Davis v. Lyons

274 S.W. 288, 1925 Tex. App. LEXIS 613
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 8, 1925
DocketNo. 2460. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 274 S.W. 288 (Davis v. Lyons) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Davis v. Lyons, 274 S.W. 288, 1925 Tex. App. LEXIS 613 (Tex. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

HALL, C. J.

We adopt the statement of the nature and result of the suit from appellant’s brief, concurred in by appellee; as follows:

Davis, as plaintiff, sued Mrs. .Lyons, the Canadian Park Oil Company, Ward .Grow, W. F. Seeger, and the members of the Canadian Park Oil Company, as partners, alleging, in substance, in his amended original petition that the Canadian Park Oil Company, which originally owned the lease in question, about June 20, 1921, entered into a written agreement with Cox & Worley, un *289 der which, they turned over the lease to the latter to operate by an agreement which provided that if Oox & Worley doubled the production from the lease or drilled as many as two additional wells, they were to have a half interest in the lease, and bound itself to assign such interest to them upon fulfillment of said conditions; that the lease and contract were later assigned to Grow, and about January L 1922, Grow orally assigned said interest in the lease to plaintiff, Davis; that Oox & Worley entered into possession under such contract, and they and their assignees, Grow and others, and plaintiff complied with the terms of such contract, or by plaintiff became entitled to a half interest in the lease; that the oil company had full knowledge at all times of such contracts and transactions; that about March 1, 1922, and at various other times, plaintiff demanded that the defendant oil company transfer to him his half interest; that the oil company refused to comply with his request, but assigned the same to Mrs. Lyons, who, with full knowledge of plaintiff’s lease, went into possession of the- lease, ousted the plaintiff, and appropriated to her own use plaintiff’s half of the oil produced, to his damage in the sum of $5,000; and also deprived piain-,tiff of the value of his half of such lease, to his damage in the sum of $7,500, and by recording her lease from the oil company to herself, she willfully clouded the title of plaintiff to the lease to his damage in the sum of $5,000. It is further alleged that Grow, by false and. fraudulent representations,. induced plaintiff to purchase' said lease, falsely representing that it produced 15 barrels of oil per day, to plaintiff’s damage in the sum of $5,000; that after Grow had, on January 2, 1922, assigned to plaintiff all the rights which Grow et al. had under the Cox & Worley contract, that is. said one-half interest in the lease, the plaintiff lawfully entered into possession with full consent of all parties, and continued to operate the lease until June 20th following, during which time he drilled one well, made payments upon the purchase money, and expended in the operation and development of the lease $4,090 over and above all sums derived by him from the oil produced therefrom. Plaintiff prayed for judgment, and in t addition to certain sums not material to this appeal, for the following: (1) $3,000 as the value of oil appropriated from the lease after plaintiff’s ouster; (2) $4,090 as the amount advanced in paying for' and improving the lease while in plaintiff’s possession, after deducting the proceeds of the oil run by him; (3) $7,500 as the value of plaintiff’s half interest in said lease.

The defendant, in addition to, exceptions and allegations not deemed material to this appeal, pleaded: (1) the statute of frauds as against the purported oral conveyances. (2) That the contract between the Canadian Park Oil Company and Cox & Wor-ley was subject to a contract subsequently made between Grow, after he had taken over such contract, and the oil company, under which Grow undertook to purchase the remaining half of the lease for $8,-000, evidenced by a number of promissory notes, and that a transfer of such lease was conditioned upon the payment of such notes; that the assignment of the lease to plaintiff Davis contemplated the assumption of such notes; that such sum not having been paid by Davis, Grow and his associates had re-conveyed their interest to the oil company, which in turn had conveyed the entire lease to Mrs. Lyons for $10,000. (3) That plaintiff .went into possession of the lease January 1, 1922, and remained in possession until June 1, 1922, and a recovery of $3,000 against him was asked for the oil taken by him from the lease during that time. (4) They sought a recovery upon a note for $413, alleged to have been executed to the City. National Bank as collateral for a note of the defendants, such note being later conveyed to the oil company when it took up the note to which the Davis note was attached as collateral. (5) That Davis had stated that he had no contract with Grow, and refused to pay anything on his written contract wih Grow, whereupon Grow and his associates reassigned to. the oil company their interest in such lease, together with all claims theyl had against Davis for the latter’s part of the purchase price of said lease. A judgment was sought for the property and the several amounts claimed. No tender was made of any amount spent by Davis.

By supplemental petition: (1) Plaintiff denied that the Cox & Worley contract under which he claimed the half interest was related to or controlled in any way by the subsequent contract between Grow and the oil company, but alleged that the half interest which passed under the former contract was a vested interest, and was entirely independent of the subsequent contract between Grow and the oil company. (2) He further pleaded failure of consideration, that the $413 note was accommodation paper, and that it was satisfied .by the payment of the note which it was intended to secure. (3) He denied that he had realized anything from the oil run of the lease other than such as he was entitled to under his contract. (4) On January 1, 1922, Grow assigned him all interest he had under the Cox & Worley contract, being a half interest, and carrying with it possession and the right of operating the lease, and had placed him in possession of the lease with the knowledge and consent of the oil company; and he had, under such agreement, drilled and cleaned out the wells, and paid on the purchase money, expending *290 in all $4|090 over and above what lie realized out of the oil run.

The case was tried before the court without a jury. The substance of the court’s finding is as follows: (1) The Canadian Park Oil Company, a copartnership, originally owned the lease in question. (2) Such company executed the contract, shown as Exhibit B to plaintiffs petition, to Cox & Worley, which contract was subsequently assigned to Ward Grow. (3) After acquiring the Cox & Worley interest, Grow, on November 5, 1921, contracted to purchase the remaining interest from the oil company for $8,000, payable in notes, in which contract it was agreed that the assignment of the whole lease should remain in escrow until all notes were paid. (4) That about January 22, 1922, and after such contract of November 5, 1921, had been placed in the bank, and after he had drilled one well and increased the production to double the amount it was at the time the oil company made the agreement with Cox & Worley, Ward Grow made an executory contract with W. F. Davis, in which he agreed to convey the lease to Davis for $6,849, with the understanding that Davis should assume the $7,600 due the Canadian Park Oil Company, "as shown by such agreement,” attached to the court’s finding as Exhibit I., (5) That the assignment was delivered to Davis, but never recorded, and was marked “rejected” by him with a pen, and the notes and deed of trust called for therein were not delivered by him, and nothing was paid except $1,000.

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

Related

Sheldon v. Stagg
169 S.W.2d 550 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1943)
Dayle L. Smith Oil Co. v. Griffin
104 S.W.2d 167 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1937)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
274 S.W. 288, 1925 Tex. App. LEXIS 613, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-lyons-texapp-1925.