Daughtrey v. Allred

22 So. 3d 1253, 173 Oil & Gas Rep. 469, 2009 Miss. App. LEXIS 874, 2009 WL 4591086
CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedDecember 8, 2009
Docket2008-CA-00826-COA
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 22 So. 3d 1253 (Daughtrey v. Allred) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Daughtrey v. Allred, 22 So. 3d 1253, 173 Oil & Gas Rep. 469, 2009 Miss. App. LEXIS 874, 2009 WL 4591086 (Mich. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

IRVING, J.,

for the Court.

¶ 1. This appeal arises out of contracts between Kenneth R. Daughtrey, Paul Upton, Charles Thomas Carden, and William Allred. In 1992, Allred approached Daughtrey and Upton with an opportunity to purchase mineral rights from Amoco Corporation. Thereafter, Upton and Daughtrey each purchased mineral rights and promised to convey, as a commission, fifteen percent of those rights to Carden, after their expenses for the purchase of the mineral rights had been recouped. Carden subsequently passed away, and Allred was assigned Carden’s rights to the fifteen-percent interests. In 2003, Allred filed suit in the Jones County Chancery Court against Daughtrey and Upton, seeking conveyance of the fifteen-percent interests as well as damages for lost profits. The chancery court found in favor of All-red, and ordered Daughtrey and Upton to convey their interests and pay Mired $26,807, each, as damages. Feeling aggrieved by the chancery court’s judgment, Daughtrey and Upton appeal, asserting that Allred lacked standing to file his complaint, that the court erred in finding the contract enforceable, and that the court erred in finding that a ten-year statute of limitations applied to Allred’s claim, rather than a three-year statute of limitations.

¶ 2. Finding no reversible error, we affirm.

FACTS

¶ 3. In 1992, Carden learned of an opportunity to purchase from Amoco around fifty-three thousand acres of mineral rights, spread over numerous Mississippi counties. Carden and Allred had been close friends and business associates for a number of years, and Carden brought All-red into the Amoco deal. Allred in turn brought in Daughtrey, Upton, and two other investors, each of whom agreed to convey fifteen percent of their mineral rights to Carden as a commission for the Amoco deal. In total, thirteen investors purchased various percentages of the Amoco mineral rights. Allred purchased 5.68% of the mineral rights for almost seventy-five thousand dollars, and Daughtrey and Upton each received a 1.89% ownership interest in the mineral rights for about twenty-five thousand dollars each. Testimony indicated that there were transactional costs and expenses of approximately fifty thousand dollars, of which Daughtrey and Upton each paid around a thousand dollars as their pro rata share. Shortly after the purchase of the mineral rights, Daughtrey, Upton, and the two other investors recruited by Allred each signed an agreement to convey fifteen percent of their mineral *1256 rights to Carden as promised prior to being allowed to purchase a percentage of the Amoco mineral rights. The fifteen percent was to be paid “at such time as [the] investment had paid out.” 1 The agreement also stated that each investor “agrees to notify C.T. Carden at such time as payout occurs and within thirty (30) days of payout[,] assign in writing by recordable Assignment 15% of the interest acquired by [the investor].... ” Testimony at trial indicated that Daughtrey and Upton expressed qualms about the commission before finally signing the contracts.

¶ 4. Carden passed away on September 12, 1995. On May 15, 1998, Jay Cuccia, Carden’s stepson, was appointed and confirmed as administrator of Carden’s estate. Carden’s rights to the fifteen-percent interests were assigned to Allred by Cuccia on February 28, 2000. The assignment stated that “although the agreements were executed in favor of Carden, same was done for the purpose of convenience only and were held in the name of Carden on behalf of William Wallace Allred.” In September 1999, Daughtrey and Upton received the payout of their investment in the mineral rights. Despite having contracted to do so, neither made any effort to inform anyone that their investment had paid out.

¶ 5. On February 27, 2003, Allred filed a complaint in the chancery court against Upton and Daughtrey, asserting that they had breached contracts requiring them to transfer fifteen percent of their mineral rights to Carden, and, subsequently, to Allred due to the assignment of that right to Allred. The complaint also sought reimbursement for the profits on the fifteen-percent interests that Upton and Allred had each been receiving.

¶ 6. Upton’s answer to Allred’s complaint was filed on April 8, 2003, while Daughtrey filed his answer on April 10, 2003. In them answers, Upton and Daughtrey asserted three affirmative defenses: (1) that the statute of limitations had run, (2) that Allred and Upton had an attorney-client relationship that should have prevented Allred from filing the action, and (3) that Allred’s dealings with them, combined with the lack of a disclosure agreement, prohibited Allred’s action because he was “in violation of the Standards of the Code of Ethics of Attorneys practicing in the State of Mississippi.” Both answers also stated that Upton and Daughtrey had assigned their fifteen-percent interests to Carden only after being assured by Allred that he had also assigned a portion of his interest to Carden.

¶ 7. On May 2, 2003, Upton and Daugh-trey filed separate motions requesting that their cases be consolidated. The record reflects that little was done in the case from mid-2003 until early 2005, when All-red filed a motion requesting a trial setting and consolidation of Upton’s and Daugh-trey’s cases. On June 6, 2005, the chancery court consolidated the two cases and set trial for November 9, 2005. Trial was delayed for a variety of reasons, including Hurricane Katrina. In August 2006, the chancery court entered an order bifurcating the trial “as to liability and damages.” Trial was ultimately held in September 2006.

¶ 8. Cuccia was the first witness to testify at trial. He testified that he had worked with Carden in the oil and gas industry for many years. He explained that Carden and Allred had been close friends who also conducted business to *1257 gether; he indicated that his stepfather and Allred “probably talked close to daily.Cuccia indicated that Carden and Allred trusted each other enough that many of their business deals were conducted verbally: “We were not worried about it if we sent a check to Wallace Allred for fifty thousand dollars, you know. It wasn’t like I had to follow up and say, oh, where is this deed, you know. Like, you know, you knew it was coming.”

¶ 9. Allred testified next. Like Cuccia, Allred testified about his close friendship with Carden. Allred explained that he had attempted to teach Daughtrey about the oil and gas business after Daughtrey approached him wanting to enter the market. Allred testified that he brought Upton into the Amoco deal because he and Upton had been very good friends for many years. Allred explained that, in the oil and gas business, it was not unusual to “pay for 100 percent and get 75 percent,” to, in other words, forfeit twenty-five percent of the mineral rights as a commission. All-red testified that, because he was friends with Upton, Daughtrey, and the other investors, he and Carden decided to charge only fifteen percent as a commission, and to make the commission payable only once the investors had recouped their initial outlay. The court asked Allred what “payout” meant in the oil and gas industry, and Allred explained: “In the industry, payout is that time and point at which the investor has received in income or sufficient income to cover his cost of drilling....

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Bluebook (online)
22 So. 3d 1253, 173 Oil & Gas Rep. 469, 2009 Miss. App. LEXIS 874, 2009 WL 4591086, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/daughtrey-v-allred-missctapp-2009.