Davis v. Indian Territory Co.

93 F.2d 976, 1937 U.S. App. LEXIS 2934
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedDecember 23, 1937
DocketNo. 1560
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 93 F.2d 976 (Davis v. Indian Territory Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Davis v. Indian Territory Co., 93 F.2d 976, 1937 U.S. App. LEXIS 2934 (10th Cir. 1937).

Opinion

PHILLIPS, Circuit Judge.

On November 22, 1929, the Indian Territory Company, hereinafter called the Company, and Longenecker entered into a contract in writing whereby Longenecker agreed to execute and deliver to the Company assignments of valid oil and gas leases covering 6,320 acres of land in a solid block, situated in Woodward County, Oklahoma, and particularly described in the contract, and to deliver to the Company abstracts of title covering such lands “showing title satisfactory to attorneys for” the Company. The contract recited that the Company had deposited in the Liberty National Bank of Oklahoma City the sum of $4,000.00 to be used in payment of drafts attached to leases upon the lands in the solid block, or upon lands within 1% miles of the outer limits thereof, upon approval of such drafts by the Company.

It further recited that all of the leases taken in the name of Longenecker upon the lands in the solid block and in the hands of the Company and all leases on lands within (a mile and one-half 1% miles) of the outer limits of the solid block which should thereafter be taken in the name of Longenecker and delivered to the Company, together with any balance remaining in the deposit, should be held by the Company as a guaranty of the performance by [978]*978Longenecker of his obligations under the contract.

It expressly provided that leases covering all of the lands in the solid block should be assigned and delivered to the Company.

It further provided that upon completion of delivery of the assignments and approval of .the titles, the balance of the deposit should be paid to Longenecker, and that the Company should pay him a • sum which, with the $4,000.00 deposited, would equal $2.25 per acre for the acreage covered by the leases in the solid block.

Davis and Longenecker entered into an oral agreement whereby the former was to assist the latter in carrying out the contract with the Company and under which they were to share the profits equally.

Leases covering 5,280 acres of land in the solid block and 3,920 acres within 1 %' miles of the outer limits thereof were on deposit in the Liberty National Bank of Oklahoma City accompanied by drafts. Davis advanced $9,000.00 and the Company $1,000.00 with which these drafts were taken up. Assignments of the leases covering 5,200 acres of the lands in the solid block and 2,920 acres of the lands within 1% miles of the outer limits thereof were executed by Longenecker and delivered to the Company. Abstracts for all o"f such lands except 640 acres were also delivered to the Company. Leases covering 1,080 acres were delivered to the Company without assignments. The Company recorded assignments covering 4,840 acres.

The abstracts were turned over to counsel for the Company for examination. He found many defects in the titles, made requirements which would have to be met before he would approve the titles and advised Longenecker and Davis in writing of such requirements.

Longenecker and Davis failed to meet these title requirements and on March 26, 1930, Longenecker and the Company entered into a supplemental contract. It referred to the contract of November 22, 1929; recited that the Company had made certain title requirements; that Longenecker had not met such requirements and had been unable to fulfill the terms of the contract of November 22, 1929, and provided:

“Now therefore, in consideration of the mutual interests of the parties and of the agreements herein entered into, it is agreed that the said contract of November 22, 1929 shall be supplemented and modified to the extent that the Indian Territory Company shall be permitted to put its own agents to work in the fulfillment of title requirements upon the block of leases hereinbefore referred to and shall be authorized to take any steps or expend any funds in its judgment proper to procure full, complete and merchantable title to oil and gas mining leases' covering the lands in said contract of November 22, 1929,. described, and to deduct all costs and expenses in connection therewith from any purchase price due or to become due to second party [Longenecker] or J. C. Davis for said block of leases or any part thereof.”

Neither Longenecker nor the Company met all the title requirements.

On August 26, 1930, the Company returned the leases and abstracts with reassignments of the assigned leases to Longenecker at his office in Oklahoma City. Two days later Longenecker returned the abstracts, papers, leases, assignments and reassignments to counsel for the Company.

Longenecker failed to furnish leases on certain of the lands in the solid block aggregating 1,040 acres. A number of the leases lapsed for nonpayment of rentals during the months of August, September, October and November, 1930.

On April 9, 1931, Longenecker and Davis brought this action against the Company to recover the sum of $2.25 per acre for 9,080 acres of leases, less a credit of $2,800.00 for moneys advanced by the Company. By an amendment to the petition they sought to recover $1.25 per acre on account of 200 acres of land in the solid block on which the Company had acquired leases directly from the^ landowners at a cost of $1.00 per acre, and $2.25 per acre on account of 160 acres of land in the solid block, a lease of which was tendered by Davis to the Company during the trial.

The Company filed an answer and cross-petition in which it alleged that Davis and Longenecker represented to the Company that they owned or had contracted for the purchase of oil and gas leases on the 6,-320 acres in the solid block, and that the leases they had not already purchased were deposited under escrow agreements in banks ready to be delivered to them upon payment of the purchase price; that there were several hundred acres of land in the solid block, which geological investigations indicated were the most valuable for oil [979]*979and gas, on which Davis and Longenecker had not acquired leases and had not secured the deposit of leases in escrow; that when the Company returned the leases, abstracts and assignments with reassignments to Longenecker in August, 1930, Longenecker and Davis had not acquired leases on a portion of the lands in the solid block and had failed to meet the requirements of counsel for the Company necessary to make the titles merchantable on more than 2,000 acres of the lands in the solid block. It set up that it had advanced $2,800.00 to Davis and Longenecker and had expended for abstracts and correction of title defects $1,702.14, and sought to recover from Longenecker and Davis on its cross-petition, for breach of the contract, damages in the sum of $4,502.14.

The parties entered into a stipulation waiving trial by jury and agreeing that the cause be referred to Honorable John J. Hildreth as referee to take the testimony and make findings of fact and conclusions of law and report the same to the court. An order of reference was entered, in accordance with the provisions of the stipulation.

Longenecker and Davis undertook to excuse their failure to furnish abstracts or title requirements showing title satisfactory to counsel for the Company by alleging and undertaking to prove that Lykes, head of the land department of the Company, subsequent to the contract of March 26, 1930, agreed that the employees of the Company would procure such title requirements.

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

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
93 F.2d 976, 1937 U.S. App. LEXIS 2934, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-indian-territory-co-ca10-1937.