Clough v. Jackson

479 P.2d 266, 156 Mont. 272, 39 Oil & Gas Rep. 60, 1971 Mont. LEXIS 461
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 8, 1971
Docket11862
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 479 P.2d 266 (Clough v. Jackson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clough v. Jackson, 479 P.2d 266, 156 Mont. 272, 39 Oil & Gas Rep. 60, 1971 Mont. LEXIS 461 (Mo. 1971).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE HAS WELL

delievered the Opinion of the Court.

Suit by plaintiff seeking rescission of her mineral deed to defendant on the grounds of fraud, misrepresentation, and undue influence. Defendant counterclaimed to quiet title to the mineral interest in himself on the basis of the mineral deed. From the final judgment of the district court of Rich-land County in favor of defendant, plaintiff appeals.

The issue on appeal is whether the record before the trial court proves that the mineral deed given by plaintiff to defendant was induced by defendant’s fraud, misrepresentation, or undue influence thereby entitling plaintiff to rescind it.

The participants in the transaction culminating in the mineral deed were plaintiff Della Verne Clough; defendant B. Pete Jackson; and defendant’s agent, Harold L. Rowland.

Plaintiff is an 80 year old spinster who retired from teaching in 1953. She has resided in Alhambra, California since 1924, and has never engaged in any business activity other than teaching. Plaintiff testified she was unfamiliar generally with the oil industry and its terminology. In 1944 she acquired by inheritance the land which is the subject of the mineral deed involved in the present controversy. This land is a tract of 160 acres located in Richland County, Montana. Plaintiff had previously leased this land to Interstate Oil and Gas Company who, in turn, had made a farmout agreement of their interest in oil and gas leases in the general area to Consolidated Oil and Gas Company; additionally plaintiff had granted an easement for a pipeline through her property. The lease, farmout agreement, and easement were in effect at the time of the mineral deed involved in the instant case.

Plaintiff had seen her land in Richland County three times *275 prior to execution of the mineral deed in question: once in the 1930’s, once in 1944, and once in 1952. She testified she had no information concerning any oil production near her land prior to the conversations involved in the instant controversy.

Defendant B. Pete Jackson is a geologist engaged in independent oil activity who resides in Billings, Montana. He was not only familiar with the oil industry and terminology, but was knowledgeable concerning oil activity, production and production potential in the vicinity of plaintiff’s land in Rich-land County.

Harold L. Rowland, although not a party in the instant suit, was the person directly involved in the conversations with plaintiff concerning her mineral lands and the person who procured the mineral deed from plaintiff. Rowland was the admitted agent of defendant Jackson and at all times acted in his behalf. Rowland is a financially independent graduate geologist, a licensed broker, and the operator of a business concerned with oil and gas exploration for major oil companies. He operates and resides in the Los Angeles area where plaintiff lives. Although familiar with the oil and gas industry and its terminology, he had no personal knowledge of oil activity and production in the vicinity of plaintiff’s land and simply imparted to plaintiff what defendant Jackson had told him. Rowland and defendant Jackson had never met.

The mineral deed involved here is a conveyance by plaintiff of a % interest in the minerals in her 160 acre tract of land to defendant. Plaintiff still retains ownership of the remaining % interest in the minerals which is not involved in the present controversy.

On October 30, 1968 defendant Jackson made a telephone call from Billings, Montana to plaintiff’s home in Alhambra, California for the purpose of determining whether she would sell any of her mineral interests. Although there are many *276 conflicts in the respective parties’ versions of that conversation, it is clear that defendant Jackson made no representations to her at that time and no understanding was reached concerning any sale by plaintiff of any mineral interests in her land.

The following morning, November 1, 1968, defendant Jackson phoned Rowland in Los Angeles. He asked Rowland if the latter could help him in his efforts to acquire some of the minerals under plaintiff’s property by contacting her, explaining the situation, answering any questions she might have, and determining whether she was willing to sell all or any part of the minerals under her land for a price of $25.00 per mineral acre, which was shown to be the highest price he paid for like acreage in the area. There is a conflict in the testimony of defendant Jackson and Rowland as to just what the former told him with respect to the closest oil production to plaintiff’s property being 20 miles; Rowland states that defendant told him this, while defendant contends that he was referring to the distance between two producing fields between which plaintiff’s land lies. In any event Rowland undertook the requested assignment.

Rowland first contacted plaintiff by telephone late in the afternoon of November 1st and arranged to visit her at her home that evening. He arrived at her home in the early evening and found her alone. Rowland discussed with her the pros and cons of selling all or a portion of her minerals, according to him; according to plaintiff, she understood the discussion to concern the sale of all or a part of her oil and gas rights under the existing lease to Interstate Oil and Gas Company with farmout agreement to Consolidated Oil and Gas Company. When plaintiff indicated her willingness to sell part of her interest, Rowland put in a telephone call to defendant Jackson in Billings in the presence of plaintiff. His purpose was to establish that there existed a meeting of minds of the parties to the transaction and to determine how *277 defendant Jackson wanted the details of the transaction handled, specifically how payment was to be made.

Defendant Jackson advised Rowland that he wanted the matter of payment handled by a draft on his account in the Midland National Bank in Billings. Upon completion of this call, Rowland typed a conveyance of plaintiff’s *4 mineral interest in her land to defendant Jackson and a draft in payment therefor. He was not satisfied with the form of draft, so he made arrangements to see her again on Sunday morning, two days hence, and complete the transaction.

In the meantime Rowland had another telephone conversation with defendant Jackson. At that time defendant Jackson advised Rowland that he had checked plaintiff’s title and there was no question about it; accordingly payment of the $1,000 could be made without the necessity of a draft. Rowland agreed to pay the $1,000 to plaintiff from his own funds for which defendant Jackson was to reimburse him.

Rowland arrived at plaintiff’s house at 8:00 a. m. Sunday, November 3rd, as previously agreed. Plaintiff signed the mineral deed conveying a *4 mineral interest in her land to defendant Jackson. Rowland delivered to her his check for $1,000 as consideration for the deed.

The deed was transmitted to defendant Jackson and recorded by him. Defendant Jackson reimbursed Rowland for the $1,000, reimbursed him for his mileage, and paid him $100 for his services.

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Bluebook (online)
479 P.2d 266, 156 Mont. 272, 39 Oil & Gas Rep. 60, 1971 Mont. LEXIS 461, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clough-v-jackson-mont-1971.