Carter Oil Company v. King
This text of 134 So. 2d 89 (Carter Oil Company v. King) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
CARTER OIL COMPANY, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
Dr. R. E. KING, Defendant-Appellee.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.
Cotton & Bolton, William R. Veal, Rayville, for appellant.
E. Rudolph McIntyre, Winnsboro, for appellee.
Before HARDY, GLADNEY and AYRES, JJ.
GLADNEY, Judge.
This suit was instituted by Carter Oil Company to recover the price paid Dr. R. E. King for an oil and gas lease affecting the Southwest Quarter of Section 17, Township 12 North, Range 7 East, containing 160 acres of land situated in Franklin Parish, Louisiana. The action is based on a warranty clause of the lease and upon the general laws of warranty. The demands of plaintiff were resisted by defendant who claims his right to retain the consideration received by him on the ground of mutual *90 error in the land description. He avers the tender of another lease to plaintiff, correctly describing the property to accord with the intent of the parties. After trial, the court rejected plaintiff's demands and ordered a reformation of the lease. Plaintiff has appealed.
The material circumstances pertaining to this litigation are derived from the negotiations between the parties preceding the confection of the invalid lease. In September of 1958, Carter Oil Company wanted to acquire certain mineral leases in Sections 7, 9, 16, 17 and 18 of Township 12 North, Range 7 East of Franklin Parish. The separate tracts of land comprising these leases were marked in red ink for identification on a land ownership map. This was done in plaintiff's Shreveport office, and the map was delivered to Harvey W. Powell with instructions concerning the purchase of said leases. Powell, a lease broker and an attorney at law, then proceeded to Winnsboro, where he discussed with Dr. R. E. King the purchase of a mineral lease on the Southwest Quarter of Section 17. This meeting resulted in a disagreement as to the price and as a consequence of this, Powell returned to Shreveport to obtain approval of the amount asked by Dr. King. About a week later, September 17th, Powell again met with Dr. King, at which time the consideration was agreed upon, and Powell then and there drafted the lease, which was executed between the parties. Payment was made to Dr. King by a draft containing the provision: "Upon Approval of Title But Not Longer Than 5 Days After Sight. Pay to the Order of Dr. R. E. King, $3,200.00."
Subsequently, during the latter part of October, 1958, Carter Oil Company was informed by the Texas Company that it had acquired from D. M. Mettz a lease of 850 acres of Dr. King's property, which acreage included the Southwest Quarter of Section 17. After checking the land records of Franklin Parish plaintiff found the information to be correct and made demand upon defendant for reimbursement.
Tersely stated, plaintiff's position is that it intended to lease from Dr. King the Southwest Quarter of Section 17 and it had no intention of securing a lease on any other property belonging to Dr. King. To the contrary, Dr. King asserts Powell offered to lease the remaining 160 acres in a tract of 1,010 acres owned by him, 850 acres of which had been leased to Mettz.
Careful consideration has been given the testimony and actions of the parties to determine the presence of mutual error, and whether vel non the parties intended to execute a lease upon the Southeast Quarter of Section 19, which was the remaining open or unleased property of Dr. King in the 1,010 acre tract. The issue was correctly stated by the district judge:
"For a determination of the issues in this case, the intention of the parties, Dr. R. E. King, defendant, and Mr. Harvey W. Powell, plaintiff's agent and representative, must be ascertained. If it was the intention of both of said parties, or either of them, to conclude the transaction on the basis of the lease in question covering the lands as described in said lease * * * then, in the opinion of this Court, plaintiff should be granted the relief sought. On the other hand, if both parties intended that the transaction be concluded on the basis of the lease in question covering the 160 acre tract of the 1010 acre tract of the defendant which was `open' or not under lease, then, obviously, there was a mistake or error, mutual and common to both parties, and the reformation of the lease or the correction in the description therein as sought, in the alternative, by defendant should be granted."
It is conceded by counsel for both sides that the sale of a mineral lease is subject to the laws of warranty and upon failure of title a purchaser is entitled to a return of the price. LSA-Civil Code, Arts. 2449, 2501, 2505 and 2506; Tomlinson v. Thurmon et al., 1938, 189 La. 959, 181 So. 458; and Hatch v. Morgan, La.App., 12 So. 2d 476 (2d Cir. 1942).
*91 The rule allowing reformation of error by the parties to a contract is set forth with clarity in the case of Ker, Administrator, et al. v. Evershed et al., 1889, 41 La.Ann. 15, 6 So. 566, 567:
"When the instrument is free from any patent or latent ambiguity, parol evidence cannot be received to vary or contradict it.
"Courts of equity, however, have established a special branch of jurisdiction under which, when it is made clearly to appear that through fraud or error the written instrument has been made to express a different purpose from that which the parties had agreed on and intended to embody therein, such mistake may be corrected, and the writing may be reformed to express the real intention of the parties.
"But in this last case both reason and authority require that before such relief can be afforded there must be very clear proof of the different antecedent agreement, and of the error in committing it to writing."
The foregoing principle has been cited with approval in Rodgers v. S. H. Bolinger Company, Ltd., 1921, 149 La. 545, 89 So. 688; Standard Oil Company of Louisiana v. Futral et al., 1943, 204 La. 215, 15 So.2d 65; Weber v. H. G. Hill Stores, Inc., 1946, 210 La. 977, 29 So.2d 33; and Southwest Gas Producing Company, Inc., et al. v. Hattie Brothers et al., 1956, 230 La. 339, 88 So.2d 649. In Weber v. H. G. Hill Stores, Inc. appears a quotation from Hearne v. Marine Insurance Co., 20 Wall. 488, 22 L.Ed. 395, this excellent statement is found:
"`The reformation of written contracts for fraud or mistake is an ordinary head of equity jurisdiction. The rules which govern the exercise of this power are founded in good sense and are well settled. Where the agreement as reduced to writing omits or contains terms or stipulations contrary to the common intention of the parties, the instrument will be corrected so as to make it conform to their real intent. The parties will be placed as they would have stood if the mistake had not occurred.'
"`The party alleging the mistake must show exactly in what it consists, and the correction that should be made. The evidence must be such as to leave no reasonable doubt upon the mind of the court as to either of these points. The mistake must be mutual and common to both parties to the instrument. It must appear that both have done what neither intended. A mistake on one side may be a ground for rescinding, but not for reforming, a contract. Where the minds of the parties have not met there is no contract, and hence none to be rectified.'" [210 La. 977, 29 So.2d 37]
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
134 So. 2d 89, 16 Oil & Gas Rep. 323, 1961 La. App. LEXIS 1372, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carter-oil-company-v-king-lactapp-1961.