Eblen v. Eblen

234 P.2d 434, 68 Wyo. 353, 1951 Wyo. LEXIS 28
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 24, 1951
DocketNO. 2492
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 234 P.2d 434 (Eblen v. Eblen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eblen v. Eblen, 234 P.2d 434, 68 Wyo. 353, 1951 Wyo. LEXIS 28 (Wyo. 1951).

Opinion

*359 OPINION

Riner, Justice.

This is a direct appeal proceeding to procure a review by this court of a judgment of the district court of Weston County adverse to the plaintiff and appellant, Orville Eblen. The action was commenced December 15, 1948, in the court above mentioned, against Imo Eblen individually, Imo Eblen Executrix of the Estate of Frank Eblen, deceased, L. M. York individually, L. M. York agent and attorney for Imo Eblen, executrix; Eblen Incorporated, A Wyoming Corporation; Thomas W. Eblen; Galloway & Smith — a co-partnership consisting of C. E. Galloway, C. A. Galloway and Roy H. Smith; Cooperative Refining Association, a for *360 eign corporation doing business in said county; and Graco Oil & Refining Co., a Wyoming corporation.

Answers to plaintiff’s petition were thereafter filed by the Graco Oil & Refining Co.; Imo Eblen individually and also as executrix of the estate of Frank Eblen deceased; Thomas W. Eblen and Eblen Incorporated. General demurrers to plaintiff’s petition were interposed by L. M. York individually, L. M. York agent and attorney for Imo Eblen as executrix; Galloway & Smith, a co-partnership consisting of the persons named above. Prior to filing their answers as stated above Imo Eblen individually, Imo Eblen as executrix of the estate of Frank Eblen deceased; Eblen Incorporated, and Thomas W. Eblen also filed general demurrers to plaintiff’s pleading aforesaid.

Thereafter by stipulation of the parties the rights of the defendants, the Cooperative Refining Association, Graco Oil & Refining Co., and Galloway & Smith, a co-partnership who were respectively the refineries purchasing the oil produced from the leases in controversy and the drillers of the wells on said leases were determined and agreed upon, and said stipulation was subsequently duly approved by an order of the district court aforesaid and these three last named defendants were “relieved from filing any further pleadings herein but shall furnish upon request of and to the parties hereto such information as. shall be within their knowledge relative to operations on said leases and relative to oil purchased by either of said refining companies at any time in the past or in the future from the lands above described.” The demurrer of these parties do not otherwise seem to have been ruled upon.

The demurrers of the remaining parties were duly presented to the District Court and overruled except the demurrer of L, M. York individually and L. M. *361 York as agent and attorney for Imo Eblen executrix as aforesaid, which was sustained, and said defendant L. M. York, either as agent or individually, appears no longer as a party of this litigation. The court order last mentioned also allowed the defendants whose demurrers were thus overruled time to file their several answers to plaintiff’s petition and plaintiff time to file replies to these answers was allowed and fixed. Pursuant to this order the answers and replies above referred to were duly filed and the issues to be determined were framed.

These pleadings are altogether too long and involved to set forth in this opinion a statement of their contents. It will be sufficient to say that plaintiff’s petition sought by its allegations to claim a joint adventure between plaintiff and defendants Thomas W. Eblen and one Frank Eblen, Sr., now deceased, to purchase, hold and develop in equal shares and interests certain oil and gas leases upon the lands hereinafter described in Weston County, Wyoming; and that plaintiff at the time of filing his petition “retains his full interest therein”; and to claim also that Imo Eblen individually and as executrix of the estate of Frank Eblen, deceased, and the defendant Eblen Incorporated her grantee have no interest in said joint adventure or the existing or future assets thereof in excess of the undivided one third (Vá) interest therein of which her husband Frank Eblen, Sr. as joint adventurer died seized; and also to claim that the assets of said adventure include certain oil and gas leases in said petition described embracing the lands described as follows, to-wit:

“The Southeast Quarter of Section 24, the Northeast Quarter of Section 24, and the Northeast Quarter of Section 14, all in Township 44, Range 63, Weston County, Wyoming,”

and asserting that the plaintiff, Orville Eblen as the *362 owner of an undivided one third interest therein is entitled to an accounting from the defendants, Imo Eblen individually and as executrix of the estate of Frank Eblen deceased, Eblen Incorporated and Thomas W. Eblen. The answers filed on behalf of the parties defendant above named were for the most part similar in character and except as set forth in said answers denied each and every allegation in plaintiff’s petition except such as were in said answers admitted. The following excerpt from the answer of Thomas W. Eblen, one of the sons of Frank Eblen, Sr., may be regarded as supplying the allegations which in large measure produced the issues of fact subsequently herein described and which were the controversial problems in the case to be determined by the trier of facts herein. That excerpt reads:

“This answering defendant admits that about the month of December, 1942, his father, who is now deceased, purchased some 136 shares or interests in the Western Oil & Gas Trust, having a par value of $25.00 per share, for the sum of Thirty-four Hundred Dollars ($3,400.00), and paid for the same. Likewise this answering defendant purchased forty (40) shares or interests in said Western Oil and Gas Trust having a par value of $25.00 per share and having paid for the same. “This answering defendant further states that his father, Frank Eblen, on or about May 3,1943, also purchased an oil and gas lease covering the lands described in paragraph one of Plaintiff’s petition but that neither the said Plaintiff, Orville Eblen, nor this defendant, had any interest therein at the time mentioned in plaintiff’s petition; that the instrument conveying said lease was on May 3,1943 duly recorded in the office of the County Clerk and Ex-officio Kegister of Deeds of Weston County, Wyoming, in Book 21, Page 393, in which said instrument the Western Oil and Gas Trust, H. O. Beadle, Trustee, covenanted that assignor was the lawful owner of and had good title to the property assigned and that the same was free and clear from all liens, encumbrances or adverse claims; that said lease was *363 valid and subsisting and that all conditions necessary to keep the same in full force had been duly performed.”

The answers also each pleaded that:

“Due to the laches of the plaintiff and the changed conditions of the parties hereto it would be inequitable, even if plaintiff had made an agreement of joint adventure as he alleges and which this answering defendant denies, to grant the relief prayed for by Plaintiff.”

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Bluebook (online)
234 P.2d 434, 68 Wyo. 353, 1951 Wyo. LEXIS 28, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eblen-v-eblen-wyo-1951.