Goble v. Bell Oil & Gas Co.

1924 OK 71, 223 P. 371, 97 Okla. 261, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 1092
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 22, 1924
Docket12664
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 1924 OK 71 (Goble v. Bell Oil & Gas 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
Goble v. Bell Oil & Gas Co., 1924 OK 71, 223 P. 371, 97 Okla. 261, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 1092 (Okla. 1924).

Opinion

Opinion by

STEPHENSON, C.

The defendant contracted to assign and sell certain oil and gas leases to the assignor of the plaintiff pursuant to the terms of a written contract entered into by and between the parties on the 8th day of February, 1918. The contract included both commercial and departmental leases. Oil was being produced from both the commercial and departmental leases at the time of the execution and delivery of the contract. Among the several provisions and conditions of the written contract, were the following:

(1) The defendant bound himself to sell and assign to the assignors of plaintiff the oil and gas leases described in schedule “A” and made a part of the written agreement. .

Schedule “A” included both the commercial and departmental leases involved in the contract.

(2) The entire purchase price to be paid for the oil and gas leases described in schedule “A” was $490,000.

(3) It was agreed that assignments properly executed covering all the leases described in schedule “A” should be placed in a bank at Tulsa with the abstract of title.

(4) The purchaser should have ten days thereafter in which to examine the abstract, and if on or before the expiration of the ten days the title should be approved, the purchaser should pay to the seller the following sum of money;

(a) $250,000, which together with the $50,000 previously paid, making a total of $300,000, should be considered as payment for the commercial leases and equipment thereon.

(5) The purchasers should place ths $190,000 in a bank at Tulsa to the credit of B. G. Goble, not to be subject to his check until the assignments of the departmental oil and gas leases were approved.

(6) It was further provided, unless the assignments were approved within 75 days from February 8, 1918, the seller might elect to rescind the sale of the departmental leases, and in which event the depository was directed to repay the said sum of money to the proposed purchasers.

After a recital of the foregoing provisions and agreements then appears the following paragraph;

“It is agreed, subject to the regulations of the Interior Department, that all pipe line runs from and after the execution of this agreement and the payment of the initial $50,000 shall be the property of the purchasers, and that the sellers will execute all proper sales and division orders, and that all oil runs and all gas produced and sold up to the execution of this agreement and the payment of said initial sum, shall still belong to' the sellers.”

It is clear that the contract by its terms and provisions is made divisible in its relation, both to the leases to be sold and assigned and the oil runs to be received by the purchasers from the two properties, in order to fix and settle the rights of the parties in the event the Secretary of the Interior should disapprove the assignment of the departmental leases. The intention of the parties in relation to the entire subject-matter as evidenced by the contract appears to be:

(1) That the purchasers should operate and receive the oil runs from the commercial leases from February 8, 1918.

(2) If the Secretary of the Interior should approve the assignment of the departmental leases, the purchasers should receive the oil runs from such leases dating from February 8, 1918.

*263 (3) If tlie Secretary of the Interior declined to approve the assignment of the departmental oil and gas leases, the proposed sellers should retain the oil runs and cause to be returned to the purchasers the $190,-000 deposited with the bank as the purchase price for the two leases.

The departmental leases were on restricted Indian lands and the Interior Department had made the sale and assignment of such leases subject to its approval; hence, the sale and assignment of said leases were subject to the regulations prescribed by the department.

The last paragraph of the contract quoted above relates to the oil runs from both the commercial and departmental leases. However, it is clear that the parties did not intend for the action of the Secretary of the Interior in relation to the departmental leased to affect the on runs from the commercial leases, as the preceding xxrovisions of the contract had made the subject-matter divisible. If it were the intention of the parties to permit the action of the Secretary of the Interior in relation to the departmental leases to affect the oil runs from the commercial leases, then the provisions of the contract inserted for the purpose of rendering the contract divisible would be both useless and meaningless. Therefore, while apparently making disposition of all the oil runs from the property subject to the regulations of the Interior Department, it was the intention and purpose of the parties to affect only the oil runs from the departmental leases. In making the disposal of the oil runs from the property subject to the requirements of the Interior Department, the parties had in mind only the action of the Secretary of the Interior in the approval or disapproval of the assignment of the departmental leases. It is apparent from the express provisions of the paragraph and of the entire contract that the sellers intended that the purchasers should receive the oil runs from the departmental leases if the assignments were approved by the Secretary of the Interior. The effect of the paragraph is to expressly provide that the purchasers should liave the oil run from the departmental leases from the 8th day of February, 1918, in the event the department subsequently approved the assignment of the leases. Later, and within the time specified by the written agreement, the department approved the assignment of the leases, and the bank paid the assignors of the departmental leases the full purchase price of $190,000. The lessee thereafter refused to account to the assignors of this plaintiff for the oil run from the departmental leases from February 8, 1918, to the date of the approval of the assignments by the Secretary of the Interior ; hence, this law suit. However, during the interim the lessee had paid to the plaintiff $3,000 to apply on the oil runs. It is admitted that the total value of the oil run between the dates is $ll,091.50.The plaintiff then commenced its action against the defendant to recover the balance of the oil run in the sum of $8,091.50. In the trial of this cause judgment went for the plaintiff in the amount sued for. The defendant has appealed the cause to this court and among the several errors assigned for reversal, are the following :

(1) Error of the court in overruling defendant’s demurrer to the evidence.

(2) Error of the court in overruling defendant’s motion for directed verdict.

(3) Error in refusing to allow the defendant cost of production and interest on purchase price between date of approval of assignments, and payment by the purchaser to defendant.

The contract introduced in the trial of the cause and the evidence present only the foregoing questions in this appeal.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1924 OK 71, 223 P. 371, 97 Okla. 261, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 1092, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goble-v-bell-oil-gas-co-okla-1924.