Camp v. Black Gold Petroleum Co.

1941 OK 371, 119 P.2d 815, 189 Okla. 692, 1941 Okla. LEXIS 357
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 12, 1941
DocketNo. 29870.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 1941 OK 371 (Camp v. Black Gold Petroleum Co.) 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
Camp v. Black Gold Petroleum Co., 1941 OK 371, 119 P.2d 815, 189 Okla. 692, 1941 Okla. LEXIS 357 (Okla. 1941).

Opinion

DAVISON, J.

This action involves the recovery of money alleged to be due under a contract for the sale of an oil and gas mining lease covering lots 36 and 37, block 6, Irvington addition to Oklahoma City.

Years before this controversy arose, John P. Camp, one of the plaintiffs in error, was the owner of the fee-simple title to the lots. When the defendant in error began its negotiations for an oil and gas mining lease on the premises, Camp’s title thereto was encumbered by a tax resale deed previously executed and delivered to one L. May Collins, who is one and the same person as Lydah May Collins.

On November 26, 1935, Lydah May Collins and James F. Collins executed and delivered to the defendant in error an oil and gas lease covering their purported interests in the lots.

In February, 1936, Camp entered into a contract whereby Oscar John Grace and Andrew T. Cole, the other plaintiffs in error, were to clear the title to said lots for an interest in them.

Thereafter, on April 13, 1936, the defendant in error entered into a contract with plaintiffs in error to purchase from them an oil and gas mining lease on the lots, and therein agreed that in the event the latter obtained good and merchantable title to the mineral rights in said lots free and clear of the claims of all other persons, including Lydah May Collins, it would pay plaintiffs in error a bonus in the sum of $1,000 in addition to the bonus to be prescribed in the lease.

Pursuant to said agreement, Camp, on May 14, 1936, executed and delivered to defendant in error an oil and gas lease covering the lots, and the other plaintiffs in error instituted an action in Camp’s name, as plaintiff, to quiet his title to said lots. A judgment was rendered in said action on November 5, 1937, declaring void the tax resale deed of Lydah May Collins and quieting Camp’s title to the lots against all claims of the said Lydah May Collins, James F. Collins and Black Gold Petroleum Company, or anyone claiming by, through, or under them except such rights as said petroleum company claimed through and by virtue of Camp’s title.

Thereafter, plaintiffs in error made due demand upon the defendant in error for payment of the extra bonus said company had agreed by its contract of April 13, 1936, to pay them for the oil and gas lease on the lots when they had obtained a good and merchantable title to.the mineral rights therein. Upon said company’s refusal to comply with their demand, plaintiffs in error instituted the present action to compel it to do so. Said parties will hereinafter be referred to by their trial designations of “plaintiffs” and “defendant.”

The cause was tried by the court without a jury.

One of the two defenses specially pleaded, and the only one that the defendant relied upon until plaintiffs had rested, was its claim that the contract by which Camp procured the assistance of the other plaintiffs in clearing his title was illegal and contrary to public policy, and that the contract sued upon was likewise illegal and unenforceable. Upon this ground the defendant demurred to plaintiffs’ evidence. When the trial judge thereupon suggested the matter by an inquiry concerning the pleadings,, counsel for the defendant then predicated his demurrer upon the further ground of asserted delay on the part of plaintiffs in obtaining good and merchantable title to the lots as they had agreed to do in the contract sued upon. Upon the basis of his opinion that in failing to secure the judgment quieting title to the lots in question until November 5, 1937, plaintiffs had not *694 fulfilled their obligation under the contract within a reasonable time after its execution, the trial judge sustained defendant’s demurrer to plaintiffs’ evidence and entered judgment dismissing the action. In this appeal plaintiffs seek a reversal of said judgment.

In their briefs, neither of the parties question the correctness of the trial court’s view that, since the contract in question specified no certain time within which plaintiffs were to cure the defects in the title to the lots, they had a reasonable time within which to do this. Plaintiffs take the position, however, that the trial court’s opinion that they did not perform this contractual obligation within such a time is erroneous under the facts of this case. With this we must agree.

It is conceded that there is no general rule by which the question of what is a reasonable time for the performance of contracts may be determined, and that such determination must be governed by the specific facts and circumstances of the particular case under consideration. See Briscoe v. Devonian Oil Co., 140 Okla. 248, 282 P. 1101, 1102. The defendant relies to a great extent upon the fact that the contract involved oil property, and that the courts, upon consideration of the fluctuating value of such property, have recognized that what might be considered a reasonable time for fulfilling a contract with reference to property of a constant or slowly fluctuating value cannot generally be so considered in cases involving property of such a rapidly fluctuating character. To demonstrate the asserted importance of this factor in the present case, our attention is called to the proof that by the time Camp's lease had been executed and delivered to the defendant, or within a month after the execution of the contract sued upon, and more than a year before plaintiffs, pursuant thereto, had obtained the judgment of November 5, 1937, the mineral value of the lots had been rendered extremely questionable by the “poor showing” of a well that had been completed near them. The defendant says it must be presumed that at the time the agreement in question was entered into, the parties to it contemplated that it should not require more than two or three months to prosecute to a final judgment a suit to quiet Camp’s title to the lots. The indulgence of such a presumption would not strengthen the defendant’s position, for it precludes any assumption or supposition that the parties intended or contemplated that such a decree or judgment should be obtained prior to the completion of the well whose outcome and effect upon the mineral value of the lots is said to have rendered unreasonable the period that elapsed between April 13, 1936, when plaintiffs contracted to obtain good title to the lots, and the date this was con-cededly accomplished by the decree of November 5, 1937.

Nor do we find any other considerations to support a conclusion that said judgment or decree was not obtained within a reasonable time under the circumstances of this case. No circumstance constituting a reason or necessity for the decree to have been obtained before November 5, 1937, is cited by counsel for the defendant. It is not claimed that defendant was in any way prejudiced by plaintiffs’ asserted delay in obtaining it. Counsel for the plaintiffs point out that long before said decree was obtained, the defendant was protected in its ownership of a 7/8 working interest in the oil and gas lying in and under the lots by a lease from the only individuals whose claims are shown to have cast a cloud upon the fee-simple title thereto, and that therefore there was no necessity of any particular haste or dispatch in securing it. The defendant does not assert that before said decree was entered it was unable to do anything with the lease that it could have done afterward.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

SILOAM SPRINGS HOTEL, LLC v. CENTURY SURETY COMPANY
2017 OK 14 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 2017)
Ball v. Wilshire Insurance Co.
2009 OK 38 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 2009)
Schmidt v. United States
1996 OK 29 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1996)
Sabine Corp. v. ONG Western, Inc.
725 F. Supp. 1157 (W.D. Oklahoma, 1989)
Shepard v. Farmers Ins. Co., Inc.
1983 OK 103 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1983)
Camp v. Black Gold Petroleum Co.
1944 OK 368 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1944)
Thompson v. Capitol Abstract & Title Co.
1944 OK 251 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1944)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1941 OK 371, 119 P.2d 815, 189 Okla. 692, 1941 Okla. LEXIS 357, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/camp-v-black-gold-petroleum-co-okla-1941.