Deupree v. Garnett

1954 OK 110, 277 P.2d 168, 1954 Okla. LEXIS 710
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 6, 1954
Docket35744
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 1954 OK 110 (Deupree v. Garnett) 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
Deupree v. Garnett, 1954 OK 110, 277 P.2d 168, 1954 Okla. LEXIS 710 (Okla. 1954).

Opinion

BLACKBIRD, Justice.

This is an action by a firm of attorneys against another attorney for attorney’s fees. The undisputed facts comprising the background of the controversy are as hereinafter related.

Prior to 1941 one Clarence L. West-cott had been interested jointly and equally with persons by the names of M. B. Oberlee, W. S. Nelson, B. St. Denis and O. A. R. Samuelson, in the development for oil and gas purposes, of a large tract of United States Government land in Freemont County, Wyoming. The oil and gas lease from the Government named only Westcott, as lessee. The rental, whose payment was necessary to keep the lease from expiring, was due October 1, 1941. A few weeks previous to this date, Westcott, who lacked the necessary funds to pay the rental and was no longer in close contact with his fellow joint adventurers, being scattered, as they were, in several different states, came to Plaintiff in Error, who, in the trial court was, and will hereinafter be referred to as, defendant, at Oklahoma City, and employed him to take charge of the lease matter and salvage whatever he could from it for the owners, promising that he would be paid a liberal fee for his services out of what was salvaged. Defendant, after accepting said employment on said terms, wrote all of the other joint adventurers above named except Samuelson (whose address he and his client did not know), asking them to forward the necessary funds for the payment of the rental. St. Denis and Nelson forwarded to defendant enough money to pay their shares, and, as the rental paying date had almost arrived, defendant, without waiting for any further replies or remittances, advanced the rest of the needed funds himself and sent the entire sum to Wyoming in time to keep the lease alive. Later he was reimbursed for that part of the rental he had advanced, by St. Denis and Nelson. Oberlee never forwarded his share, but finally, in answer to defendant’s previous letters, wrote him from Kansas City of his unwillingness to advance the funds necessary to pay West-cott’s and Samuelson’s shares of the rental without “a better understanding” as to the security he would be furnished for such advancement.

Approximately six or eight months later Westcott came to defendant’s office where he obtained a form of the lease’s assignment that defendant had drawn for him and he had previously executed, with the name of the assignee left blank, and thereupon inserted therein St. Denis’ name as assignee and mailed it to him. Thereafter, defendant and St. Denis, working together, were successful in persuading the Sinclair Wyoming Oil Company to purchase the lease, paying a bonus of $2,000 and reserving to St. Denis, as vendor, a 4% overriding royalty.

After said sale of the lease, St. Denis and Nelson decided they would exclude Oberlee and Samuelson from any interest in the bonus and overriding royalty and then take 40% each for themselves, but would allow Westcott his 20%. Defendant, as Westcott’s attorney, protested that even though Westcott had contributed no money to the rental payment, he should share equally in the lease with St. Denis and Nelson. After much negotiation by correspondence, the differences between the three were resolved by an agreement that Westcott should be allowed a 30% interest in the bonus and overriding royalty, with St. Denis and Nelson keeping 35% each. This agreement was reduced to writing by defendant but it was not put into force until September 26, 1946, because a short time previously Westcott had been adjudged mentally incompetent and his wife, Mary Edna Westcott, had been appointed his guardian and the Order from the guardianship court approv *171 ing the agreement and her execution of it on his behalf was not entered until that date.

•In the meantime, the lessee, Sinclair Wyoming Oil Company, had obtained production on the lease in 1945 and said lease had been communitized for development with an adjoining one. Under the communitization plan, the percentages of said area’s production which the three associates were to have were: 1.4% each, for the St. Denis and Nelson interests, and 1.2% for the Westcott interest. Delivery of the proceeds of these interests in the production from the lease to said parties was prescribed in a division order to the oil company that specified checks for Westcott’s share of the production should be forwarded to him in care of defendant. When defendant received the first of Westcott’s royalty checks and notified Mr. and Mrs. Westcott of its arrival, they came to his office where they gave defendant one-si'xth of its proceeds and. are said to have orally agreed that he would receive the same proportion of all future checks as payment for the services he had rendered them in the matter. Later when Westcott came to defendant’s office on another occasion, defendant suggested that he execute and deliver to him a formal written assignment of one-sixth of the Westcott 30% interest, but Westcott angrily refused. The Westcotts then proceeded to employ Messrs. Halley and Douglas to represent them, and these attorneys made demand upon defendant for all of West-cott’s papers in his possession. Also, through these new attorneys, Mr. and Mrs. Westcott refused to pay defendant any further fee. Thereupon, defendant filed a claim in Westcott’s guardianship proceedings for payment for his services in the sum of one-sixth of Westcott’s 30% interest or 5% of the 4% overriding royalty hereinbefore described. Later, oh July 5, 1946, defendant sought to establish his right to such alleged interest by instituting Cause No. 113,316, entitled “Harlan Deupree v. Mary Edna West-cott, guardian of the person and estate of Clarence L. Westcott, Incompetent”, in the District Court of Oklahoma County. It was shortly thereafter that the firm' of attorneys who, in the trial of the present action, were, and in this opinion will be referred to as, “Plaintiffs”, entered the picture by being employed through one of. its members, Charles H. Garnett, to represent defendant in said action against the guardian, Mrs. Westcott. After plaintiffs' employment as defendant’s attorneys in that litigation, a settlement was reached whereby defendant was to get Jioth of Westcott’s 30% interest or 3% of the 4% overriding royalty, instead of the ⅛⅛ or 5% he had claimed. This settlement was incorporated in an agreed Journal Entry of Judgment entered and filed in Cause No. 113,316, supra, on May 9, 1947. Said judgment decreed, among other things, that Mrs. Westcott, the guardian, execute and deliver to defendant, as plaintiff therein, “a proper and legally sufficient assignment of an undivided 3% interest” in Westcott’s interest in the overriding royalty. Thereafter, in accord with said judgment, said guardian, on May 26, 1947, executed an assignment to defendant of the interest specified in said judgment, and 3 days later, Charles H. Garnett, to whom we will hereinafter refer by use of the single word “Plaintiff”, forwarded to the oil company said assignment, together with a certified copy of the guardianship court’s order authorizing and approving it. Subsequently, after correspondence between the oil company and plaintiff extending over more than a month, during which various requirements made by said company were met, apparently to its satisfaction, defendant received from it his first royalty check on August 2, 1947. According to his testimony defendant thereupon went to the plaintiff law firm’s office and offered to pay plaintiff one-sixth of said check’s proceeds on plaintiff’s fee for representing him.

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

Related

KEITH v. MARRS
2019 OK CIV APP 38 (Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma, 2019)
State Ex Rel. Howard v. Oklahoma Corp. Commission
1980 OK 96 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1980)
Kizer v. Davis
369 N.E.2d 439 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1977)
Nix v. STANDING COM. ON JUD. PERFORM. OF OKL. BAR ASS'N
1966 OK 264 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1966)
Sebree v. Rosen
393 S.W.2d 590 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1965)
American-Canadian Oil & Drilling Corp. v. Aldridge & Stroud
373 S.W.2d 148 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1963)
Lyles v. State
330 P.2d 734 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1958)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1954 OK 110, 277 P.2d 168, 1954 Okla. LEXIS 710, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/deupree-v-garnett-okla-1954.