E. R. Rice and M. Metzenbaum v. Hans May

231 F.2d 389, 5 Oil & Gas Rep. 1134, 1956 U.S. App. LEXIS 4640
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 29, 1956
Docket14426
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 231 F.2d 389 (E. R. Rice and M. Metzenbaum v. Hans May) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
E. R. Rice and M. Metzenbaum v. Hans May, 231 F.2d 389, 5 Oil & Gas Rep. 1134, 1956 U.S. App. LEXIS 4640 (9th Cir. 1956).

Opinion

CHAMBERS, Circuit Judge.

Herein Hans May, a Philadelphia doctor, seeks to recover $11,500 from E. R. Rice and Mr. Metzenbaum, Los Angeles, oil lease buyers and sellers, for a fractional interest in a tract of oil land *390 called the Rankin in Kern County, California, together with the same fractional interest in the owner’s interest in the oil leases to which the property was subject. The doctor originally bought the interest from the defendants. Shortly after the purchase, he became dissatisfied and they then agreed to buy it back for what he had paid for it. The district court held that May, the plaintiff, was entitled to judgment against Rice and Metzenbaum, the defendants, for the amount prayed for less certain deductions for royalties received by the doctor. In turn, Dr. May was ordered to reconvey to the defendants the interest he had previously acquired from' them. The defendants appeal.

Sometime prior to November, 1950, Rice and Metzenbaum, had sold to Dr. May a fractional interest in an oil property in Texas called the “Crutchfield.” .On that, the investment was about half of the amount paid for the interest in Rankin. And the returns to him on the Crutchfield turned out to be excellent, if not handsome.

After preliminary correspondence on .the Rankin, Rice went to see Dr. May in Philadelphia about September 1, 1950. And the agreement to purchase the Rankin interest at a price greatly in excess of the cost of the interest to Rice and Metzenbaum who were simultaneously acquiring it resulted. 1 ****The principal evidence of the original agreement is in escrow instructions, dated September 27, 1950, to a branch office of the Bank of America at Bakersfield, California. These escrow instructions provided that the sellers would obtain a “permit and authorization of the Commissioner of Corporations of the State of California authorizing and permitting said conveyance.” Apparently the deed was recorded about seven weeks thereafter and .title insurance written thereon in the name of Dr. May, the permit to sell being issued by the Commissioner of Corporations on November 14, 1950. Evidently, Dr. May before the trial of the case never saw the permit or the conditions of it, although the original permit was referred to in his deed. If he had seen it, in this court’s view, it would make little difference.

The permit was entitled “In the Matter of the Application of Mr. Metzenbaum and Miriam Metzenbaum, his wife, and E. R. Rice and Grace M. Rice, his wife, for a permit authorizing the sale and issuance of securities.” Then it recited, inter alia, that one of the conditions of the permit was as follows:

“(a) That none of the securities authorized to be sold and issued under Paragraph 1 hereof shall be sold or issued unless and until applicant first shall have selected an escrow holder and said escrow holder shall have been first approved in writing by the Commissioner of Corporations; that when issued the securities may be forthwith recorded with County Recorder of the county in which is situated the property to which the securities relate, and a duplicate original of said securities may be filed in accordance with any applicable state or federal regulation; that said securities shall be delivered to said escrow holder immediately thereafter, to be held in escrow pending the further . written order of said escrow holder for said securities shall be filed with said Commissioner; and that the owner or person entitled to said securities shall not consummate a sale, assignment, or transfer of said securities or any interest therein, or receive any consideration therefor, until the written consent or permit of said Commissioner shall have been obtained so to do.” 2

*391 The italicized portions, if binding on Dr. May, do literally seem to apply to him. The effect, if any, of this condition will be considered hereinafter.

The returns to the doctor from the Rankin proved disappointing. Sometime prior to December 19, 1950, he called Rice via long distance telephone. There is not a shred of testimony that he accused Rice or Metzenbaum any time before the spring or summer of 1952 of fraud. In his conversations, he told Rice that he was keenly disappointed, that the property had not produced what Rice had “promised.”

On December 19, 1950, Rice wrote to May, “However, doctor, if at the end of the next six months, you should be dissatisfied, I shall arrange to take over your interest at your purchase price.” On February 1, 1951, by letter, Dr. May advised Rice that “I shall avail myself of your offer of December 19, 1950, to purchase from me at the end of six months my royalty interest in the Rankin Royalty at the price which I had paid for it, $11,500.” Rice confirmed on April 11, 1951, his offer of December 19, when he wrote to Dr. May, “Please be advised that I am making arrangements to take over your interest in the Rankin Royalty at the end of the six-month period as stipulated in my letter of December 19, 1950.”

Performance was due June 19, 1951, and at this maturity date, the conduct of Rice and Metzenbaum was that which one usually encounters when the debtor doesn’t have the money to meet what is due. There were several letters and telephone conversations. Rice sent Dr. May $1,000 on July 23, 1951, and a check for $500 on August 31, 1951. There were hard luck excuses and a request for installment payments. The doctor insisted that he must have his money in full and refused to cash the checks. He employed one Roland Swaffield, a Long Beach attorney, to demand payment in full from Rice and Metzenbaum. Swaffield wrote demand letters and threatened suit. Even yet, the defendants had not been accused of fraud.

Being at the mouth of the gun of Dr. May’s threatened suit in the summer of 1951, Rice and Metzenbaum found their way to their attorney’s office. There they were advised they had a defense. They were told that the doctor had not complied with the “conditions” imposed by the commissioner in the original permit to transfer concerning a resale by a transferee, i. e. that Dr. May must have a permit to transfer and hadn’t secured it. Apparently, they were advised irrespective of the commissioner’s written condition in the original permit, that the California Corporate Securities Act required the commissioner’s written consent to the transfer.

No money being forthcoming, Dr. May obtained lawyers other than Swaffield, his original counsel. In his behalf in district court, they filed on May 7, 1952, a two-horned suit. The first claim, standing on the agreement to buy back and seeking to enforce it, was a claim for specific performance: a demand for a money judgment for $11,500 against Rice and Metzenbaum (less deductions for royalties received) which was coupled with an offer to convey the royalty back. No performance of any kind on the part of Dr. May was alleged, but the complaint stated that Dr. May was ready, willing and able to perform. In this first claim, it is pleaded that one of the considerations in the December, 1950, offer to buy back was to forestall a prospective suit by Dr. May. A possible inference of this pleading would be that the threatened suit would have alleged fraud. However, the answer of Rice and Metzenbaum denied that this factor of possible suit for fraud had anything to do with the repurchase agreement.

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Bluebook (online)
231 F.2d 389, 5 Oil & Gas Rep. 1134, 1956 U.S. App. LEXIS 4640, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/e-r-rice-and-m-metzenbaum-v-hans-may-ca9-1956.