Cogdall v. Cottrell

1921 OK 211, 198 P. 581, 82 Okla. 125, 1921 Okla. LEXIS 200
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 31, 1921
Docket10195
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1921 OK 211 (Cogdall v. Cottrell) 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
Cogdall v. Cottrell, 1921 OK 211, 198 P. 581, 82 Okla. 125, 1921 Okla. LEXIS 200 (Okla. 1921).

Opinion

KENNAMER, J.

The defendant in error, B. F. Cottrell, commenced this action in the district court of Garfield county against the plaintiffs in error, W. E. Cogdall, F. H. Bowers, and W. M. Shockley, to recover $612.50 alleged to be due as his pro rata share of the sale of certain oil and gas leases which had been sold for the sum of $2,850. The parties herein will be referred to as they appeared in the trial of the cause.

From the pleadings filed and the evidence introduced in the trial of the cause, B. F. Cottrell, F. PI. Bowers, W. M. Shockley and Charles Carr in March, 1916, entered into an oral agreement in which it was stipulated that the parties were to secure a block of oil and gas mining leases on lands in Washington township, Garfield county, Oklahoma, and the parties further agreed that all such leases secured, for convenience, were to be taken in the name of F. H. Bowers, one of the defendants herein; that pursuant to the agreement they leased about sis thousand (6,000) acres of land, in which each of the parties had an undivided one-fourth interest in said leases; that sometime after the leases were obtained Charles Carr sold his undivided one-fourth interest in the leases to Dr. D. S. Harris, and thereafter the said Harris sold the undivided one-fourth interest he had purchased to W. E. Cogdall, one of the defendants herein; that after W. E. Cog-dall had become an owner of the undivided one-fourth interest formerly owned by Charles Carr, one of the original purchasers, it is alleged by the plaintiff in his petition, F. H. Bowers, W. M. Shockley, and W. E. Cogdall conspired together to defraud the plaintiff out of his interest in the leases and the proceeds to be derived from the sale of the same, and that said defendants, without, the knowledge or consent of the plaintiff, sold the leases to the Permian Oil Company, and that the defendant, F. H. Bowers, assigned and transferred the leases to said oil company, receiving the sum of $2,850 as the purchase price of said leases. The defendants in their answer filed in the cause alleged that, prior to the sale of the leases to the Permian Oil Company, the plaintiff. B. F. Cottrell, had sold all his right, title, and interest in and to said leases, being an undivided one-fourth interest, to W. E. Cog-dall, and on the date of the sale of the leases to the Permian Oil Company had no interest in the leases, and the evidence of the defendants introduced tended to support their theory of the transaction. It is undisputed in this case that the plaintiff, under the original agreement of procuring the leases, did own an undivided one-fourth interest, and the decisive question in this cause is whether or not the plaintiff in the sale of the leases to the Permian Oil Company was defrauded in the transaction. The plaintiff contended in the trial of said cause that on September 30th, Bowers, one of the defendants herein, sent Shockley, another one of the defendants herein, to see him with reference to selling his interest in the leases, and that Shockley told the plaintiff that they had a purchaser who would pay him $100 for his interest in the leases; that he re fused the proposition, stating that he would rather lose all he had in the leases than tc sell for such a small sum; that after Shockley returned to Drummond and reported to Bowers, Bowers went to Enid and saw Cog-dall and that Cogdall mailed a check to the plaintiff for $100, writing on the check “for interest in oil leasesthat when he received the check he was busy sowing wheat and carried it sometime before cashing it, and that before he cashed the check he saw Shockley and Bowers and they each told him that they had sold the leases and only received $400 for them, and that the check was the oil company’s check; that he did not know Cogdall at the time and did not know that he had bought the Harris interest in the leases, and that Bowers and Shockley finally convinced him that the leases had been sold for only $400 and that he accepted the check and cashed it the same day that the leases were sold by the defendants for the sum. of $2,800. The respective contentions of the parties to this cause were sharply contested in the trial, but upon the issues joined the jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff for the sum of $300. From the judgment entered in accordance with the verdict of the jury, the defendants have appealed to this court and four assignments of error are presented for grounds for reversal of the judgment:

First. Error of the court in excluding evidence offered by the defendants.

Second. Error in refusing to give proper instructions, and also in giving instructions which do not properly state the law.

*127 Third. There is no evidence whatever in the record to support a verdict against the defendant W. E. Cogdall.

The first assignment argued in the brief of counsel for defendants is that the court erred in excluding evidence offered by the defendants. There is no merit in this assignment. as the evidence excluded merely tended to establish something that is admitted by all the parties to this controversy, and that is that the plaintiff received a check for $100’through the mail with a letter stating that it was in payment of 'his interests in the oil leases. All the parties agreed that he did receive the letter and check and as to the contents of the same.

The second assignment of error complained of is on account of the court refusing to give instruction No. 4 requested by the defendants, to the effect that a person has a right to sell and transfer any property and interest in property which he has without the consent and knowledge of others. The court did not err in refusing this instruction, as that was not the decisive issue in the cause. Instruction No. 5 by the defendants in substance requested the court to instruct the jury that it was unnecessary for the plaintiff to execute an assignment in writing in order to transfer his interest in the leases. That was not a material issue in the case. Under the second assignment counsel complained of the action of the court in giving instructions Nos. 5 and 6, which are as follows:

“Number Five: You are instructed that where parties enter into an agreement to engage m a business and divide the profits and share the expenses equally, that such an agreement in the eyes of the law constitutes a partnership, and you are instructed that in a partnership every partner is required to exercise the utmost good faith towards his copartners, and a partner is not entitled to inane a secret profit out of a business transaction connected with the partnership business; but that the partners are all entitled to share equally in all profits made in any transaction connected with the partnership business.
“Number Six: You are instructed that if the defendants or any of them prior to the alleged purchase of the plaintiff’s interest in said leases by the defendant, W. E. Cogdall, had received any offers for said leases in excess of the sum of $400.00 for an entire interest in said leases or $100.00 for a one-fourth interest, that it was their duty under the law to communicate sucn offers to the plaintiff.

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

Related

Brittain v. Clark
1925 OK 814 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1925)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1921 OK 211, 198 P. 581, 82 Okla. 125, 1921 Okla. LEXIS 200, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cogdall-v-cottrell-okla-1921.