Finlay-Tampico Oil Co. v. Robbins

246 S.W. 1047
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 11, 1923
DocketNo. 1392.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 246 S.W. 1047 (Finlay-Tampico Oil Co. v. Robbins) 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
Finlay-Tampico Oil Co. v. Robbins, 246 S.W. 1047 (Tex. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

WALTHALL, J.

This suit was brought by John C. Robbins, appellee, against) appellants, Finlay-Tampico Oil Company, alleged to be a joint-stock association, E. S. Plumb, C. M. Davis, J. H. Morford, E. Harms, John Roseborough, Jr., and G. Zork, to recover commissions under a contract, alleged to be in parol and by letters, to procure some one to contract with appellants to drill for oil on lands then held and controlled under rental leases and permits by appellants. in Hudspeth or El Paso counties, Tex.

Without stating the petition at length, it is alleged that the above-named company is a joint-stock company, and that the other parties named are members thereof and own stock therein, and during the year 1920 were engaged, under the firm name of said company, in buying, selling, and trading in mineral leases and lands in Texas, including the counties of Hudspeth and El Paso, and in prospecting, drilling, and .developing lands for oil and other minerals; that about the 1st day of May, 19£0, appellants contracted orally and by correspondence by letters with appellee to procure a man, or number of individuals, company, or corporation who would contract with appellants to drill for oil on their said lands in either of said counties, then held by appellants under mineral leases and permits, the aggregate acreage of said lands in said two counties then exceeding 150,000. • It is alleged that by the terms of their said contract with appellee, appellants contracted that if appellee procured some one to sink a well to a depth of 3,500 feet on said lands, upon terms" and conditions *1048 stated by appellants, appellants would, when the drilling site was located, transfer commercial mineral leases of 88 form on four sections of said lands, two of said sections to he not more than two miles from the drilling site, and the other two not to be more than seven miles from said drilling site.

Appellee alleged that, acting upon said agreement, he did, in June, 1920, present and introduce to appellants one W. G. Yates, and through and by Yates introduced the W. A. Boole Syndicate and W. A. Boole, who were then in the business of contracting for and drilling such prospect wells as appellants desired to contract for, and that appellants did, about the 1st day of December, 1920, contract with said W. G. Yates and the W. A. Boole Syndicate and W. A. Boole to put down a well on said lands in all .things as by appellee and appellants agreed. Appel-lee alleged the refusal of appellants to pay appellee for his said services and refusal to lease or transfer to appellee said sections. Appellee alleged the value of said two sections within two miles of the well location to be $10 per acre, and the value of the two sections within seven miles of the well location at $5 per acre, and that his services Were worth said sums. Appellee sued to recover the said value of said leases.

Appellants answered by general demurrer, general denial, and special denial that appel-lee was the procuring, efficient, or producing cause of any contract entered into between appellants and'the Boole Syndicate; alleged that the contract entered into with the Boole Syndicate was entirely different from the contract which appellee attempted to procure for appellants with other individuals; alleged that appellee was unsuccessful in procuring any customer for appellants; and that several months after appellee had ceased his efforts to procure a customer, appellants, through a different source, came in contact with said syndicate and entered into a contract with said syndicate.

No service having been had on J. H. Mor-ford, the suit wasdismissed as to him.

The case was tried with a jury and submitted upon special issues.

The jury found all issues submitted, and on which findings were made, in favor of appellee. The jury having found that api pellants and appellee entered into the contract as alleged, and that appellee was the efficient and procuring cause of the contract entered into between appellants and W. A. Boole, and that commercial leases or permits located within two miles of the wfell as contracted for by appellants had a market value, and that such leases or permits on two sections of land so located were reasonably worth $2,560 on the date of the location of' the site of the well, judgment was rendered in favor of appellee for said sum. Judgment was also rendered in favor of ap-pellee for $281.60 as the value of commercial oil lease or permit of the two sections within seven miles of the site of the well, but that portion of the judgment was remitted by appellee, and we need not further refer to it.

Appellants present six propositions, but, practically, there are only two. The pleadings of appellee and the evidence offered show that the contract between appellee and appellants was to the effect, as stated above, that if appellee, Robbins, would procure or cause to be. procured and present to appellants an individual, a company, or corporation who would contract with appellants to sink a well to the depth specified, the contract on the part of appellee would have been performed. Appellee, in June, 1920, presented W. G. Yates to the appellants as a man who would get appellants a man to drill the well in compliance with the contract, and Yates procured W. A. Boole, of the Boole Syndicate, with whom appellants did contract to sink the well. Appellee, Robbins, did not, in person, present Boole, but did through Yates.

Robbins testified:

' “I introduced Mr. Yates to Mr. Davis (one of appellants and at that time secretary and treasurer of appellant company), and told Mr. Davis that this was the party I had mentioned that was down at Pecos, who had some California parties whom X understood could drill a well for them if they desired, referring to Mr. W. A. Boole in California. * * * I understand from Mr. Yates and Mr. Roseborough that they got in touch with Mr. Boole some time along in the fall of 1920. * * * I did not present Mr. W. A. Boole in person to the defendants, but I presented him through Mr. Yates.”

Yates testified that he found Boole and introduced him to appellants.

Appellants refer us "to Goodwin v. Gunter, 109 Tex. 56, 185 S. W. 297, 195 S. W. 848, as sustaining their propositions to the effect appellee not having procured a customer ready, able, and willing to enter into the contract upon the terms authorized, he is not entitled to his compensation. We think that ease does not conclude the point here presented, in appellants’ favor. That case is quite lengthy, and we must refer to the case for an extended statement of the contract declared upon and the facts. In that case Goodwin was not dealing directly either with Mrs. Gunter or with Judge Bliss, her representative. He acted entirely through Witwer, and, as stated in the opinion, his right to the commissions claimed depended upon the legal effect of Witwer’s acts. In that case it was distinctly found that Iinds-ley, the purchaser, was not procured as a purchaser through Witwer. The opinion states that if by uncontroverted proof it was established that Witwer’s action produced *1049 Iúndsley as. the purchaser, Goodwin’ would be entitled to recover as a matter of law. In that case the record presented evidence from which the trial court could conclude, and did conclude, that Witwer did not procure Eindsley as the purchaser. The Supreme Court does not try the facts of the case, and was bound by the facts found.

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Bluebook (online)
246 S.W. 1047, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/finlay-tampico-oil-co-v-robbins-texapp-1923.