Barrett v. Buchanan

1923 OK 134, 218 P. 682, 95 Okla. 262, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 153
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 13, 1923
Docket10741
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 1923 OK 134 (Barrett v. Buchanan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barrett v. Buchanan, 1923 OK 134, 218 P. 682, 95 Okla. 262, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 153 (Okla. 1923).

Opinion

COCHRAN, J.

This action was instituted by the plaintiff in error, who will hereinafter be referred to as plaintiff, against S. A. Oakley, hereinafter referred to as defendant, and the Prairie Oil & Gas Company, seeking to have the interests of the parties established in an oil and gas lease, and an accounting for money expended in the; development of the oil and gas lease.

The Prairie Oil & Gas Company filed a demurrer, which was by the court sustained. The defendant, Oakley, answered, alleging that the plaintiff was the owner of an undivided one-half interest in the lease, and that the record title to the other one-half interest was in W. B. Buchanan up to December 19, 1910, when, by decree in the district court of Rogers county, the said Oakley was decreed to be the owner of such undivided one-half interest. Defendant further admitted that there had been development on said premises resulting in producing wells; but alleged that the expenditures therefor had been made before the defendant acquired his interest in said lease and were made by the plaintiff and Buchanan without the knowledge or consent of the said Oakley, and that he was not liable for said expenditures. The ease was tried to the court without a jury, and testimony developed that in June, .1914, Oakley and Buchanan decided to purchase an oil and gas lease; Oakley contributed $100, it being agreed that, each should Own an undivided one-half interest in the property; the lease was procured in the name of Buchanan, and no conveyance was ever made of any interest in this lease to Oakley; thereafter, on January 12, 1915, the plaintiff entered into an agreement with Buchanan and Oakley by which the plaintiff paid to Oakley the $100 which he had invested in the lease, and re- *263 eeived from Buchanan an assignment of an undivided one-haif interest in the lease. Buchanan and the plaintiff thereupon proceeded to develop the lease for oil and gas and procured several producing wells, but in so doing became considerably involved on account :of the expense incident! .'thereto. Buchanan having failed to pay any part of this expense, the plaintiff paid the entire amount out of his own funds, and was operating the lease and applying the proceeds from the sale of the oil on this indebtedness. After oil was discovered on the property Oakley filed a suit against Buchanan for a one^-half interest in the lease, and procured service on Buchanan by publication. No appearance having been made by Buchanan, on December 19, 1916, judgment was entered decreeing that Oakley had a one-half interest in the oil and gas lease. Demand was made by the plaintiff on Oakley for the payment of one-half of the cost of development of the property, and defendant refused to pay the same. The trial court found that plaintiff was not entitled to any relief, and dismissed his petition.

When plaintiff purchased an undivided one-half interest in the oil and gas lease, he became a tenant in .common with Buchanan, and when thereafter Buchanan and the plaintiff agreed to develop the property, each paying his part thereof, and did develop the same in common, the relationship created by this agreement is usually referred to as a mining partnership. This term has been applied to distinguish this relationship from the ordinary partnership arrangement, and refers principally to the obligations and liabilities incurred by tenants in common who develop their property for minerals or oil, and gas. In 15 Am. Eng. Cyc. of Law, 609, a mining partnership is defined as follows:

Where the tenants in common of a mine unite and co-operate in working it, they aonstitute a mining partnership.”

In Childers v. Neely (W. Va.) 49 L. R. A. 468, the court said:

“Mere coworking makes them partners, without special contract. Barringer & A. Mines & Mining. Courts of equity take jurisdiction of them as if general partnerships. * * * Of course, owners of mines, oil leases, or farms can by agreement make an ordinary partnership therein; but where tenants in common of mines or oil leases or lands actually engage in working the same, and share, according to the interest of each, the profit and loss, the parnership relation subsists between them although there is no express agreement between them to become partners or to share the profits and losses.”

In the case of Childers v. Neely, supra, the court distinguishes between a general partnership and a mining partnership, and uses the following language:

“One leading distinction between the mining partnership and the general one is that the general one has, as a material element of Its membership, the delectus personae (choice of person), while the other has not. Those forming an ordinary partnership select the persons to form it, always from fitness, worthiness, of personal confidence; but we know such is not always or often the case in oil ventures. * * * A mining partnership is a nontrading partnership, and its members are limited to expenditures necessary and usual in the particular business.”

Thornton on the Law of Oil and Gas, sec. 855, says:

“If two or more owners of a mine unite in working it, without any partnership agreement, the act of working it together creates a mining partnership: and the same is true of two or more holding interest in a lease of mining property. ‘Whatever may be the rights and liabilities’ of tenants in common of a mine not being worked,’ said the Supreme Court of California, ‘it is clear that when the several owners unite and co-operate in working the mine, then a new relation exists between them, and. to a certain extent, they are governed by the rules relating to partnership. They form what is termed a mining partnership, which is governed by many of the rules relating to ordinary partnerships, but .which '(has also some rules peculiar to itself, one of which is that one person may convey his interest in a mine and business without dissolving the partnership.”

The defendant contends that this relationship cannot be considered a partnership, because section 4432. Revised Daws 1910, provides:

“A partnership can be formed only by consent of all parties thereto, and no new partner can be admitted into a partnership without the consent of every existing member • thereof.”

As stated above, this arrangement cannot be called a partnership within the general law applying to partnerships, but is simply a term which has been applied to the relationship existing between joint owners of mining or oil property who have undertaken to develop the same in common, and sharing in the loss or profits. Thornton on the Daw of Oil & Gas. sec. 364, states the liability of such partnership as follows:

“A partner, whether he be a member of a mining partnership or an ordinary partnership, who advances more than his share of money to operate or develop the mine, *264 or the gas or oil lands, has a lien on his partner’s share to the extent of his over-advancement, on final accounting.”

The following cases support the doctrine announced above: Ervin v. Masterman, 16 Ohio Cr. Ct. Rep. 62; Childers v. Neely (W. Va.) 34 S. E. 828; Duryea v. Burt, 28 Cal. 569.

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Bluebook (online)
1923 OK 134, 218 P. 682, 95 Okla. 262, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 153, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barrett-v-buchanan-okla-1923.