Brown v. Likens

22 P.2d 848, 37 N.M. 312
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedMay 31, 1933
DocketNo. 3745.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 22 P.2d 848 (Brown v. Likens) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. Likens, 22 P.2d 848, 37 N.M. 312 (N.M. 1933).

Opinion

WATSON, Chief Justice.

Plaintiffs, claiming as owners of one-half of seven-eighths of all minerals and mineral rights, including natural gas, in and under a certain 80-acre tract, sued defendant for an accounting and damages for a conversion of gas from the premises.

Third parties intervened, denying plaintiffs’ asserted title and setting up one of their own. Defendant’s lot is cast with the interveners, since he claims under them.

The title of plaintiffs rests on a decree of the district court rendered June 5, 1926, adjudicating them the owners of the mineral right in question. In this, suit, however, Charles E. McHugh was the sole defendant.

The title asserted by the interveners rests upon a warranty deed, dated January 8,1926, by which said McHugh conveyed the land to intervener Elizabeth A. Bolger, then Lenihan.' But McHugh was married and his wife did not join in this deed. For that reason the trial court held, and it is not here questioned, that if the beneficial title was in McHugh, the , deed was void.

Appellees advanced, and the trial court adopted, the theory that McHugh’s title was not beneficial, hut was a resulting trust for the interveners. On this theory alone judgment went against the plaintiffs, and they have appealed.

On this question of trust much evidence was received. It is highly conflicting. As usual in such cases, we are on the one hand reminded of the heavy burden of proof resting upon the proponent of a theory of resulting trust, and, on the other hand, reminded of the substantial evidence rule. In this case, however, we are able to reach a decision upon the testimony adduced on behalf of the appellees, without balancing it against the evidence to the contrary.

Unfortunately, we are compelled to arrive at the ultimate facts by reviewing the record; the trial court having failed to make findings supporting its conclusions that intervener Bolger paid a valuable consideration for the conveyance to her, and that McHugh’s title was in trust.

We may say at once that, aside from the evidence now to be examined, on which interveners rely to establish the trust, there is no proof or contention that intervener Bolger paid a consideration for the conveyance to her.

All agree that Sarah B. Miller owned the property prior to May 16, 1925. On that date she executed a quitclaim deed to McHugh, reciting a consideration of $1, and reserving an undivided one-eighth interest in oil and gas. On January 18, 1926, as above stated, McHugh conveyed to Bolger, reciting a consideration of $100. Finally, on January 8, 1927, Bolger, by her attorney in fact, quit-claimed the land to interveners Fred Sahara and Leo Kelly, as trustees, for $1 and other valuable consideration.

It is the nature of the first transaction that here concerns us. The two last conveyances are claimed to have merely executed the trust which resulted from the first. The nature of the trust impressed upon the final conveyance is not expressed in the deed, but in the petition in intervention it is thus stated: “ * * * Por the use and benefit of all the intervenors herein and all others who had from time to time invested moneys for the purchase of the said land by the said O. E. McHugh.” '

Late in the year 1924, McHugh, a resident of South Dakota, came to San Juan county, with a view to engaging in oil and gas speculation or development. He acquired a number of leases adjoining the Miller property. Upon the latter there was at the time a producing gas well. Having returned to South Dakota, he interested Mrs. Bolger in his projects; stating that he was endeavoring to raise money to acquire the Miller tract, which, as he expressed it, would “take the wild-cat out of” his adjoining leases, and which could be purchased for $2,000. He proposed to Mrs. Bolger that with the money raised he would purchase the Miller tract, which property, as Mrs. Bolger testifies, “was to stand in the name of the investors as security to them against loss in their investment. In addition there was to be acquired leases in the name of O. E. McHugh.” Mrs. Bolger became interested herself and thought that she could interest her father and relatives. It was agreed that she should go to Chicago for the purpose, and that the expense of the trip, $250, should be treated as an investment by her. She did go to Chicago and succeeded in interesting her father and others.

Some weeks later, McHugh left for Chicago for the purpose of reaping the harvest which Mrs. Bolger had already sown. On his departure, Mrs. Bolger gave him $1,000, “which, together with the $250 previously expended on.this venture,” as she testifies, “was to constitute a part of the purchase price of the Miller place-and which property it was agreed would be purchased in my name as security for my investment and that of my father and others who were lending financial aid.”

In Chicago, on May 6th, McHugh met Mrs. Bolger’s father, Frank M. Lenihan. The latter, on the next day, gave the former $700, taking a receipt in which it was said that the sum was “to be applied on exploiting the oil leases I own in San Juan County, New Mexico & the profits derived from, said leases are to be divided pro rata according to cost of the expenses' of developing between myself & Frank Lenihan, Sr.”

Lenihan testified: “I asked him how much the place could be - bought for — the Miller place — and he said $2,000. I asked him where he came in on this proposition. He said that the fact of the matter was he was up against it in as much as the other leases were about due and he had not been able to produce any money, and he also stated that when he got it going that he would have a well of his own as good or better than the Miller place. The agreement was that this deed was to be placed in my daughter Elizabeth’s name as a trust deed for herself and others whom she might interest. * * * We were to share and share alike for any money we put in in the other leases. * * * He was to have nothing to do with that (the Miller ranch). That was the bait he threw out to us and we bit.”

These moneys of intervener Bolger and her father are the only investments shown to have been, made with McHugh prior to his taking title in his own name on May 16, 1925.

June 15, 1925, McHugh obtained $500 from intervener Sahara, giving a receipt certifying that the latter had “that day invested ($500) five hundred dollars in with me in the Aztec N. Mex. oil and gas fields and is to share with me in all my property I hold in Aztec, N. Mex. to share equally with me share & share alike.” McHugh then represented that the Miller ranch had already been acquired and stood in Mrs. Bolger’s name.

Lenihan thereafter interested numerous friends and relatives in the project, the total of all contributions amounting to some $9,000.

This evidence satisfactorily shows that McHugh obtained the money of Mrs. Bolger and her father upon a promise to acquire title to the property in question in the name of Mrs. Bolger; that he obtained money from Sahara on the representation that he (had already done this; and that numerous, other sums were accepted by him upon similar representations made by Lenihan and by which McHugh was no doubt bound.

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22 P.2d 848, 37 N.M. 312, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-likens-nm-1933.