Davis v. Godwin-Barclay Co.

1926 OK 923, 251 P. 1042, 120 Okla. 274, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 451
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 23, 1926
Docket16918
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 1926 OK 923 (Davis v. Godwin-Barclay Co.) 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
Davis v. Godwin-Barclay Co., 1926 OK 923, 251 P. 1042, 120 Okla. 274, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 451 (Okla. 1926).

Opinion

Opinion by

THREAD GILL, C.

Plaintiffs in error brought this action to cancel a royalty conveyance made by them to defendant on November 8, 1922, oh the ground of fraud and inadequacy of consideration, both of which were pleaded in the petition and ■denied by the answer of defendant. The case was tried to the court as one of equitable cognizance and judgment rendered for defendant, and plaintiffs have appealed cn the ground that the judgment is against the weight of the evidence.

For convenience, the plaintiff in error C. G. Davis will be referred to herein as plaintiff, and Evelyn Davis as plaintiff’s wife, and defendant in error as defendant.

The undisputed .facts in the case are substantially as follows : Plaintiff and his three brothers, Rufus P. Davis, commonly called Percy, Howard I. Davis and Leslie M. Wil-shire, whose name was changed by adoption, and his sister, Edith Manion, inherited from their father’s estate 160 acres of land, described as the S. W. % of section 27, T. 25 N., R. 1 W., in Kay county, and which is now a part of the Tonkawa oil field. On May 15, 1922, these parties executed an oil and gas lease to H. J. Barclay for a term of five years and as long thereafter as oil or gas was produced in paying quantities. This lease was taken as the property of the Godwin-Barclay Company. At that time there was no development for oil and gas closer to this 160 acres of land than three miles. Plaintiff was a man about 32 years of age and his wife about 30, and they lived at Mercer, Mo., where he was engaged as a telegraph operator. They had never lived in Oklahoma, but plaintiff had visited here. He made a visit to Kay county for a short time in 1915, and ,again in the fall of 1921, just after the discovery oil well was brought in three miles south of the Davis land, and then in November of 1922, when he and his wife visited his brother, Percy, who lived on the land, and when the contract in controversy was executed. Plaintiff and his wife were persons of common school education and of average business ability and plaintiff had special training in telegraphy. The defendant, through its principal stockholders and officers, H. J. Barclay and J. O. Godwin, desired to purchfus*} .one-half of, the l/8th royalty interest provided for in the lease owned by the four brothers and one sister. They bought one-half of the interest of said Percy Davis for $1,200 and made an agreement with him to pay him $100 in each case to' assist them, Barclay and Godwin for the company, in buying one-half of the interest of the other brothers and sister for $800 each. For this purpose Percy wrote each of ■ them - a letter, saying he had sold his interest to the company for $800 and stating that they could get the same price for their said interest if they desired to sell. These letters were turned over to the company, and H. J. Barclay wrote each one a letter, offering $800 for his or her one-half royalty interest and enclosed the letter written by Percy together with conveyance to be executed for such interest of $800 each and addressed these letters to the respective parties. It appears that all of them received the letters and accepted the proposition and sold their interest and conveyed it to defendant, except the plaintiff. He received the letter and the conveyance enclosed to him about the 1st of October, 1922, and on October 26th he answered:

“Referring to your letter of October 4th, have delayed answering on account of sickness and left Mercer shortly after receiving same. Do not care to sell royalty at the figure you mention. I expect to be down there in the next week or ten days.. In case you write further in regard to this, please write me here.”

About November 4th, thereafter, he and his wife arrived at Tonkawa and the next day they went out some four miles in the country and visited their brother Percy, who lived on the Davis farm, and he talked the royalty matter over with his brother, and the same day or the next day they drove over the prospective oil field and visited a well which was being drilled about one-half mile east of the Davis farm, and talked to different persons about oil and gas properties and the value of royalties, and sought to find a buyer other than the defendant for his royalty interest, but was unable to get a better offer than defendant had made him. In the meantime, Barclay and Godwin of defendant company called at his brother’s house to see him about November 6th. and, after considerable conversation, they offered him $1,000 for his interest at his suggestion that it ought to be worth more than when his brothers and sister sold their interest *276 for $800, as the development of the proven oil territory had approached nearer to the land, and H. J. Bar way wrote out a check, in plaintiff’s presence, for this amount and told him when he and his wife should sign the conveyance and acknowledge it he could cash the check. There is some conflict in the evidence as to what was done with the check when written. Plaintiff says it was given to him there and then, but Barclay says he took It to town and turned it over to Fred French, assistant cashier of the Bank of Commerce, who was a notary public, and directed him to deliver it to Davis when he and his wife came in and acknowledged the .conveyance, and French’s testimony corroborates Barclay, and, while we do not regard this disputed fact as material, we think the weight of the evidence on this point is with the defendant. It would make no, difference whether he got the check at the time it was written or whether it was delivered to him by French after the acknowledgment was taken. The plaintiff and his wife appeared at the bank and advised with said Fred French about selling the royalty and its value, and he told them he thought it wise to sell and the price offered seemed to be reasonable, since no one could tell whether or not the oil and gas development would reach the Davis land. Thereupon French took their acknowledgment and kept the conveyance for the company and delivered to plaintiff the check, which he cashed. Thereafter, about June, 1923 plaintiff again visited his brother Percy and, in the meantime, oil had been discovered on the Davis land, and Percy told plaintiff that he received $1,200 for his royalty interest in the lease and $400 for recommending to him and the other brothers and sister that they should sell their interest at $800 each. Thereafter, on January 31, 1925, plaintiff fi'ed this action with the result as above stated. These are the material facts in the ease, and we think there are two questions to be answered decisive of the appeal.

The first is whether or not the facts, as above stated, are sufficient to show such fraud, on the part of the company in using the letter written by Percy Davis, the brother, to entitle plaintiff to the relief prayed for. As we view it, this question must be answered in the negative, for the reason that it is clear that plaintiff did not rely upon the representations of his brother as to the value of the royalty interest in the oil and gas lease. When he received the letters and conveyance to be executed, he waited nearly a month to answer, and in his answer he turned the $800 proposition down and then went to Tonkawa and visited the said prospective oil field to investigate for himself.

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Bluebook (online)
1926 OK 923, 251 P. 1042, 120 Okla. 274, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 451, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-godwin-barclay-co-okla-1926.