Cantrell v. O'Neill

1924 OK 1123, 235 P. 232, 109 Okla. 238, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 768
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 16, 1924
Docket14976
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 1924 OK 1123 (Cantrell v. O'Neill) 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
Cantrell v. O'Neill, 1924 OK 1123, 235 P. 232, 109 Okla. 238, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 768 (Okla. 1924).

Opinion

Opinion by

POSTER, C.

In this case, defendants in error, Alexandria O’Neill, W. W. O’Neill, and June O’Neill, minors, by their mother and next friend, Alexandria O’Neill, as plaintiffs, sued John Rutledge, Laura Rutledge, his wife, J. R. Driggers, J. W. Benge, and Lily M. Benge, his wife, Joe E. Ball, and James W. Cantrell, as defendants, in the district court of Grady county, Okla., to reform an instrument purporting to be an oil and gas mining lease, so as to make said instrument operate as an unconditional conveyance of one-half of the oil and gas in a. tract of land located in Grady county, consisting of approximately 200 acres, which had been conveyed to the defendant John Rutledge by W. W. O’Neill, in his lifetime.

Judgment was rendered by the' trial court in favor of the plaintiffs in accordance with the prayer of their petition, but only the defendant James W. Cantrell has appealed from the adverse judgment so rendered, said judgment having become final as to all-the defendants except the said James W. Cantrell, who is the plaintiff in error in .this court.

Parties will be hereinafter referred to as they appeared in the trial court.

It was the claim of plaintiffs in their petition that W. W. O’Neill, who was the husband of Alexandria O’Neill, and the father of W. W. O’Neill and June O’Neill, the plaintiffs, prior to his death in October, 1920, *239 executed a deed to the defendant John Rutledge, by which he conveyed about 200 acres of land in Grady county, and that as part and parcel of the same transaction by which the said land was conveyed and on the same date, it was intended that the grantee, Rutledge, should reconvey to W. W. O’Neill one-half of the oil and gas in the land, but that owing to a mutual mistake by the parties to the transaction, the instrument which the defendant Rutledge signed to evidence their agreement was an ordinary, commercial oil and gas lease instead of an unconditional grant in fee of one-half the oil and gas in the land.

The petition prayed for the reformation of the instrument mentioned so as to make it operate as • a conveyance of one-half of the oil and gas in the land.

Answers were filed by the various defendants in the case, but since the defendant Cantrell only has appealed, no attention need be paid to the answer of any defendants except Cantrell.

The defendant Cantrell denied generally the allegations contained in the plaintiffs’ petition, and claimed to be a purchaser of 70 acres of the farm originally purchased by Rutledge from a subsequent grantee of Rutledge, and disclaimed all interest in the remainder.

Judgment having been rendered as stated, motion for a new trial was filed and overruled, exceptions allowed, and the cause comes on regularly to be heard in this court on appeal by the defendant Cantrell.

There is only one proposition argued and discussed by the defendant in his brief, as ground for reversal, and that is that the plaintiffs failed to introduce sufficient proof to warrant the trial court in rendering a decree changing the oil and gas lease into a conveyance.

There does not appear to be any conflict in the evidence upon the proposition that in the inception of the negotiations for the sale of the 200 acres of land, a reservation of the entire oil and gas rights in the land was proposed, this reservation to be accomplished by ¿ separate grant thereof, by Rutledge to O’Neill, at the time the deed was executed. This is the testimony of T. J. O’Neill, the father of W. W. O’Neill, corroborated in all substantial respects by the testimony of W. G. Methvin, a witness for the defendant.

As the negotiations proceeded it appears that the original proposition was modified, and it is with reference to the nature and extent of the modified agreement that the principal conflict in the evidence developed. The testimony of witness T. J. O’Neill is clear and positive that on the day the deal was finally closed an agreement was reached in his office whereby W. W. O’Neill consented to accept a conveyance of one-half the oil and gas rights, and while he was not present when the instrument was drawn by which the agreement between them was evidenced, this was the purport of the agreement as they left his office for the office of Mr. Methvin, to have the instrument reduced to writing and signed.

The witness Methvin, who was engaged by O’Neill and Rutledge to draw the instrument in question did not give a very convincing statement of what transpired in his office when the instrument was drawn with respect to how it was that O’Neill came to relinquish his previous demand for a conveyance of the entire oil and gas rights and accept in lieu thereof an instrument which did not even secure to him the rights ordinarily obtained by a lessee in a commercial oil and gas lease. It must be remembered that Methvin was a layman and that the instrument was drawn by the parties without professional aid.

If the instrument which Methvin drew is to be accepted as reflecting the true intent of the parties, then O’Neill in assuming the payment to the lessor of a royalty of one-half of the oil and gas produced by him as lessee, shouldered a burden which no lessee could discharge without a prospect of substantial loss and cannot be regarded oven as a surrender of his previous demand, much less a compromise thereof.

Methvin, when confronted with this stipulation appearing interlined in the instrument in his own handwriting, could account for it upon no other theory than that it was intended by the parties that they should share in the royalties equally up to a certain date, which intention tends to corroborate the theory of the plaintiffs that the parties intended to divide ownership in the oil and gas equally, and not merely to execute a commercial oil and gas lease on the entire land.

In view of this admission by the witness Methvin, coupled with the further admission that his recollection was not clear as to the material facts in connection with the transaction, we cannot regard the testimony of Methvin of a very convincing character upon the proposition that the instrument was intended as a commercial oil and gas lease.

When we come to consider the testimony of the defendant Rutledge himself it is equally unconvincing. It is true that Rut *240 ledge denied the evidence of T. J. O’Neill to the effect that an agreement was reached in his office between W. W. O’Neill and Rutledge a short time before the instrument was drawn whereby O’Neill should obtain the ownership of one-half the oil and gas in the land, and denied that he had ever entered T. J. O’Neill’s office prior to February, 1919, considerably more than a year after the instrument in controversy was executed.

It is not denied by Rutledge that about February, 1919, he went to the office of T. J. O’Neill in response to a written communication calling him there to settle and adjust some of the purchase money notes which he had executed and delivered to W. W. O’Neill for the farm in question.

There is a sharp and irreconcilable conflict between the testimony of T. J. O’Neill and Rutledge as to what transpired on this occasion. Both witnesses agree that an argument took place between them, but they differ widely over what the argument was about.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1924 OK 1123, 235 P. 232, 109 Okla. 238, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 768, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cantrell-v-oneill-okla-1924.