Doyle v. Chief Oil Co.

148 P.2d 915, 64 Cal. App. 2d 284, 1944 Cal. App. LEXIS 1054
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 9, 1944
DocketCiv. 14110
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 148 P.2d 915 (Doyle v. Chief Oil Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Doyle v. Chief Oil Co., 148 P.2d 915, 64 Cal. App. 2d 284, 1944 Cal. App. LEXIS 1054 (Cal. Ct. App. 1944).

Opinion

YORK, P. J.

Defendants appeal from a judgment rendered in favor of plaintiffs for the sum of $3,315.66 and interest, as actual damages, and the further sum of $500, as exemplary damages, in an action for fraud arising out of an oil and gas lease.

The respondents Doyle, as owners and lessors, on March 26, 1934, entered into an oil and gas lease with one C. G. Truitt, as lessee, covering certain premises situate in the city of Signal Hill, under the provisions of which lessors were *286 to receive as royalty 12% per cent of all oil and gas produced from such premises. On November 2, 1934, said Truitt and Ms wife, as lessors, executed a sublease to appellant Chief Oil Company, which reserved to the lessors “as royalty the equal one-sixth part of the value of all oil removed from the leased premises” after making customary deductions, and also provided that “24. All payments which may fall due under this lease shall be made 12%% to J. J. Doyle and 4.6% to C. G. Truitt, one of the above named'lessors, in the manner herein stated.”

Thereafter, appellants drilled an oil well upon said land and placed the same on production on or about January 13, 1935. Said well which was commonly known as Chief Well No. 2, Doyle Lease, continued on production until sometime during the month of September, 1935, producing large quantities of oil and gas. Appellants accounted to respondents from month to month for the latter’s one-eighth landowners’ royalty, based on a total production of 28,536.64 barrels of oil, or, as alleged in the complaint, ‘1 deposited monthly what the defendants represented was the plaintiffs’ royalty of 12%% of the proceeds thereof ... to the account of the plaintiff, John J. Doyle, in the Security First National Bank of Los Angeles . . . accompanied with written statements purporting to show the amount of all the oil and gas sold by defendants and all the sums of money realized therefrom.”

Respondents instituted the instant action sounding in fraud, alleging that the statements and representations so made by appellants as to the total number of barrels of oil produced from said premises were false and fraudulent, were known by appellants to be false and fraudulent and were made and caused to be made by appellants with the purpose and intent of cheating and defrauding respondents out of their royalty on 18,450 barrels of oil, which was the difference between the production accounted for and the amount actually produced by the said well during the period in question.

Respondents also alleged that while said well was on production and at the time the complaint herein was filed, they were residents of the State of North Dakota, had no means of knowing that appellants were falsifying their statements as to production and remained unaware and did not discover the falsity of such statements of appellants until August, 1940.

*287 The court found that the total production was 50,842.60 barrels; that appellants had accounted to respondents for a total production of 28,536.64 barrels, and that appellants had failed to account to respondents for a total of 22,305.96 barrels of oil, and gave judgment accordingly, as hereinbefore indicated.

Appellants make the following specific assignments of error on the part of the trial court:

1. The admission in evidence of certain documents which were hearsay only and utterly incompetent as evidence;
2. That certain findings of fact are not supported by the evidence;
3. That it was error to render a judgment against the individual appellants.who were not parties to the contract or liable thereunder;
4. That exemplary damages are not allowable in an action for accounting based upon an express contract; .
5. That the judgment for exemplary damages in the sum of $500 is not sustained by the findings of fact.

The oil well here in question was not connected with any pipe line, consequently, when the oil was sold it was necessary to haul it in tank trucks. To facilitate delivery of the oil to the trucks, two large tanks 25 feet in height, each having a capacity of several hundred barrels, referred to as Tank No. 1 and Tank No. 2, were maintained at the site of the well and were filled in rotation with oil therefrom. Appellants employed as their pumper one Albert A. Dickinson, who had charge of the production of oil at the well. Among others, it was his duty to gauge or measure the oil in the tanks and prepare it for shipment. In order to keep a record of the production of the well and the amount of oil sold therefrom, appellants followed the customary practice of the oil industry, and furnished Dickinson with books known as pumper’s daily gauge reports made especially for that purpose, in which said Dickinson was required to mark down the number of the tank being gauged and the different gauge readings each time the tank was measured. The owners of the well and those in charge of its operation are furnished with a chart, or “strappings” so-called, to be used in measuring the oil in the tanks. This chart shows how much oil is in the tank at all various depths measured in feet and inches. As an illustration of this method of measuring oil *288 in the tank: when a purchaser wished to buy oil, the pumper in charge of the well would take a steel tape with a plumb bob at the end and drop it into the tank until the plumb bob touched the bottom of the tank. The steel tape would be withdrawn from the oil and the gauger would note the depth of the oil in the tank as shown by the mark on the steel tape. The gauger would then turn to the chart or “strappings” which showed the gauger, without any computation on his part, the exact number of barrels of oil in the tank at the particular depth.

Whenever oil was sold from the well here involved, the pumper Dickinson and the agent of the purchaser would take the high gauge of the tank from which the oil was being delivered, and the low gauge thereof after the oil was withdrawn. By referring to the chart the amount of oil that had been removed from the tank was ascertained. High, low and intermediate gauges were shown on the pumper’s daily gauge reports. Much of the oil produced by the well in question was purchased by the Los Angeles Refining Company which had in its employ a gauger by the name of Smith, who took the high and low gauges of the tank which was being shipped, and reported the figures to his company, together with a notation of the location of the well from which the oil was taken. Thereupon the refinery would issue crude oil invoices (also referred to as receipts or run tickets), stating the amount of oil thus received. Operators Oil and Refining Company of Long Beach was also a frequent purchaser of oil from the well and also issued “run tickets” for the oil shipped to it.

Beginning with the month of March, 1935, Dickinson kept in a blue book, plaintiffs’ exhibit 4, a record of oil sold and shipped from the well, together with the names of the purchasers to whom shipped and sold.

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Bluebook (online)
148 P.2d 915, 64 Cal. App. 2d 284, 1944 Cal. App. LEXIS 1054, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/doyle-v-chief-oil-co-calctapp-1944.