into a block; that he was employed only for the acquisition of specific leases; that he obtained no confidential information from such employment but that any information that he had was public information, available to anyone interested; he denied all allegations of breach of faith and asserted that he had the right to acquire the lease in the absence of any information that the Plaintiffs desired to acquire it, or in the absence of any instruction to purchase it for the Plaintiffs. He admitted that he had acquired the lease and that he had concealed his ownership of it from the Plaintiffs, saying: “I didn’t want nobody to know I had it; I wanted to keep it to see if it would turn out and make me some money.”

The record in this case is distinctive in that it has findings of fact and conclusions of law consuming 203 of the 550-page record and 723 remarks by the Court in the other 281 pages of the record consumed in the trial.

The 203 pages of findings of fact and conclusions of law culminate in the fact that the Judge chose to believe the man who admitted that he lied to, and deceived, his quondam employer, and who had extracted a $500 commission for buying a lease from himself, and to disregard the testimony of witnesses Wadley and Valerius whose verity has no such damaging admissions against it. The adage “Falsus in uno, fal-sus in omnibus,” seems to have met with small favor with the lower Court.

From a decree denying any recovery, Plaintiffs appealed.

The Plaintiffs contend that Willis was • an agent of Wadley and under a duty not to use, in competition with his principal confidential information which the agent necessarily acquired during the course of the agency; that Willis, by virtue of his agency, was well informed that the Plaintiffs were having geophysical tests for oil made of the area and that Mr. Wadley had already acquired numerous leases in the area;, that Willis had seen Wadley’s map .of the area showing the ownership of land and the oil leases of the Plaintiffs and had ascertained that Heilbron’s land was in the [827]

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Bluebook (online)
152 F.2d 824, 1946 U.S. App. LEXIS 3118, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barnsdall-oil-co-v-willis-ca5-1946.