Donley v. Ardrey

261 S.W. 1059, 1924 Tex. App. LEXIS 950
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 12, 1924
DocketNo. 8955.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 261 S.W. 1059 (Donley v. Ardrey) 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
Donley v. Ardrey, 261 S.W. 1059, 1924 Tex. App. LEXIS 950 (Tex. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

JONES, C. J.

This appeal is from a judgment in the district court of Dallas county adverse to appellants, who had sued appel-lees for an indebtedness of $25,608 alleged to have been due the firm of Wagner & Don-ley Bros, for the drilling of wells Nos. 4 and 5 on a tract of 94 acres of land in Eastland county. Appellants asserted a one-half interest in said indebtedness, and sought to recover the other one-half interest for the estate of their then deceased partner, Wagner. The following general statement will be sufficient to show the general conditions under which this litigation arose:

The Texas Pacific Coal & Oil Company was the owner of an oil and gas lease on the Dan McCleskey 9-aere tract of land in Eastland county, Tex. There had been drilled on this land one well, down near the oil sand, when said company on January 25, 1919, sold an undivided one-half interest in its lease to R. L. Steiner; the consideration to be paid by Steiner being $100,000 in cash and an additional $50,000 to be paid out of oil as same was produced by development of the property. This sale was to be consummated within 15 days from said date by the payment of the cash consideration by Steiner and by the delivery to him by the company of an assignment of the said one-half interest, There was a further consideration that the cost of the development of the property was to be borne by the assignee. This developing of the lease was to begin within 30 days by the placing of two standard rigs in operation on the land and to keep them in operation until 2 wells, including the one that was nearing completion, should be drilled. The maximum number of wells that could be drilled was 11, but the conditions of the lease would be satisfied by the completion of the said 2 wells.

At the time the said Steiner contracted to purchase this lease he was in partnership with one Warren Wagner under the firm name of Wagner & Steiner, and they were engaged in the production, piping, and marketing of oil in the oil fields of Eastland county and its vicinity. The transaction in question, however, was not a partnership transaction, but was undertaken in the first instance by Steiner alone, as a side matter, Steiner, when he secured the said contract for the assignment of the said lease, interested the other appellees in his undertaking, and also interested his partner, Wagner; he being an experienced driller of oil wells.

The written lease to the undivided one-half interest in the property was executed to Steiner by the Texas Pacific Coal & Oil Company on March 25, 1919. Previous to this Steiner had executed assignments of his *1060 entire interest in such lease in terms of percentage, as follows: To Warren Wagner, 50 per cent.; to Herbert D. Ardrey, individually, 10 per cent.; to Herbert D. Ardrey, as trustee for Steiner, 15 per cent.; to Herbert D. Ardrey, as trustee for A. Ragland, 5 per cent.; to D. R. Hunger, 1% per cent.: to O. H. Munger, 5 per cent.; and to J. Fred Schoellkopf, 7% per cent. — making the total of 100 per cent. These parties paid their proportionate share of the $100,000 cash consideration. On April 9, 1919, Warren Wagner, as the ownér of one-half of this assignment, transferred 1 per cent, of his interest to Prank J. Burk and 1 per cent, to O. L. Wallace.

It was understood between these various owners of this assignment that Wagner was to take charge of the development of the property, at least so far as the placing of the two standard rigs on the property and the drilling of the two wells made necessary by the terms of the lease were concerned. It was not understood that Wagner was to have a free hand in the development of the property, other than to drill the two said wells. In a meeting of the various owners of this assignment it was estimated that $8,000 would be sufficient to complete well No. 1, and it was believed that the sale of the production of well No. 1 would be sufficient, without an extra outlay of money, to complete well No. 2, and that the sale of the production from these two wells would be amply sufficient to pay for whatever future development of the property should be determined upon. The parties, however, agreed to raise at once $12,000, by each contributing to this sum in proportion to his interest in the lease, and that this sum of money should be placed in a bank to the credit of Ardrey as treasurer for the owners of the lease. It was to be checked out by Wagner as needed in the work undertaken by him on the two wells, the completion of which would fulfill the terms of the contract between Steiner and the said coal and oil company.

Work was at once begun by Wagner, with-the result that well No. 1 was completed in a short time and at a cost of from $2,000 to $2.500, but the entire $12,000 was in a very short time paid out on cheeks issued by Wagner. This well, though announced by Wagner to be an 800-barrel well, was shown by the pipe line returns to have a production of from 200 to 300 barrels a day.

Immediately after the completion of the first well, Wagner, without consulting the other owners of the lease, and without informing them of his intention, proceeded to drill, or caused to be drilled, wells Nos. 2, 3, and 4, and later 5, 6, and 7, and appropriated all the oil from well No. 1 to his own use and made no accounting to the other parties therefor, and refused them any information concerning the extent of the production other than his statement of the production of well No. 1 at the time it was brought in. Attempts were made by the other owners of the lease to secure a statement-of Wagner of what he was doing and of what the production amounted to on the property, but this resulted each time in a failure. The appellees, as the other owners of the lease with Wagner, desired to form a corporation to which all their interests should be conveyed, but did not succeed in interesting Wagner in this proposition. Wagner, however, began to call- for money, and to complain that the burden of this entire property had been thrown upon him, and suggesting that some arrangement would have to be made to assist him in this matter. This resulted in a conference being held in Dallas, at which Wagner and the others were present. At this conference, however, nothing was accomplished. Wagner was not given any money by the other parties, and they were rendered no statement, either of the oil that had been produced or the development that had been undertaken. ^

Finally, however, and on May 25, 1919, on the occasion of the visit of some of the owners of this lease to the oil field, an agreement was reached between Wagner and the other parties, who are the appellees in this cause. It was estimated that $88,000 would pay all the indebtedness incurred by Wagner on all the development work that had been done and which would be done up to June 1, 1919. With this estimate as a basis, it was agreed by the parties that a corporation would be formed, with a capital stock of $200,000, to be represented by the $100,000 that had been paid for the lease, the $12,000 that had been paid in for development purposes, and the $8S,000 to pay all the outstanding indebtedness; that all development by Wagner was to cease, and no further development made, except by authority of the corporation. An attorney who accompanied these parties returned to Dallas and at once prepared all the papers necessary for the formation of the corporation and sent them to Wagner for his execution. This he did not do, and the corporation was never formed. At the time of this meeting and agreement, on May 25, 1919, well No.

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261 S.W. 1059, 1924 Tex. App. LEXIS 950, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/donley-v-ardrey-texapp-1924.