Forest Oil Co. v. Crawford

101 F. 849, 42 C.C.A. 54, 1900 U.S. App. LEXIS 4481
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedMay 21, 1900
DocketNo. 32
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 101 F. 849 (Forest Oil Co. v. Crawford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Forest Oil Co. v. Crawford, 101 F. 849, 42 C.C.A. 54, 1900 U.S. App. LEXIS 4481 (3d Cir. 1900).

Opinion

DALLAS, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from a final decree of a circuit court sitting in equity, which was made on February 2,1900. The only parties to the bill, which was filed on January 2, 1897, were Oliver P. Crawford, “a citizen of the state of Nevada,” plaintiff, and the Forest Oil Company, “a corporation organized and existing under the laws of the state of Pennsylvania,” defendant. It suggested no ground of jurisdiction in the circuit court, other than the diverse citizenship of the parties, and, without pausing to consider whether that fact (of which there is no question) was sufficiently pleaded, we may assume that it was. We have, then, a suit which" origina ted in a bill filed hy a citizen of one state against a citizen of another state, and respecting which the jurisdiction of the court was dependent solely upon this diversity of citizenship. After answer and replication, and the appointment of an examiner, viz. on April 27, 1897, the petition of several persons was presented, wherein it was prayed that the court would permit them to intervene in and become parties to the suit, and to appear therein as plaintiffs, in the same manner and with the like effect as if they had been named in the original bill, [850]*850and that upon the hearing there should be granted to them such relief as might be just, equitable, and proper. Thereafter two additional like petitions were presented by other petitioners.. The filing of these petitions was allowed, but before any action was taken upon them, viz. on July 30, 1897, a receiver was appointed to take charge of, and operate for oil and gas purposes, the farm described in the bill. The original plaintiff never interposed any objection to the intervention petitions, and, so far as appears, he seems to have been content that the petitioners should all be joined with him as parties plaintiff; but on January 17, 1898, the defendant, the Forest Oil Company, answering these petitions, set up that several of the peti tioners were residents of the state of Pennsylvania, and therefore had not the requisite citizenship to give the circuit court jurisdiction, and, as to others of them, that they were unknown to the defendant, and proof of their citizenship was demanded. This answer also alleged that five of the petitioners had, at the time their petition was filed, each brought a separate action of ejectment against the defendant for the recovery of an undivided one-thirteenth part of the land to which the controversy related, but that, although judgment had since been entered against the defendant in each of the said actions, no writ of habere facias possessionem had been issued on said judgments, nor had the plaintiffs in said actions in any other way obtained possession of the premises, or any part thereof, against the defendant. It further alleged that none of the petitioners were in possession of the land, and that the defendant was in possession thereof, except the one-thirteenth part thereof, which was in the possession of Oliver P. Crawford, the plaintiff named in the bill, by virtue of a writ of habere facias possessionem; and it further averred that the petitioners had a complete and adequate remedy at law, and that their purpose in seeking to be joined as plaintiffs was to recover from, the defendant certain mesne profits to which they claimed they were entitled, but for recovery of which, the defendant was advised, the bill could not be maintained. After hearing upon these petitions and this answer, it was on March 12, 1898, ordered:

“That the said petitioners, and each of them, have leave, and leave is hereby granted to them, to interpose in this suit for their own interests and for the interests of those whom they represent, and to that end to appear in the suit in the same manner and with like effect as if they were named in the .original bill as plaintiffs having, or claiming to have, an interest in the matter therein in controversy; this order to he without prejudice to the proceedings already had.”

In making this order the court below said:

“A court having assumed jurisdiction, we are of opinion that the citizenship of parties interested in the subject-matter and seeking to intervene is not material. Osborne v. Barge (C. C.) 30 Fed. 806, and cases cited therein. Waiving for present purposes the question of the prior determination of their title being necessary, it is clear that all these petitioners have an interest in the fund in the possession of the court, and which forms part of the subject-matter of the bill. Their right to intervene, therefore, cannot be denied them. Moreover, Eliza Erskine, William Crawford, Nancy Reed, Matthew A. Crawford, and Mary A. Davis have established title to the real estate. The rule to intervene granted January 7, 1898, Is made absolute.” - ■

[851]*851We are unable to concur in this statement, or to sustain the order which was made in pursuance oí it. We cannot agree that there was a fund in the possession of the court iu which the petitioners had an interest, and which gave them a right to appear in the suit in the same manner and with like effect as if they had been named in the original hill as plaintiffs. The original hill had not been, and did not in any manner purport to have been, filed on their behalf. It contained nothing to suggest that they, or any of them, might become parties to it. It was in no sense a class bill, but was exclusively the bill of the plaintiff named. It prayed, it is true, that a receiver might be appointed to take charge of certain oil wells, and the oil produced therefrom, and also that an account should he taken of the value of the oil which it was alleged had been unlawfully taken by the defendant, and of the damage done by the defendant to the property; hut nothing whatever was suggested with respect to the disposition to be ultimately made of the property passing into the hands of the receiver, or of the proceeds thereof, and, as to the accounting, what was asked for was that the defendant should be required to pay over to tbe complainant the amount found to he due to him, — not that there should he an accounting and distribution with and among all parties who might claim and he adjudged to be entitled. Waiving the question as to whether the receivership was rightfully instituted, we turn to the final decree of February 3, 1900, which confirmed the report of a master who had been appointed on April 28, 1898, to state an account in accordance with the interlocutory decree then made, which adjudged:

“That the plaintiff, Oliver P. Crawford, and the interveners are entitled to an accounting from the said defendant, the Forest Oil Company, for the value of the oil heretofore taken from the said farm by the Forest Oil Company, down to the date of the appointment of the receiver in this case, and also for the damage, if any, done to the said farm by the said defendant during the time of its occupation thereof, for the purposes of operating for and producing oil therefrom.”

ISTow, the report of the master upon which the decree appealed from was based did not state nor in any manner deal with a receiver’s account, hut. purported to exhibit (as the order appointing the master had directed) “an accounting from the said defendant” (the Forest Oil Company itself) to Oliver I’. Crawford and the interveners; and by the account reported it was made to appear that there was due by that company to them, and for distribution among them, the aggregate sum of $39,372.27. Upon the coming in of this report the decree under review was made.

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Bluebook (online)
101 F. 849, 42 C.C.A. 54, 1900 U.S. App. LEXIS 4481, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/forest-oil-co-v-crawford-ca3-1900.