Bledsoe v. Magnolia Petroleum Co.

36 F. Supp. 531, 1941 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3909
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Illinois
DecidedJanuary 31, 1941
DocketNo. 279
StatusPublished

This text of 36 F. Supp. 531 (Bledsoe v. Magnolia Petroleum Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bledsoe v. Magnolia Petroleum Co., 36 F. Supp. 531, 1941 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3909 (illinoised 1941).

Opinion

WHAM, District Judge.

Plaintiffs, by the first count of their verified complaint, seek to have a certain oil and gas lease cancelled as null and void, or, if held valid to any extent, then held to have expired on August 25, 1939, and the defendant ordered to cancel and release same of record, return original lease to plaintiffs and pay plaintiffs’ costs and attorneys’ fees. By the second count they seek damages by reason of defendant’s refusal to release said oil and gas lease and allege deprivation thereby of opportunities to sell or lease the premises for large sums of money.

The case was tried before the court without a jury. Proof was offered in support of the first count of the complaint. None in support of the second count. The case is now before the court upon oral and written evidence taken and heard at the trial, a written stipulation of facts, oral arguments of counsel and briefs subsequently submitted.

In substance, it is alleged in the first count of the complaint that the plaintiffs, on August 25, 1936, were the equitable owners of one hundred acres of land described in the complaint under a contract for a deed from Frank L. Stephenson who held the legal title; that on said date plaintiffs were approached by one R. S. Finn, agent of the defendants, who solicited the execution of an oil and gas lease on said premises; that plaintiffs agreed to lease to the Standard Oil Company for a consideration of $20 for a period of three years from said date, with provision for a $10 annual delay rental, provided the said Stephenson would also execute the lease; that plaintiffs were very busy and plaintiff M. L. Bledsoe was forced to leave immediately after terms of lease .were agreed upon; that said Finn induced plaintiffs to sign a blank form of lease, representing to them that he would complete the lease according to the terms of the agreement, give them a copy, secure the signature of said Stephenson thereon and pay the consideration for the lease before the delivery of the lease would become completed; that plaintiffs did sign a blank form of lease and permitted said Finn to take it with him for the sole purpose of securing the signature of said Stephenson; that later Finn presented the lease to said Stephenson who refused to sign; that said Finn advised plaintiff Leota Bledsoe of such refusal and requested leave to retain the lease for a few days to make another attempt to secure the signature of said Stephenson; that Stephenson never signed the lease; that Finn never returned the lease to the plaintiffs nor paid any consideration therefpr nor furnished a copy; that plaintiffs never did acknowledge the deed or deliver same for purpose of conveying any title thereunder; that on November 29, 1939, plaintiffs acquired legal title to said premises by paying balance due on said contract to said Stephenson; that soon thereafter they learned that there was of record in Jefferson County, Illinois, an oil and gas lease purporting to be from themselves to one P. E. Haralson, acknowledged before R. S. Finn, assigned by Haralson on June 7, 1937, to the defendant Magnolia Petroleum Company and purporting to have been executed for a con[532]*532sideration of $2.50, to run for ten years; that on February 23, 1940, plaintiffs gave defendant notice of forfeiture and demand for release of said oil and gas lease of record and return of original lease to them but that defendant has failed to release said lease or return such instrument.

The more I study the evidence, the more I am impelled to the conclusion that plaintiffs’ case is the outgrowth of inexcusable, self-confessed carelessness, of afterthought and faulty memories. According to the testimony of the plaintiffs, because Mr. Bledsoe was in a hurry and Mrs. Bledsoe busy,, they signed, without reading, a blank form of oil and gas lease presented to them by Finn, a total stranger. Plaintiffs further testify that they entrusted the signed blank form of lease to the stranger to be filled out by him later, out of their presence, in accordance with a verbal understanding arrived at in a hurried conversation, as follows: Term of lease three years, consideration $20 and delay rental of $20 per year. They say they did not intend to make delivery of the lease to Finn, yet they kept no receipt or scrap of paper to show it not to be a complete delivery. They say that later they indorsed, without reading, a check and a certificate of deposit for delay rentals without knowing what they were for or from whom the money came. The plaintiffs’ testimony on these points constitute their confession of carelessness. Plow much of the confession is true and how much untrue is an issue of fact.

In conflict with plaintiffs’ testimony that the agreed delay rental was $20 per annum is an allegation in their verified complaint that the agreed delay rental was $10 per annum. Then, too, the evidence shows they accepted $10 in 1937 and $10 in 1938, which sums were paid to them in full of annual delay rental which fact they could have known by the exercise of ordinary diligence. The lease, as recorded, shows delay rental $10 per annum, which said Finn testified was the amount agreed upon and placed in the lease before plaintiffs signed it.

In their complaint plaintiffs allege that the agreed consideration for the lease was $20 and that they were paid no consideration. They testified at the trial that the agreed consideration was $20, that they were paid $2 and that Finn promised to bring the balance of $18 at a later time. It developed in the evidence that at the time the lease was turned over to Finn, plaintiff M. L. Bledsoe signed and gave Finn a receipt for $2.50 as consideration for the lease which is the amount of the consideration recited in the lease, as recorded. Bledsoe denies his signature on the receipt but the greater weight of the evidence shows that it is his signature. Finn testified that $2.50 was the consideration agreed upon and that he inserted that amount in the lease in the presence of plaintiffs before they signed it.

Plaintiffs say the lease was given Finn solely to enable him to attempt to obtain Mr. Stephenson’s signature and to become a delivery only if Mr. Stephenson’s joinder was obtained. Yet, Mr. Bledsoe accepted the consideration for the lease and gave an unconditional written receipt therefor.

Neither plaintiff made any effort to repossess the lease after they knew Stephenson “blew up” and refused to join in the lease. To the contrary, they indicated their acquiescence in and acceptance of the fact that the lease was actually in effect for three years up to August 25, 1939, by their acceptance of the delay rentals in the amount tendered. In their notice of forfeiture dated February 23, 1940, they state that they executed an oil and gas lease, which was filed for record December 15,- 1936, and recorded in Deed Record 125 at page 450 and which'did by its terms expire on August 25, 1939. On that ground they demanded that the lease be released of record, the original returned to them, and warned of damages if lease were not released and the original returned as demanded. This does not accord with their claim that there had been no delivery of the lease. While the said notice contained statements charging forgery and alterations of portions of the lease, and payment of only a portion of the agreed consideration and delay rentals, the essential nature of the instrument was a statutory demand for the release of record by reason of the expiration of the true term of an effective lease, with notice of damages in the event of failure to make such release.

Plaintiffs say the lease was to be for three years instead of ten years, as it appears on the record.

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Bluebook (online)
36 F. Supp. 531, 1941 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3909, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bledsoe-v-magnolia-petroleum-co-illinoised-1941.