Flint-Texas Oil-Drilling Trust v. Bridges

23 S.W.2d 875
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 16, 1929
DocketNo. 12206.
StatusPublished

This text of 23 S.W.2d 875 (Flint-Texas Oil-Drilling Trust v. Bridges) 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
Flint-Texas Oil-Drilling Trust v. Bridges, 23 S.W.2d 875 (Tex. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

*876 CONNER, C. X

The appellee, Lee Bridges, instituted this suit on the 7th day of January, 1928, against the Elint-Texas Oil-Drilling Trust, an unincorporated association, with O. M. Van Benschoeten and others as trustees and individuals. The plaintiff alleged that on the 12th day of June, 1922, he contracted with the defendant association to drill and operate a drilling rig furnished by the defendant, and to give his exclusive time to work for defendant in accordance with their instructions on a lease owned by the defendant, “to receive wages at the prevailing wage for similar work in that particular territory, and the natural profits from the company’s operation should then be divided, 75 per cent. to defendant, and 25 per cent, to plaintiff, which contract should remain in force until dissolved by agreement of both parties.”

The petition described lands covered by the ⅜ lease upon which plaintiff was to work, and further alleged that from the date of the original contract in 1922 until the filing of i the petition therein on October 1,1926, “when one of the defendant trustees notified this , plaintiff that he was no longer needed, but ¾ that other trustees or officers of defendant | company instructed said plaintiff to remain j on the lease, which he has done until the fil-1 ing of this petition.”. It was further alleged that C. M. Van Benschoeten was the principal representative and trustee at Flint, Mich., and the checks received by him from time to time were signed, “Flint-Texas Oil Drilling Trust, by C. M. Van Benschoeten, Trustee,” and the principal parts of correspondence and instructions were received by the plaintiff from said trustee; that as a bonus, on May 11, 1923, the defendant sent the plaintiff a certificate covering 500 shares, of par value of $1, in the Flint-Texas Oil-Drilling Trust, which had a total number of shares of $100,-000. It is further alleged that payments for wages were sent very irregularly, but with promise that back payments would be made; that on June 30, 1924, the defendant trust, through O. M. Van Benschoeten, “stated that they were doing the best they could to take care of plaintiff’s salary, but it was impossible to pay any appreciable amount of money at that time, but that they would assign this plaintiff an undivided one-tenth interest in the lease, together with a monthly payment covering all expenses, which would be an amount sufficient to allow plaintiff to live sufficiently; that plaintiff accepted the proposition to take the undivided one-tenth interest as salary in lieu of past service and former contract,” but that assignment had never been received; that the plaintiff, “acting under the new contract of June 30. 1924,” had given his full undivided time on the leasing, drilling, pumping, and superintending the well, which work was “reasonably worth $200 per month, being the customary value of such work in this field, and which to date amounts to $7,-000.”

Plaintiff further alleged that in order to keep the lease going he had to pay out of his own money for materials from time to time, and pay labor and repair bills, etc., in order to protect his own interest in the lease, in the approximate sum of $2,000. It was further alleged that on the 8th of February, 1927, he had filed a laborer’s lien against defendant, which had been duly recorded, and which he prayed might be foreclosed, or in the alternative, if insufficient as a laborer’s lien, that he then have an equitable lien against the defendant’s property to secure the payment of the $9,000, before set out in his petition. It was further alleged in substance that one R. A. King was a holder of a vendor’s lien note covering the property of the defendant, which was thereunder sold at a judicial sale and purchased in the name of O. M. Van Ben-schoeten, who had been furnished by the other stockholders in Michigan with the money to pay off said note, and that by Van Benschoe-ten’s conduct he was “estopped from denying that said title and property was the property of the said Flint-Texas Oil-Drilling Trust, and furthermore settled with said trust a controversy relating thereto with, certain stockholders in Michigan, by paying them off for their interest in the lease, but that no settlement had been made with the plaintiff. It was further alleged the plaintiff was a partner, and was being excluded from the partnership in the management of the properties, etc., and he prayed for a recovery of the $9,-000 before mentioned, with foreclosure of liens theretofore mentioned, and that “a master be appointed to determine the various un-liquidated and liquidated claims and counter claims and pass upon said items of account; that this plaintiff be vested with an assigned one-tenth interest in the above oil and gas lease” ; and for general relief.

The defendant answered, so far as disclosed by the record, with a general denial and with a special plea, not thought to be necessary to set forth.

The case was tried before the court without a jury, and resulted in a judgment in the plaintiff’s favor for the sum of $3,654.06, against the Flint-Texas Oil-Drilling Trust, O. M. Van Benschoeten, and other named trustees, with findings to the effect, among other things, that Lee Bridges was a partner in the enterprise and remained in charge of the property until about the 20th day of November, 1926, when he was discharged by Van Benschoeten without just' cause and ordered to vacate the premises, and that at the time of said discharge there was justly due the plaintiff the sum of $3,654.06, “for materials, supplies, labor, repairs, improvement, and upkeep in and about said property and his personal service in the operation, care, protec *877 tion, etc., incident thereto”; that the plaintiff at all times was a partner in the enterprise, and entitled to an “equitable lien” upon all the property of the Flint-Texas Oil-Drilling Trust, for the purpose of securing the payment of the said sum of $3,654.06, together with his interest and cost.

The court further found that on or about the 30th day of June, 1924, there was due and unpaid to the plaintiff from the defendant trust the sum of $3,000 and more for past salary for services rendered up to that date, and that it was “then agreed by and between the parties, plaintiff, Lee Bridges, and the defendants Flint-Texas Oil-Drilling Trust, C. M. Van Benschoeten, and other authorized members of said trust, by and through the said, defendant O. M. Van Benschoeten, acting as its duly authorized trustee and agent of said trust,” that said trust would convey 'to Bridges an equal one-tenth interest in and to all of the property of said trust, in consideration of the said Lee Bridges releasing his said claim of $3,000 against the said trust in exchange thereof; that same was accepted and agreed upon, and it was accordingly ordered that plaintiff he vested with an undivided one-tenth interest in all property of the trust.

The court’s judgment further recites that on the 21st day of May, 1927, through ancillary proceedings, Charles E. Clark had been duly appointed as receiver to take charge of, manage, control, keep, operate, and dispose of all the property of the Flint-Texas Oil-Drilling Trust, subject to the further orders of the court; that the receiver accepted, qualified, gave bond, and entered upon his duties, and was still so acting, and which receivership was ordered to be continued until the further orders of the court. The court further found, as recited in the judgment, that D. G.

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Related

Phœnix Oil Co. v. McLarren
244 S.W. 830 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1922)
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Bluebook (online)
23 S.W.2d 875, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flint-texas-oil-drilling-trust-v-bridges-texapp-1929.