Bingham v. Stevenson

420 P.2d 839, 148 Mont. 209, 26 Oil & Gas Rep. 175, 1966 Mont. LEXIS 313
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 19, 1966
Docket11009
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 420 P.2d 839 (Bingham v. Stevenson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bingham v. Stevenson, 420 P.2d 839, 148 Mont. 209, 26 Oil & Gas Rep. 175, 1966 Mont. LEXIS 313 (Mo. 1966).

Opinion

MR. CHIEF JUSTICE JAMES T. HARRISON

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from the District Court of Liberty County. The action began on May 18, 1955, as one to quiet title to real property and to cancel an oil and gas lease. On January 25, 1965, a judgment was entered which held that the oil and gas lease in question was no longer of any force or effect and was terminated and that such oil and gas lease was cancelled and removed as a cloud on plaintiffs-respondents’ title to the land. This appeal followed.

*211 The plaintiffs-respondents are Nelson Gr. Bingham and Beva L. Bingham, husband and wife, and are the lessors of the oil and gas lease. The plaintiffs-respondents will be referred to by name.

The appellant in this Court is A A Oil Corporation, the assignee of the original lessee, E. 0. Stevenson. The appellant will be referred to as A A Oil.

L. C. Stevenson was the husband of E. 0. Stevenson and the president of A A Oil prior to his death on June 27, 1964. L. C. Stevenson conducted the negotiations which resulted in the lease of the Binghams’ property.

The fact that E. 0. Stevenson, the original lessee, assigned the lease to A A Oil is not relevant in the consideration of the main question to be decided in this appeal.

The lease in question will be referred to interchaneably as the Stevenson lease or the A A Oil lease.

This action was tried by the district court without a jury on August 5, 1964. The district court entered its Amended Findings of Fact and Conclusion of Law and Amended Judgment on January 25, 1965. The appellant lists eight specifications of error and resolves them into four questions, but in our view the main question in this appeal is this.

Whether the actions of the Binghams amounted to a repudiation of the oil and gas lease thereby extending the lease beyond the ten year term.

A summary of the relevant facts follows:

The oil and gas lease was executed and delivered on August 15, 1944. The lease covered 640 acres. Nelson Gr. and Beva L. Bingham and E. 0. Stevenson signed the lease agreement. Achsa M. Bingham, the mother of Nelson G-. Bingham and the owner of an undivided one-half interest in 320 acres of the lease, did not sign it. Later Achsa M. Bingham deeded her interest in the property to her son. There is no issue on this matter.

One hundred sixty dollars in cash was paid at the time of *212 the execution of the lease. This sum paid the rental of advance royalty payment for the first lease year. No rental was paid during the second lease year. Mr. Bingham, testified that no notice or request for the payment was made, although the lease agreement contained a provision requiring the lessor to give lessee notice of any breach and giving lessee thirty days from the notice to remedy any existing breach.

After the beginning of the third lease year, a cheek in the amount of $240.00, dated September 16, 1946, was delivered to Mr. Bingham. This check was for the rental or advance royalty payment for the second lease year in the amount of $160.00 plus $80.00 for the first half of the third lease year. This $240.00 check was returned by Mr. Bingham in a letter dated November 8, 1946, with the words, “I am returning your check as I do not care to lease again.”

Meanwhile on October 18, 1946, an oil and gas lease was executed and delivered by Nelson C-. and Beva L. Bingham and by Achsa M. Bingham to Montana-Dakota Utilities Co. (MDU). This lease provided for a fixed term of five years and a rental of $320.00 a year, which was twice the amount involved in the lease given to Mrs. Stevenson. Binghams accepted the rent from MDU for the five years of that lease. The MDU lease covered the same 640 acres.

The Stevenson lease provided for semi-annual rental payments. In the third lease year, the second half payment would have been due on February 16, 1947. On February 4, 1947, this payment in the sum of $80.00 was tendered to Mr. Bingham in a letter from E. J. McCabe, attorney for Mrs. Stevenson. The letter also contained the September 16, 1946, cheek for $240.00. Mr. Bingham took the letter and the checks to an attorney, Louis P. Donovan. On June 6, 1947, Mr. Donovan, acting for Mr. Bingham, wrote a letter to Mrs. Stevenson enclosing the $240.00 check, the $80.00 check, and an additional check from Mr. Bingham in the amount of $160.00 payable to E. O. Stevenson and dated May 29, 1947. In this letter Mr. *213 Donovan explained Mr. Bingham’s reasons for returning the money in this manner:

“I am, therefore, transmitting the same checks to you by authority of Mr. Nelson G-. Bingham, who returns same for the reason that the terms of the alleged lease were never agreed upon and the alleged lease was never signed by Achsa M: Bingham, and the alleged leasé was never executed, acknowledged or delivered by Nelson G. Bingham, or his wife, and a lease covering the same property has been granted to Montana-Dakota Utilities Co. and recorded.”

The next paragraph of the letter then made a .demand for release of the lease.

On September 8, 1947, Mrs. Stevenson wrote Mr. Donovan a letter explaining her position on the lease in these words: “I may state, however, that I claim the oil and gas lease executed as a valid oil and gas lease, notwithstanding one of the parties named did not sign same.” On May 14, 1948, Mrs. Stevenson wrote individual letters to Nelson G. Bingham, Beva L. Bingham, and Achsa M. Bingham expressing her desire to pay rental due, her belief that the lease was still in “full force and effect between us”, and asking where the rental payments should be sent. These letters were never answered, and no further rentals were tendered until July, 1954.

• A letter dated July 26, 1954, and received by Nelson Bingham on August 3, 1954, was written by L. C. Stevenson as president of A A Oil. The letter enclosed a check for $1,760.00 which amount was to pay rentals from August 15, 1944, to August 15, 1954, and from August 15, 1954 to August 15, 1955.

Nelson Bingham kept the check until December 1, 1954 when it was cashed. On December 20, 1954, he wrote a letter to A A Oil enclosing his check for $320.00 which he stated he was “refunding to you, as it is an overpayment on the specified oil and gas lease which expired August 15, 1954, of its own terms.”

*214 At the trial, Mr. Bingham testified that after November 8, 1946, up until December 1, 1954, he was not willing to accept rentals from the Stevensons or A A Oil. He further testified that he invited drilling.

Mr. Bingham further testified that from 1946 during the five years of the MDU lease he was willing to accept payments from MDU but not payments from A A Oil and that he was willing to accept drilling from A A Oil but not MDU.

We briefly summarize the Binghams’ actions.

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420 P.2d 839, 148 Mont. 209, 26 Oil & Gas Rep. 175, 1966 Mont. LEXIS 313, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bingham-v-stevenson-mont-1966.