D & F Petroleum v. Cascade Oil Co. (In Re Cascade Oil Co.)

65 B.R. 35, 1986 Bankr. LEXIS 5730
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Kansas
DecidedJuly 8, 1986
Docket19-10295
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 65 B.R. 35 (D & F Petroleum v. Cascade Oil Co. (In Re Cascade Oil Co.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
D & F Petroleum v. Cascade Oil Co. (In Re Cascade Oil Co.), 65 B.R. 35, 1986 Bankr. LEXIS 5730 (Kan. 1986).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION

JOHN K. PEARSON, Bankruptcy Judge.

This adversary proceeding is before the Court upon the joint motion of the debtor and Official Unsecured Creditors’ Committee for partial summary judgment with respect to certain individual defendants in the above captioned adversaries. Hereafter the Court will refer to “the Committee”, “the debtor” and “the Kirklands” as such and the various purchasers of working interest shares as the “investors”. 1 The Court recognizes that the label “investor” may not reflect the position of all such purchasers, but adopts that label for convenience in reference.

A: PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

This adversary was originally commenced by D & F Petroleum, Kermit Our-sler, and Paul Fiacco against the debtor and a number of individuals and entities in 1983. An amended complaint followed very quickly and the debtor and the Committee filed separate answers. Ultimately the debtor and the Committee joined in an amended answer and counter- or cross-claim against the other defendants. 2 It appears that the various claims have been brought sufficiently into focus for the Court to consider the motions and set the various adversaries for trial on a number of claims for relief including, but not limited to the following:

1. D & F Petroleum, Kermit Oursler and Paul Fiacco (hereafter “D & F, Oursler and Fiacco”), seek a determination that each has an interest in an oil and gas lease generally known as the “Vestring Lease.” 3

2. Cascade Oil Company (the “debtor”), joined by the Committee, seeks to avoid the claims of virtually all of the other claimants, record or otherwise, to the Vestring Lease under various provisions of 11 U.S.C. §§ 544(a)(3), 547, 548 and 549:

a. The “investors”, 4 who claim an interest in the Vestring Lease by virtue of an assignment dated January 19, 1982, and recorded on September 7, 1982, after the petition for relief herein.
b. Larry and Lonnie Kirkland (hereinafter “the Kirklands”), former officers and directors of the debtor corporation, claim an overriding royalty interest in the Vestring Lease by virtue of an assignment dated August 25, 1981, recorded June 10, 1982, after the petition for relief.
c. Patrick Mercier (hereinafter “Mer-cier”), who claims an overriding royalty interest in the Vestring Lease by virtue of an assignment dated August 25, 1981, recorded June 10,1982, after the filing of the petition for relief.
d. Paul Bell (hereinafter “Bell”), a former employee of the debtor corporation, who claims a portion of the working interest (the amount is apparently in dispute) by virtue of an assignment recorded April 20, 1982, but modified by virtue of a “stipulation” recorded August 16, *37 1982, and settlement ultimately approved by this Court.
e. D & F and Oursler who claim an interest by virtue of an assignment dated September 25, 1981, but recorded June 8, 1982, after the petition for relief herein,

3.The debtor and the Committee have filed a motion for summary judgment against the investors, Lonnie Kirkland and Pat Mercier. The balance of the adversary is now set for trial beginning July 22, 1986.

B: SUMMARY OF RULING

For the reasons hereinafter set out, the Court grants the Committee’s motions with respect to the investor group, Lonnie Kirkland and Pat Mercier and directs entry of judgment against the investors, Lonnie Kirkland and Pat Mercier, individually, and in favor of the debtor and Committee, setting aside the post-petition transfer to the individual investors, Lonnie Kirkland and Pat Mercier of any interest in the working interest of the Vestring Lease.

The parties’ positions with respect to this litigation are not surprising. The investors, Mr. Kirkland and Mr. Mercier (presumably) assert that the trustee’s avoiding powers under § 544(a)(3) are limited by the provisions of § 541(d). 5 Not surprisingly, the Creditors’ Committee advances the position that the debtor’s § 544 powers are separate and apart from the § 541 property rights and not dependent or in any way limited thereby.

C: FINDINGS OF FACT

From reading the investors’ pleadings and the balance of the file, the Court concludes that there are no genuine disputes as to the following material facts:

1. The debtor was engaged in drilling oil and gas wells in Central Kansas prior to the filing of its petition for relief,

2. In April 1980, four members of the Vestring family granted an oil and gas lease to Robert Vestring on 640 acres of land located in Chase County, Kansas known as “the Vestring Lease”. Robert Vestring, in turn, assigned that lease to the debtor,, reserving an overriding royalty interest in addition to the usual landowner s interest.

3. In late 1979, the investors individually contracted for the purchase of the working interest in a drilling program marketed by the debtor under the title of “The Chase 16 Program.” Under the terms of that offering, each investor was allowed to purchase, for $24,000.00, a five percent'interest in the working interest of the Chase 16 Lease. 6

4. The Chase 16 Program required that the debtor drill 16 wells on the Chase 16 Lease and refund a prorata share of the invested money for each well which was not commercial and not completed.

5. The debtor could not complete 16 commercial wells on the original Chase 16 Lease and apparently decided to transfer to the investors similar interests in other leases in lieu of refunding their money under the program agreement. 7 Pursuant to the debtor’s decision, the debtor assigned the investors various interests in a lease known as the “Carlson Lease” located in Marion County, Kansas on December 1, 1980.

9. The investors, other than their initial payments to the debtor in 1979, made no further investment in or payments to the debtor in exchange for the assignment of interests in the Carlson and Vestring leases.

*38 10. Lonnie Kirkland and Pat Mercier, respectively, claim a .025859375% and a .015625% overriding royalty interest in the Yestring Lease based on an assignment executed August 25, 1981, but recorded June 10, 1982. 8

D: CONCLUSIONS OF LAW

11. The Court has jurisdiction over the subject matter and parties and venue is proper in Kansas.

12.

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Bluebook (online)
65 B.R. 35, 1986 Bankr. LEXIS 5730, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/d-f-petroleum-v-cascade-oil-co-in-re-cascade-oil-co-ksb-1986.