Ft. Dearborn Trust & Sav. Bank v. Skelly Oil Co.

1930 OK 196, 293 P. 557, 146 Okla. 179, 1930 Okla. LEXIS 302
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 29, 1930
Docket19067
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 1930 OK 196 (Ft. Dearborn Trust & Sav. Bank v. Skelly Oil Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ft. Dearborn Trust & Sav. Bank v. Skelly Oil Co., 1930 OK 196, 293 P. 557, 146 Okla. 179, 1930 Okla. LEXIS 302 (Okla. 1930).

Opinion

EAGLETON, C.

Skelly Oil Company brought suit against Globe Oil Company and Fort Dearborn Trust & Savings Bank and Frank M. Forrey, trustees, and others to compel specific performance of a contract it made with Globe Oil Company, to compel conveyance of clear title to the oil and gas leases involved. The Fort Dearborn Trust & Savings Bank and Frank M. Forrey, as mortgage trustees, filed cross-petition to foreclose their mortgage, a deed of trust, which covered the leases. Thereafter many changes in position and pleading took place as will more fully hereinafter appear. From the judgment 'both the trustees and Skelly Oil Company appeal.

This litigation grows out of an investment bubble. A $2,000,000 loan was placed on certain supposedly valuable oil and gas properties of the Globe Oil Company. The Fort Dearborn Trust & Savings Bank and Frank M. Forrey were made trustees in the deed of trust. The bonds were floated to' the public. The Globe Oil Company has gone into bankruptcy. The Fort Dearborn Trust & Savings Bank was liquidated. Some of the officers of the Globe Oil Company have gone through bankruptcy, some of them are dead. This suit is a fight over certain of the remaining assets with which to wipe out partially some of the nearly if not fully $2,000,000 loss suffered by the owners of the Globe Oil Company bonds.

The Skelly Oil Company, before the bubble broke, went into the possession of certain leases covered by the deed of trust under a contract of purchase entered into between it and the Globe Oil Company, and collected from the production from these leases sums of money. The suit as tried and as it comes to this court involves only a fight for this money.

When the case was tried in the lower court, the following issues were joined: The Fort Dearborn Trust & Savings Bank and Frank M. Forrey, hereinafter called mortgage trustees, had a mortgage on the leases involved given to secure the bond issue of $2,000,000, which they claimed to be a first and superior lien thereon, the terms of which had been breached by the defaults of the Globe Oil Company, and prayed a foreclosure and sale to liquidate the bonded indebtedness. The Skelly Oil Company alleged its contract of purchase, and that the mortgage trustees were bound by the terms of the sale and estopped from asserting priority thereto, and that, due to the failure to make delivery of title to the leases free and clear for a long period of years, to wit, from the date of the contract, which was February 17, 1920, to February, 1925, at which time the election on the part of Skelly Oil Company was made and the cause tried, it would elect to abandon the claim for specific performance of the contract. It tendered into court the gross receipts from the oil runs made while the properties were operated by it’ less all actual expenses incurred in the operation of the property from which runs were made and less the sum of $250,000 together with interest thereon at the rate of eight per centum per annum from the date paid as in the Globe-Skelly contract provided. The mortgage trustees, denied that they were bound by the Globe-Skelly contract or their lieu subject to it. The trustees in bankruptcy for the Globe Oil Company were in the case in the trial court, but are not involved in this appeal.

After trial to the court without a jury, decree of foreclosure was rendered in favor of the mortgage trustees, and the properties ordered sold to liquidate the obligations by them represented . in the sum of $1,955,131, together with trustees’ fees in the sum of $2,000, attorney’s fees in the sum of $55,000 and foreclosure sale was ordered. The court further decreed that the mortgage trustees had a valid lien and were entitled ta the proceeds of the sale of oil and gas produced from said premises from August 5, 1920, the date on which in this cause at the instance of the mortgage trustees a receiver for the properties was appointed until August 1, 1922, on which date the properties were by the Skelly Oil Company turned over *181 to the receiver, less the reasonable cost of producing and marketing the same and less such credit as might be adjudged and allowed on accounting to be due the Skelly Oil Company for the sum it had paid on its purchase contract, and entered a judgment against the Skel'ly Oil Company therefor, and decreed an accounting with the Skelly Oil Company to effectuate this portion of the decree. After the foreclosure sale the mortgage trustees amended their pleadings and added to their complaint against the Skelly Oil Company the contention that the Skelly Oil Company was from and after the appointment of a receiver for the properties on August 5, 1920, a willful trespasser on the premises and not entitled to credit for operating expenses incurred after that date. To sustain this contention they asserted that the Skelly Oil Company, by appealing to the Supreme Court the order denying its application to the trial court to have the appoint-ent of a receiver vacated and superseding by bond the court’s orders and retaining possession of the properties, was a willful trespasser. They asserted further that if it did not on August 5, 1920, become a willful trespasser, it became such after the Supreme Court had finally sustained the trial court on said appeal on September IS, 1921. That the application of the Skelly Oil Company to the trial court, after the mandate of the Supreme Court had been filed in the trial court, to be allowed to substitute a bond for faithful and economical operation of the premises in lieu of operation by the receiver, the denial thereof by the trial court, and the abortive appeal therefrom, by means of which Skelly Oil Company continued in possession of the premises until the second denial of relief to the Skelly Oil Company by the Supreme Court, constituted willful trespass. The Skelly Oil Company acknowledged liabi’ity for the overplus by it received from oil runs after deducting its operating expense, including overhead, and the sum of $250,000 by it on the purchase price paid plus interest at eight per centum. On issues joined further hearing and accounting was had, and judgment entered thereon under date of July 25, 1927. The receipts and expenses were agreed and presented to the court by stipulation. It was not agreed that the Skelly Oil Company was entitled to any operating expense. Nor was it agreed that, in case Skelly Oil Company was entitled to operating expenses, it should be entitled to that portion thereof designated as overhead expenses which sums were by Skelly Oil Company claimed as the reasonable proportionate part of the general office, and .administrative expense of the company which could not be reasonably isolated from the general administrative, record keeping and supervisory expense to which the company is by necessity put in carrying on all of its general operations. Skelly Oil Company claimed this cost as part of its necessary and proper expense in operating the properties. On the basis of the Skelly claim it was stipulated as to the amount to which it would thereunder be entitled, should the court allow the charge as a proper deduction up to the date of the appointment of the receiver as well as up to the date the possession of the properties was relinquished by Skelly Oil Company.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Lincoln Bank & Trust Co. v. Oklahoma Tax Commission
1992 OK 22 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1992)
Depuy v. Hoeme
1989 OK 42 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1989)
Johnson v. Johnson
674 P.2d 539 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1983)
Saulsbury Oil Co. v. Phillips Petroleum Co.
142 F.2d 27 (Tenth Circuit, 1944)
Detrick v. Kitchens
1939 OK 55 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1939)
United States v. Standard Oil Co. of California
21 F. Supp. 645 (S.D. California, 1937)
Phoenix Oil Co. v. Mid-Continent Petroleum Corp.
1936 OK 250 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1936)
Attaway v. Watkins
1934 OK 620 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1934)
Parlette v. Equitable Farm Mortgage Co.
1933 OK 478 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1933)
Moody v. Wagner
1933 OK 416 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1933)
Skelly Oil Co. v. Johnson
1932 OK 433 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1932)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1930 OK 196, 293 P. 557, 146 Okla. 179, 1930 Okla. LEXIS 302, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ft-dearborn-trust-sav-bank-v-skelly-oil-co-okla-1930.