Crow Oil Gas Company v. Drain

286 S.W. 971, 171 Ark. 817, 1926 Ark. LEXIS 533
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 4, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 286 S.W. 971 (Crow Oil Gas Company v. Drain) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crow Oil Gas Company v. Drain, 286 S.W. 971, 171 Ark. 817, 1926 Ark. LEXIS 533 (Ark. 1926).

Opinion

Wood, J.

This action was instituted by the appellee against the appellant on the following instrument:

“Fort Smith, Ark., March 20, 1923.
“Crow Oil & Gas Company, Fort 'Smith, Arkansas.
“Gentlemen: The Fort Smith -Drilling Company is indebted to Mrs. D. S. Drain in the sum of $3,500, evideuced by three notes, dated February 23, 1922, the first for $1,000, due in six months, the second for- $1,000, due in twelve months, and the third for $1,500, due in eighteen months, all bearing interest from date at the rate of eight per cent, per annum, and you are' hereby authorized and directed to pay to Cravens & Cravens, attorneys for Mrs. D. S. Drain, at t'he. completion • of each well drilled for you, the sum of three hundred dollars- ($300), until the full amount of these notes, together with-interest, is paid.
“Yours truly,
“H. L.,Thompson.”
' “We hereby accept the above order, and agree with Mrs. D. S. Drain to pay to her or her attorneys, upon the' completion of each well for us by the Fort Smith Drilling Company, the sum of three hundred dollars ($300), in accordance with the above order, provided we do not bind ourselves to pay any amounts not earned by the Fort Smith Drilling Company under its present agreement or future agreements.
“Crow Oil & Gas Company.”

The appellant denied liability. The cause, by consent of parties, was tried by the court sitting- as a jury.

The appellee testified, and introduced in evidence the instrument set out above. -She further introduced in evidence, over the objection of appellant, three notes dated February 23, 1922, in the aggregate sum of $3,500, purporting to have been executed by the Fort Smith Drilling Company to the appellee; also a mortgage of same date to secure these notes on certain oil well drilling machinery. The appellant also introduced in evidence certain correspondence between the appellant and Cravens & Cravens, attorneys for the appellee. One of the letters was dated February 12,1923, in which the appellee stated that it was its intention to drill approximately a dozen wells in the Alma field during the following spring and summer; that it expected to give the majority of the work to the Fort Smith Drilling Company, and that it was willing to make the payments for' complete wells as directed by that company. Further : correspondence shows that .the Crow Oil & Cas Company paid to Cravens & Cravens the. sum.of $300 on the accepted order, and had failed to make any other payments upon demand-of Cravens & Cravens. The correspondence concluded with a letter from. Cravens & Cravens of November 16, 1923, notifying the appellant that they considered it liable on the order and.its acceptance.

Ben Cravens testified, identifying the above correspondence. He identified and introduced in evidence a memorandum which reads as follows:. “This check is-to be given to Mrs. D. S. Drain, and is fin accordance'with a.letter dated March 20, 1923, from H. L. Thompson, ordering the -Crow Oil & Cas Company to pay to Mrs, D.- S. Drain the above amount upon the completion of each well drilled by Mr. Thompson for this company.” The witness further stated that this memorandum was attached to a check seht him by the appellant for. $300. The appellee made further demand on- the appellant for $300, which was refused. The witness did not know which wells the above correspondence referred to, but stated that he received $300 for the drilling of the first well. -Witness did not know;.-whether-the drilling company-had completed any well.

Witness-C. B. - Jones testified for the appellant .that he was-its secretary and treasurer at. the time the transactions mentioned were had-with the Fort Smith Drilling Company.- At the time the order in controversy- was accepted by the appellant, the -Fort Smith. Drilling Company was drilling, or preparing to drill for' the appellant. The drilling company had a contract to drill three wells. It completed the Boren well, and. Mrs. Drain was paid $300. The drilling company did not complete the Wood well, and no money was paid Mrs. Drain because that well-was lost.- The Byars well was not-completed, but the appellant would have paid for.it if it had been, permitted to do so by the chancery court. - A suit wás filed by various parties against the .drilling company and the. appellant, claiming liens on the Byars well, and the appellant paid the amount earned by the drilling- company, to-wit, $4,555.85, into the chancery court in that suit. The appellant finished the well. The appellant had- orders from the drilling company for four or five times as much money as was coming to it. It accepted these orders conditionally just the same as the Drain orders. Suit was brought by Pugh and others against the drilling company and others before the Byars well was completed and was shut down.-by attachment, and the parties bringing that suit afterwards received their money under the order of the chancery court.' The appellant received no benefit from the giving of the order by the drilling company to the appellee and its conditional acceptance by the appellant. There was no resolution of the board of directors authorizing the witness' to accept the order. The conditional acceptance was just an effort to help persons with whom appellant had dealings in a business matter between themselves. The appellant paid into court, in the case mentioned, all the money due the drilling company on the Byars well. The witness did not know that the drilling company was indebted to the appellee until the order was brought to witness. Thompson told the witness that Mrs. D. S. Drain was pressing the drilling company for payment. If .Mrs. Drain had taken possession of the outfit, - the drilling company could not have drilled the wells. The appellant could have got fifty other contractors to drill .the wells, but wanted to help the drilling company. The appellant advanced to the drilling company $1,000 before it did anything, and it advanced it in all the sum of $2,200 between June 14 and November 28,1923, inclusive. This amount, with the amount paid into court, made the sum of $6,738 due' the drilling company for footage. . The appellant paid the City National Bank the sum of $500 as an accommodation to the drilling company. Witness did not know whether this was for material used, -in drilling the well- or not. Witness would have paid Mrs. Drain out of the $4,555.85 due on the Byars well,- but was prevented by the suit of laborers and materialmen for prior liens. The order of the drilling, company accepted by the appellant was given before the drilling company had any contract to drill for the appellant. The materials paid for by the appellant. were added to the drilling company’s rig used in drilling the Byars well, on which machinery Mrs. Drain had a mortgage. The appellant put. in evidence a certified copy of a decree of the Crawford Chancery Court, which decree recites, as follows:

“On this day this cause comes on-to be heard, the plaintiffs appearing in person and by their respective attorneys, the defendant, Fort Smith Drilling Company, appearing by its attorneys, Warner, Hardin & Warner, the defendants, Industrial Oil & Gas Company and Crow Oil &-Gas Company, appearing by their attorney, E. L.

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

Related

May v. Edwards
505 S.W.2d 13 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1974)
Central States Life Insurance v. Simmons
105 S.W.2d 1077 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1937)
Hot Springs Golf & Country Club Ass'n v. Community Bank & Trust Co.
32 S.W.2d 427 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1930)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
286 S.W. 971, 171 Ark. 817, 1926 Ark. LEXIS 533, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crow-oil-gas-company-v-drain-ark-1926.