First State Bank v. Burton

73 So. 2d 453, 225 La. 537, 3 Oil & Gas Rep. 1883, 1954 La. LEXIS 1245
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 31, 1954
Docket41472
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 73 So. 2d 453 (First State Bank v. Burton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First State Bank v. Burton, 73 So. 2d 453, 225 La. 537, 3 Oil & Gas Rep. 1883, 1954 La. LEXIS 1245 (La. 1954).

Opinion

LE BLANC, Justice.

As is made to- appear in the opinion of this Court in a previous hearing of this case, 222 La. 1030, 64 So.2d 421, this appeal arises out of a judgment rendered in the district court after the cause had been remanded to that Court for the purpose of having further proceedings conducted with parties who might have an interest in the .subject matter of the suit and who had not been cited.

As indicated in the said opinion, the proceeding originated in an attachment in Which The Hunter Company, Inc., had been made 'garnishee, the plaintiff bank claiming that that company had in its possession funds belonging to the defendant, Glenn K. Burton. The Hunter Company, Inc. will hereafter be referred to as Hunter Company.

Burton and Hunter Company had entered into a contract on October 9, 1950, for the drilling of an oil well by Burton on a lease held by Hunter Company on lands situated in Ouachita County in the State of Arkansas. They both held leases on lands in that area. Prior to entering into this contract,. Burton, had on September 28, 1950, contracted orally with Morris & Kendrick Drilling Company for drilling the well.. In the contract of October 9, 1950 between Hunter Company and Burton , it is recited among other matters that:

“Whereas, Burton has already orally entered into a contract for the drilling of said well with Morris & Kendrick Drilling Company, of Vivian, Louisiana, hereinafter called ‘Contractor’, which contract Burton has, or will reduce to writing.
“Now, therefore, in consideration of the premises and of the mutual convenants herein made and contained, Burton and Hunter have agreed as follows :
“1. Burton agrees to cause the said Morris & Kendrick Drilling Company to commence operations for the drilling of the above referred to test well at the location above described on or before October 15, 1950, and to continue such drilling operations with due-diligence until a depth of 2700 feet below the surface of the ground has-been reached, unless oil, gas or other *541 minerals be discovered in paying quantities prior to reaching said depth or unless igneous rock, salt or some other practically impenetrable substance be encountered at a lesser depth.
“2. It is understood that the contract between Burton and Contractor provides, in effect, that the Contractor will ‘cut the hole’ and take two free cores for the total sum of $3.00 per foot drilled; additional cores are to be paid for at the rate of $150.00 each and the Contractor shall be paid $125.00 per eight hour day for day work. Hunter agrees to pay one-half of the amount which Burton is obligated to pay under the terms of said Contract, limited, however, to the amounts herein stipulated. Day work to be subject to approval of Hunter, /s/ Glenn Burton
“3. It is understood that Burton and Hunter, in addition to paying the Contractor equally, as above provided, will also pay in equal proportions, for the cost of digging the pits, erecting derrick, for all casing, mud and other equipment which may be necessary in •order to complete said well into the ■tanks, if the well results in one capable ■of producing oil, gas or other minerals ■in paying quantities.
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“10. It is understood that no partnership or association is contemplated .by this agreement, and it shall never be construed to be such, as this is merely an agreement to cause the drilling of a test well, the expense of which is to be borne equally by Hunter and Burton, subject to the terms and provisions set forth above.”

The drilling of the test well resulted unsuccessfully and thereafter, according to the stipulation on which the present proceeding was submitted, a statement of the total cost amounting to $7,949.83 was delivered to Burton who then delivered it to Hunter Company. Hunter Company then drew its check in the sum of $3974.92, that being one-half of the total amount, making the same payable to Glenn K.' Burton and Morris & Kendrick.

From the stipulation it is made to appear also that R. D. Wilson, doing business as Acorn Rig & Construction Company had also entered into an oral contract with Burton under the terms of which he had dismantled the derrick on the well site • at an agreed price of $828. On the same day that Hunter Company issued its check payable to Burton and Morris & Kendrick, it also issued one in the sum of $414 payable to Glenn K. Burton and Acorn Rig & Construction Company.

Both checks were drawn on the Commercial National Bank, Shreveport, Lái, and Burton, who had received them both, then endorsed them in his name and in the name of the other payees and deposited them to his own account in the plaintiff bank in Marlin, Texas. .He then drew against that deposit and had depleted the account to a balance of $30.42 when on *543 January 23, 1951, the two checks were returned to the plaintiff bank, having been dishonored by the Commercial National Bank for the reason that Burton had no authority to endorse them for the co-payees.

When the true situation which was developed by the answers of Hunter Company, garnishee in the original suit, and a rule to traverse the answers had been discharged in the lower Court, from which ruling an appeal had been taken, this Court, being without information as to whether Burton had ever paid Morris & Kendrick and Acorn Rig & Construction Company, concluded that these two creditors, if they had not been paid, should be made parties to the proceeding and ordered the case to be remanded. On the remand, in conformity with the suggestion contained in the Court’s opinion that the matter might be brought to issue by the provoking of a concursus proceeding, the plaintiff bank did institute such a proceeding by having both Morris & Kendrick and Acorn Rig & Construction Company cited to appear and assert whatever claims they or either may have to the funds in the possession of the garnishee.

In asserting their claim, Morris & Kendrick set out a state of facts very much the same as have been herein related; they denied and contested Burton’s right and authority to have endorsed the check made payable jointly to them; averred that his name was inserted in the check as payee purely for purposes of convenience and to protect the drawer against unwarranted legal action, but that in any event Hunter Company was not indebted to Burton and Burton had no right or claim to any of the funds which Hunter Company ordered the drawee to pay. They then alleged that Hunter Company was, and is liable to them for the full amount of the check under the agreements which had been entered into primarily because the agreement between Burton and Hunter Company contained a stipulation pour autrui, said stipulation being in their favor. In the alternative they averred that said agreement constituted a contract of agency in which Hunter Company was the principal and Burton the agent and in the further alternative that both contracts have been merged into one agreement.

In asserting his claim, R. D.

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Bluebook (online)
73 So. 2d 453, 225 La. 537, 3 Oil & Gas Rep. 1883, 1954 La. LEXIS 1245, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-state-bank-v-burton-la-1954.