Eagle Oil Corp. v. Cohassett Oil Corp.

248 N.W. 840, 263 Mich. 371, 1933 Mich. LEXIS 1168
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJune 5, 1933
DocketDocket No. 60, Calendar No. 36,969.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 248 N.W. 840 (Eagle Oil Corp. v. Cohassett Oil Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eagle Oil Corp. v. Cohassett Oil Corp., 248 N.W. 840, 263 Mich. 371, 1933 Mich. LEXIS 1168 (Mich. 1933).

Opinion

McDonald, C. J.

‘ Under an oil and gas lease from one Harm Doctor, the Eagle Oil Corporation drilled a well on certain premises in Muskegon county at a total cost of $13,272.31. At first the well produced in paying quantities. Subsequently it was held by this court in Doctor v. Turner, 251 Mich. 175, that the lessor had no title to the property, that the title was in Joseph H. Metcalf. Turner was interested in the litigation as lessee in a lease which he claimed to have from Metcalf. During the litigation over the title, the plaintiff remained in possession, but immediately thereafter was ousted in ejectment proceedings instituted by Mr. Metcalf. The Oohassett Oil Corporation, assignee of the Turner lease, followed in possession. While the plaintiff was in possession it sold and delivered to the Standard Oil *374 Company of Indiana oil valued at $5,886.28, and to the Simrall Pipe Line Corporation oil valued at $1,698.15, payment of which was subsequently made to the Cohassett Oil Corporation. After the Cohassett Oil Corporation went into possession, it sold oil to the Wellman Oil Company of the value of $906, and received payment therefor. Some of the oil sold to Wellman Company was produced by the plaintiff, but the record is not clear as to the exact amount. By the terms of the Metcalf lease one-eighth of the oil belonged to him as a royalty.

The plaintiff filed this bill on the theory that it was entitled to an equitable lien on seven-eighths of all oil produced until the $13,372.51 expended in drilling the well was fully paid; that it is entitled to payment from the several defendant oil companies of the oil purchased by them, and to an injunction restraining the Cohassett Oil Corporation and all others from removing or disposing of the personal property used in drilling the well and storing the oil.

The defendant Joseph H. Metcalf answered and filed a cross-bill in which he asks to recover the entire production of the well on the theory that both the plaintiff, Eagle Oil Corporation, and the defendant Cohassett Oil Corporation, assignee of the Turner lease, were trespassers, because the lessor of the Eagle Oil Corporation had no title, and the Turner lease does not include the premises in question. The other defendants except the Wellman Oil Company appeared and severally answered, denying plaintiff’s right to the relief prayed for in its bill.

At the conclusion of the hearing, the trial court decreed that the plaintiff was entitled to an equitable lien on the oil produced during its operation of the well and on future productions until it is fully re *375 imbursed for tbe money expended in its drilling operations; that until sucb expenditure is repaid the defendants Cohassett Oil ^ Corporation, John G. Turner, and Frank Marxer, shall regularly account for all money received from tbe sale of oil from any source other than tbe Standard Oil Company of Indiana and tbe Wellman Oil Company, and pay tbe proceeds from sucb sales to tbe clerk of tbe court for tbe use and benefit of tbe plaintiff; that in tbe event they abandon tbe well or surrender their lease before the $13,372.51 is fully paid, tbe plaintiff may remove’all of tbe personal property; that tbe plaintiff take nothing from tbe Simrall Pipe Line Corporation for tbe oil it purchased, but that the Standard Oil Company of Indiana and tbe Wellman Oil Company pay to tbe clerk of tbe court for tbe use and benefit of tbe plaintiff tbe value of seven-eighths of the oil sold and delivered to them; that the lease from Joseph H. Metcalf to Turner covered the lands in question, that Turner and bis assigns were not trespassers, and that Metcalf’s cross-bill be dismissed; that Joseph H. Metcalf recover from tbe Standard Oil Company of Indiana and from tbe Wellman Oil Company and from tbe Simrall Pipe Line Corporation one-eighth of tbe value of tbe oil which they respectively purchased, and that tbe same shall be paid to tbe clerk of tbe court for bis use and benefit; that tbe Cohassett Oil Corporation, John G. Turner, and Frank Marxer and their successors in interest deposit every 30 days with tbe clerk as received, for tbe use and benefit of plaintiff and Mr. Metcalf, tbe proceeds from tbe sale of future oil productions until plaintiff is fully paid as provided herein, and that in the meantime tbe preliminary injunction remain in force.

*376 From the decree entered the defendant oil companies except the Wellman Oil Company appealed. The defendant Joseph _ IT. Metcalf cross-appealed from the provision of the decree dismissing his cross-bill, and the plaintiff took a cross-appeal from denial of relief against the Simrall Pipe Line Corporation.

The first question logically arising for our consideration relates to the contention of defendant Met-calf that his lease to Joseph H. Turner does not include the premises involved. If it does not, Turner and his assigns were trespassers, and the court was wrong in dismissing Metcalf’s cross-bill.

The land in question consists of 1.5 acres lying north of the city of North Muskegon. With other lands it was acquired by Joseph H. Metcalf on March 4, 1901, by deed from Hackley and Plume. In the deed it was recited as being within the city of North Muskegon. A part of the description was within the city. When the Turner lease was made it was believed by all of the parties that the parcel in question was within the city, and it was in fact so located until the boundaries were changed in 1895. The Turner lease was secured through one A. K. Primeaux acting as agent for Mr. Metcalf, who resided in Seattle, Washington. The lease was executed in accordance with a preliminary agreement escrowed with the National Lumberman’s Bank of Muskegon. It was executed in Seattle and the escrow agreement in Muskegon, which probably accounts for the difference in description of the land leased. We think the description in both instruments, though incomplete, fairly includes the parcel in question. The trouble arose over the mistaken recital in both instruments that all of the land lay within the city of North Muskegon. Mr. Turner *377 was entitled to a lease of all of the land described in the escrow agreement. It is contended by him that the premises in question are included in the description in the lease wherein it says, “And all that part of block 24 lying west of the county road. ’•’ This contention is supported by the testimony of George W. Clark, a surveyor, called to testify by Mr. Metcalf. We have no doubt it was the intention of Mr. Metcalf to include the parcel in question with the other property leased to Mr. Turner, and that the description of the lease, though incomplete, is sufficient for that purpose. This disposition of Mr. Metcalf’s contention brings us back to the controversy between the plaintiff and the other defendants.

It is first argued by the defendants that the court erred in refusing to dismiss the bill because of the plaintiff’s failure to file its annual reports with the secretary of State for the years 1930 and 1931, as required by the statute, 2 Comp. Laws 1929, §§ 10127,10128.'

The bill was filed in October, 1930. At that time the plaintiff was not in default for failure to file its report, because, according to the provisions of the statute, the report for the year 1930 was not due until August, 1931. The case came on for hearing September 16, 1931.

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Bluebook (online)
248 N.W. 840, 263 Mich. 371, 1933 Mich. LEXIS 1168, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eagle-oil-corp-v-cohassett-oil-corp-mich-1933.