Currier v. Stauffer

1934 OK 210, 32 P.2d 871, 168 Okla. 334, 1934 Okla. LEXIS 171
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 3, 1934
Docket24810
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1934 OK 210 (Currier v. Stauffer) 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
Currier v. Stauffer, 1934 OK 210, 32 P.2d 871, 168 Okla. 334, 1934 Okla. LEXIS 171 (Okla. 1934).

Opinion

BAYLESS, J.

This is an appeal from one phase of case No. 66445, L. C. Jones, Plaintiff, v. Capitol Production Trust No. 1 et al., Defendants, pending in the district court of Oklahoma county, Okla.

Certain lien claimants, parties to the action, petitioned for the appointment of a receiver. This petition was granted and S. M. Stauffer is now receiver for the property involved in that action. This property eon.sisted of a lease of 13/16ths interest in the •oil and gas rights, certain drilling equipment on the lease, and a hole drilled to a ■depth of about 4,500 feet. The receiver made a contract with W. C. Currier, duly approved by the court, for the further drilling- of this hole in the hope of getting a producing well. Currier’s compensation for drilling this well was to be $329,865, payable as follows: $164,927.50 from the first 13/16ths of the oil or gas saved and sold from this lease, after operating expenses had been paid, and $164,927.50 from 1/2 of 13/16ths of the oil and gas thereafter' produced after operating expenses had been paid. Currier assigned interests in this contract, but the positions and contentions of him and his assignees are the same, and they will be referred to herein collectively as Currier. Currier drilled the hole deeper and brought in a producing well. In the meantime, and thereafter, litigation arose between Currier and his assignees (see State ex rel. Stauffer v. Halley, No. 22798, 159 Okla. 14, 12 P. [2d] 523), and between Currier and the receiver (see State ex rel. v. Chambers No. 22939 1 no opinion filed) all of which was finally adjudicated. During this period of time the proceeds from the sale of 13/16ths of the oil and gas saved and sold was, by agreement between the parties and under the supervision of the trial court, applied to the payment of Currier’s obligations incurred in the drilling of the well. The proceeds of the sale of 13/16ths of the oil and gas saved and sold since that time has been paid into the hands of the receiver. The court ordered the receiver paid $2,500 as an allowance upon his compensation and the receiver’s attorney paid $1,-500 as an allowance upon his fee, and $200 as court costs, from the money in the hands of the receiver derived as aforesaid. Currier appeals from this order.

Currier’s contentions may be stated thus: That by virtue of his contract with the receiver, approved by the court, the portions of the oil and gas saved and sold, and its proceeds áfter the operating expenses are paid, named as his, are his, and are not subject to charge for the payment of the expenses of the administration of the receivership estate and costs, and the court has no authority to, in effect, disturb the terms of his contract and apply the money elsewhere. The receiver’s contentions are, in effect, the negative of Currier’s.

The receiver at the time of his appointment found himself in charge of certain tangible property of an alleged value at that time insufficient to satisfy the liens and charges against it. As this property then stood to be administered by the receiver for the benefit of those then interested, the compensation to be paid by the receiver and the *335 expenses to Re incurred by him, including-attorneys fees, were undoubtedly to be classed as court costs and to be paid first.

Certain of the tangible property that came into the hands of the receiver had a speculative potential value much in excess of its then known value. This speculative potential value could only be tested out by the expensive process of drilling a well. If such a well was drilled and proved true this potential value, the value of the estate in the hands of the receiver would be greatly enhanced.

The question before us is: If the receiver entered into a duly approved contract with a third person to perform services in the drilling of this well, and resulting in the enhancing in value of the estate in his hands, for a stated compensation, can the receiver then postpone the payment of such compensation until he has been paid for his services. or can he relegate the priority of payment of such compensation, as provided in the contract, to a position of inferiority in time of payment as regards his compensation?

Th(> receiver says yes, because to say otherwise would be to let the courts lose control of their estates, or, to phrase it as the 'receiver did in the oral argument, to let the court commit suicide ■ by rendering it unable to pay the costs of its own operation. In other words, the effect of the receiver’s argument is to say. regardless of the terms of a contract, it is always imputed to the parties that the law of receiverships, and especially the priority of payment of the cost, of administration of the receivership estate, is known to them, and impliedly is a part of the contract.

Is this always true? Suppose, for example, that in this case the receiver had made a contract to give Currier a bill of sale to the drilling equipment for drilling this well, and the bill of sale had been put in escrow pending performance by Currier. Could it be contended that upon performance by Currier and demand for the title papers to the equipment, the receiver could reclaim these papers and sell the property and deliver the balance to Currier as ■ fulfillment of the receiver’s obligation to the contract? Or, suppose that the receiver had in the estate the lease, subject to many unpaid liens and charges, and the sum of $5,000 in cash: and. he then and there, under an approved contract, paid to Currier, in advance, this $5,-000 to drill the well, and the well had been drilled in as a dry hole, thereby destroying the value of the lease, could the receiver then get back from Currier enough of the $5,000 already paid to pay himself and his attorney? In our judgment, no.

But the receiver says he should not be permitted to contract to this end or result. Of course, this whole matter is being presented to us as if there will never be anything in this estate from which the receiver will be able to pay himself his compensation. We do not know whether this is or will be true, but we do not think that it has any material bearing upon the answer to this question.

According to 53 C. J. 256, under the subtitle “Agreement of Receiver”, 53 C. J. 383, sec. 622, and notes 4 and 8, and 23 R. C. L.. page 136, sec. 144 and note 14, it is not unknown that a receiver may agree to serve without compensation, or may limit the amount of his compensation'in advance, or may waive its priority for payment in favor of other claims. In addition to this we nowhere find that such a contract, even if it results in a court unduly hampering itself,, is contrary to public policy.

We are cited the case of Cornell v. N. & L. Co., 189 Fed. 556, and the decision on appeal of . the Circuit Court of Appeals of the Second Circuit in 201 Fed. 320. In this-case a receiver was named for a machine company which had recently suffered the loss by fire of most of its tangible property. This lost property was covered by policies of insurance with various insurance companies located in foreign countries, which companies deniecl liability.

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Bluebook (online)
1934 OK 210, 32 P.2d 871, 168 Okla. 334, 1934 Okla. LEXIS 171, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/currier-v-stauffer-okla-1934.