Glock v. Carpenter

184 F. Supp. 829, 1960 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4273
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Kentucky
DecidedJanuary 6, 1960
DocketNos. 1033, 1035, 1044, 1046, 1048, 1072, 1076
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 184 F. Supp. 829 (Glock v. Carpenter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Glock v. Carpenter, 184 F. Supp. 829, 1960 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4273 (E.D. Ky. 1960).

Opinion

HIRAM CHURCH FORD, Chief Judge.

Plaintiffs seek damages for fraud alleged to have been practiced upon them by the defendant A. H. Carpenter and his agent, J. F. Shepperd, in inducing them to purchase fractional working interests in gas leases owned by the defendant Carpenter upon lands located in an area referred to in the testimony as the “Furnace Area” in Powell and Es-till counties, Kentucky.

The above entitled cases were consolidated for trial and were tried to the Court without the intervention of a jury.

The facts disclosed by the record are in substance as follows:

South Central Petroleum Corporation, of which the defendant A. H. Carpenter was president, owned a gas lease located in the Furnace Area in Estill county upon the farm of J. M. Garrett.

Commencing on August 12, 1947, the South Central Petroleum Corporation, with Carpenter in charge as contractor, drilled a gas well upon the Garrett lease. The well was completed September 30, 1947, and it had the appearance of substantial gas production. This well is known and referred to in the record as “Garrett No. 1” and it is also referred to as the “discovery well.”

On October 7, 1947, at the invitation of Mr. Carpenter, W. B. Maxwell, manager of the Geology Department of the United Fuel and Gas Company, Charleston, W. Va., made a field test of the gas in Garrett No. 1 which revealed the gas from this well to be contaminated in that it was 45% carbon dioxide, a gas which would not burn, and contained 300 grains of hydrogen sulfide, a corrosive, per hundred cubic feet, all of which was promptly reported to Mr. Carpenter, together with the information that United Fuel would not purchase the gas from this well so contaminated unless the contamination were removed. Mr. Maxwell later mailed to Mr. Carpenter a copy of the laboratory analysis which confirmed the field analysis.

[831]*831For the same corporation and upon the same farm Mr. Carpenter completed the drilling of a second gas well on December 14, 1947, referred to in the evidence as Garrett No. 2, the test of which showed the gas from it to be contaminated to about the same extent as Garrett No. 1. Mr. Carpenter made a diligent investigation as to the prospect of cleaning the contaminated gas produced from these wells. The high cost of such procedure was obviously quite prohibitive.

Shortly after Garrett No. 1 was completed and tested, Mr. Carpenter by his agent, J. F. Shepperd, inaugurated an energetic campaign to sell fractional working interests to the plaintiffs, all of whom resided out of the state of Kentucky, in gas leases which Carpenter individually acquired in a large area in the general neighborhood of the Garrett farm, known as the “Furnace Area”, which leases were upon farms referred to in the record as the “Hood Wise” lease, “Elbert Wasson” lease, “Ida Barnes Nicholas” lease, “Tipton” lease, “James Smyth” lease, “James Hall” lease, and “Pete Wells” lease.

During the course of the procedure to induce plaintiffs to invest in these leases, the various plaintiffs, sometimes accompanied by Mr. Shepperd, visited Mr. Carpenter at Winchester, Kentucky, and were conducted on tours of inspection of the so-called gas field and on such occasions Mr. Carpenter represented that the well known as Garrett No. 1 signified an enormous gas discovery in that area; that the gas produced was pure, sweet, premium gas and all that needed to be done to realize a large profit was to turn it into a pipeline and put meters on the wells; that the gas could be marketed readily; that a gas transmission company would be willing to put in a pipeline to take the gas, and that a fabulous profit could be realized by investors in the wells. There is testimony indicating that Shepperd made representations similar to those made by Carpenter to induce plaintiffs to invest in the leases and that Carpenter said he would back up and stand behind anything Shepperd said in regard to the wells. Carpenter and Shepperd met with some of the plaintiffs in Indiana, where most of them resided, and made substantially the same representations in respect to the quality of the gas and the enormous profits to be derived from investments in fractional working interests in the wells being drilled and proposed to be drilled in the Furnace Area.

These representations related to matters of material fact. They were false and were made by Carpenter as well as by Shepperd with knowledge that they were false and under circumstances which did not justify honest belief in their truth. Such representations went far beyond the permissible limits of legitimate “sales talk”.

At the time of their investments the plaintiffs were unaware of the facts as to the inferiority of the gas produced in the discovery well. The facts disclosed by the analysis of the gas were concealed by the defendant Carpenter. Such concealment under the attendant facts and circumstances, as well as the assertion of what was false, constituted actionable fraud. Fields v. Cornett, 254 Ky. 35, 42, 70 S.W.2d 954; Kaze v. Compton, Ky., 283 S.W.2d 2.04, 207.

The plaintiffs relied upon the repre-resentations made by Carpenter and Shepperd and were induced thereby to make and did make investments as hereinafter stated in fractional working interests in the leases, payments for which were made through Shepperd and were sent to and received by Carpenter. Mr. Carpenter drilled wells on certain of the leases, some of which produced gas, but all of which gas was contaminated to substantially the same extent as the Garrett wells.

In 1952 and 1953 the plaintiffs and others who had purchased interests in the wells in question joined in a contract employing Harry G. Witt to market the gas and to distribute to the respective owners their proportionate share of the net proceeds. Since 1952 the gas has been marketed to South Central Petrole[832]*832um Corporation which resold some of it to a nearby brick plant for firing brick and has used the remainder for running engines of oil well pumps, repressuring and experimentation in the secondary recovery of oil. In Dunn v. Tate, Ky., 268 S.W.2d 925, the Kentucky Court of Appeals held that by such action defrauded purchasers are not precluded from maintaining actions for damages and that the language of previous decisions to the contrary was merely obiter dictum.

By 1954 the rock pressure of the gas wells had declined considerably and has continued to decline rapidly. On February 9, 1958, the pressure of the James Smyth well was 110 pounds, the Hood Wise 70 pounds and the Elbert Wasson 65 pounds. The leases in which plaintiffs invested have little or no present commercial value.

It appears from the record that the investments made by the plaintiffs respectively and the amounts received by each of them from gas sales made by Mr. Witt are as follows:

Dr. Wayne R. Glock on December 11, 1947, paid $2,000 for 34s of % working interest in the Hood Wise lease; on March 29, 1948, he paid $2,562.50 for 3k of % working interest in the Hood Wise lease; on April 28, 1948, he paid $8,000 for 34e of % working interest in the Elbert Wasson lease; on June 8, 1948, he paid $3,000 for 3k of % working interest in the Ida Barnes Nicholas lease, and on August 16, 1948, he paid $1,875 for 3428 of % working interest in the Jim Hall lease. The total investment of this plaintiff was $17,437.50. From the operations by Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
184 F. Supp. 829, 1960 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4273, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/glock-v-carpenter-kyed-1960.