Carter Oil Co. v. Crude Oil Co. (Oklahoma)

201 F.2d 547, 1953 U.S. App. LEXIS 3979
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 12, 1953
Docket4493
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 201 F.2d 547 (Carter Oil Co. v. Crude Oil Co. (Oklahoma)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carter Oil Co. v. Crude Oil Co. (Oklahoma), 201 F.2d 547, 1953 U.S. App. LEXIS 3979 (10th Cir. 1953).

Opinions

HUXMAN, Circuit Judge.

Appellee, Crude Oil Company, commenced this action against appellant, Carter Oil Company, to recover 1/6 of the royalty of oil produced from a well completed September 15, 1927. Recovery was sought of all the oil so produced from the date of the completion of the well to June 28, 1951, the date of the institution of this action, a period of approximately 24 years.

The facts out of which this controversy arose are these. In June, 1924,, W. E. Grisso executed an oil and gas lease to E. M. Meyers on two non-contiguous tracts containing respectively 80 acres and 40 acres each. This - lease by mesne conveyances became the property of Carter Oil Company. The lease contained what is commonly termed an entirety clause, providing in substance that if the leased premises should thereafter be owned in severalty the premises should nonetheless be developed as one le$se- and royalty accruing thereunder should be paid to the separate owners in proportion that their respective acreage bore to the entire leased acreage. About one year after the execution of the lease, Grisso conveyed a ^4 mineral interest under the 80 acre tract aloné, subject to the outstanding lease to Felix L. Gast. This interest by mesne conveyances became the'property of Crude Oil Company.1 By virtue' of the entirety clause Crude became entitled to its share of any oil produced from either tract. About September, 1927, Carter Oil Company completed a producing oil well on the 40 acre tract. Carter has at all times since and was at the time of the trial of this action producing oil from this well. Crude Oil Company has never received any returns from this well.

The complaint alleged that Carter and Grisso knew at all times that Crude Oil Company owned an interest in the oil so produced; that they deliberately withheld from Crude all information respecting the drilling of the well and the production and sale of oil therefrom; that Carter -and Gris-so fraudulently concealed from Crude the facts respecting the production and sale of the oil; that such acts constituted fraud upon Crude Oil Company; that Crude did not learn until January, 1951, that Carter had drilled such a well; that since such discovery demand has been made upon Carter for an accounting, which has been refused. Prayer was for an accounting and for judgment for such amount -as was found due.

Carter’s motion to dismiss on the ground that Grisso, not a party to the action, was an indispensable party and in his absence the court lacked jurisdiction was overruled. Carter then filed a third party complaint against Grisso and J. A. Patterson, surety on Grisso’s bond to Carter. In this complaint Carter sought judgment over against Grisso and Patterson for all sums which might be adjudged against it in favor of Crude Oil Company. So far as material Carter, Grisso, and Patterson all pleaded that laches was a bar to all sums claimed except those -accruing within five years preceding the filing of the action. Trial was had to the court. It made findings of fact and conclusions of law and based thereon entered judgment against Carter for all sums found due from the entire production and entered judgment for Carter over against Grisso and Patterson on its third [549]*549party complaint for the amount of judgment rendered against it.

It is urged that the trial court erred in failing to sustain Carter’s motion to dismiss because of the absence of Grisso, an alleged indispensable party. An indispensable party is generally defined as one who has such an interest in the subject matter of the controversy that a final decree between the parties before the court cannot be had without affecting his interest or leaving the controversy in such a situation that its final determination may be inconsistent with equity and good conscience.2 Carter’s contention that it is a mere stakeholder and that the real controversy is between Grisso and Crude Oil Company is not well founded. Carter was the lessee and Grisso and Crude Oil Company, by virtue of its assignment from Grisso, were in effect co-lessors. The lease expressly provided that the covenants thereof should extend to heirs and assigns. By such right of assignment the lessee’s obligation to pay royalty extended separately and apportionately to the lessor and his assignees.3 A case somewhat similar upon the facts is Hudson v. Newell, 5 Cir., 172 F.2d 848, where it was held that in a suit by one royalty holder against a lessee other royalty holders were not indispensable parties.

In Oxley v. Sweetland, 4 Cir., 94 F.2d 33, 37, the court said that “The thing that makes one an indispensable party to a suit is that some interest of his will be affected by it, not that questions of law or fact will be passed upon in which he is interested but by the decision of which he will not be bound.” The question of Grisso’s fraud toward his cotenant, Crude Oil Company, his trust relationship toward it with respect to the funds in question, Carter’s knowledge of the trust relationship and that Grisso was misappropriating these funds were questions in the case in which Grisso was interested. But they were questions in issue only between Crude Oil Company and Carter. While Grisso was interested in these questions, their determination in an action to which he was not a party would not be binding upon him subsequently if an action were instituted against him by either party to this action. The trial court apparently did not base its conclusions in this matter on this ground but since its decision is correct it must nonetheless be affirmed.

The trial court’s finding and conclusion that Carter Oil Company was placed in the position of a trustee and was operating in a fiduciary capacity with respect to Crude Oil Company’s interest in the production cannot be sustained. In Bunger v. Rogers, 188 Okl. 620, 112 P.2d 361, 363, the Oklahoma Court held that there was no trust relationship between the lessor or his assignees and the lessee of an oil and gas lease. It held that “The defendants were merely lessees under an oil and gas mining lease and were under no obligation to the plaintiff, other than to pay the rent and royalty provided in said lease, and if they breached this duty then their liability was purely a contractual one and in no sense fiduciary.” 4

But holding that Carter Oil Company stood in no trust relationship to Grisso or those to whom he assigned royalty is not dispositive of the questions inherent in this appeal. It seems clear from the record that at the time of the assignment of the mineral interest to Gast neither he nor Grisso comprehended the legal effect of the entirety clause of the lease and that both labored under the erroneous impression that the assignment conveyed only a mineral interest in the 80 acre tract. In response to the following question, “Is it not true that you and Doctor Grisso believed your minteral interest only related to this 80 acre tract? ” Gast answered “At the time I bought it, Yes, Sir.” It is, however, obvious that thereafter Grisso learned that the entirety clause gave Gast an interest in the production from the 40 acres not included in the [550]*550assignment to Gast.

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Carter Oil Co. v. Crude Oil Co. (Oklahoma)
201 F.2d 547 (Tenth Circuit, 1953)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
201 F.2d 547, 1953 U.S. App. LEXIS 3979, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carter-oil-co-v-crude-oil-co-oklahoma-ca10-1953.