Gorman v. Carlock

1919 OK 58, 179 P. 38, 72 Okla. 104, 1919 Okla. LEXIS 318
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 25, 1919
Docket7165
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 1919 OK 58 (Gorman v. Carlock) 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
Gorman v. Carlock, 1919 OK 58, 179 P. 38, 72 Okla. 104, 1919 Okla. LEXIS 318 (Okla. 1919).

Opinion

RAINEY, J.

This action was instituted in the district court of Carter county by M. Gorman and J. E. McCarty, as plaintiffs, against John Oarlock and John R. Dexter, defendants. The plaintiffs’ petition alleged that a partnership existed between the plaintiffs and the defendants with reference to oil and gas leases in what is known as the Healdton oil field: that a certain lease, known as the William Tillis lease, was taken in the name of John H. Carlock, one of the defendants, but was a part of the partnership property and prayed that the defendants be adjudged to hold said lease in trust for the partnership, and for an accounting and a distribution of the partnership assets. The defendants, in their answer. which was verified, denied that any partnership was ever formed or entered into between the plaintiffs and the defendants.

It appears from the record in this ease that the first well in the Healdton field was brought in early in August, 1913, at which time the plaintiffs, who were in the real estate business, became interested in securing oil and gas leases on lands that appeared to them likely to be in the oil-producing area. The defendants, who were also in the real estate business, likewise became interested and active in taking leases in the same territory. According to the plaintiffs’ testimony. about this time Mr. Dexter approached. the plaintiffs and suggested that it would probably be mutually advantageous for them all to go in together to secure oil leases in the field, and that after all four had talked the matter over they agreed to work together in securing' leases, to share the expenses equally, and to share the profits or losses equally: that Mr. Dexter was to keep the books; that they each put up $50, and were io put up more money if it. was needed; that a number of leases were acquired between the 12th of August and the date of taking the Tillis lease, on the 27th day of August, 1913; that said lease was taken by Mr. Carlock, in- his own name, from one William Tillis, a full-blood Choctaw Indian, on a departmental form, which,. upon application, was approved by the Secretary of Interior as was provided by law, and that the plaintiffs did not learn until about February, 1914, that this lease had been taken. Plaintiffs further testified that when they discovered Oarlock had taken this lease in his own name they inquired of him why he had not -turned it in, and that he answered that it was procured a long time after they qiiit taking leases together.

The account kept by Mr. Dexter was entitled-: “McCarty, Gorman, Carlock .Oil Leases.” The first entry on the account was August 15, 1913,' and various items of- expense occurred in obtaining leases executed prior to the Tillis lease were entered in the account up to and including October 28, 1913, but the cost and expenses of procuring the Tillis lease were not charged in this account. ■; " ■■■'

According to the testimony of the defendants, -there was no agreement between them and the plaintiffs that they would,go in together on all leases taken in the Healdton field, but the agreement was that'j-the'. plaintiffs and the defendants were only -.to -be equally interested in such- leases as wefe ¡submitted to each other and a'l agreed'-to acquire, and that before the Tillis lease was taken, plaintiffs informed defendants that inasmuch as they had leases in every direction from the discovery well! that they did not want an interest in any more leases. There is also evidence in the record that.defendants became interested with other parties in leases in the same field during the existence of the alleged partnership, ’and that the plaintiffs became interested in lenses with other parties in the early part of the following year. In one lease the four became co-owners with three other parties. The defendants testified that ir. November, 1913, Mar. Dexter traded Mr. Oarlock a one-half interest in 30 acres of land in the field for a one-half interest in the Tillis lease.

During the trial the court impaneled a jury and submitted to it three certain interrogatories, which, together with the answers thereto, are as follows:

T. Was there a partnership formed between Gorman, McCarty, Oarlock, -and Dexter to acquire-oil and gas-leases? A. Yes. ■
*106 “2. When was such partnership formed? A. August 12, 1913.
“3. Was such partnership in force on the 27th day of August, 1913, at the time the William Tillis lease was acquired by John H. Carlock? A. No.”

The court did not make special findings of fact or conclusions of law, but the judgment in defendants’ favor1 contains the following recital:

“And it appearing’to the court that said special requested charges were requested and agreed to by both the plaintiffs and defendants, and that the question or right to have a general verdict returned herein was waived by both parties thereto, arid the court being sufficiently advised in the whole premises doth adopt the finding of the jury that there was no partnership existing between plaintiffs and the defendants on the 27th day of August, 1913, at the time the William Tillis lease was taken by John H. Carlock, which said lease is the one that is in controversy herein; and doth find that plaintiffs, M. Gor-man and J. E. McCarty, had no interest therein.”

A motion for a new trial was filed and overruled, to review which action the plaintiffs have appealed to this court. The parties will hereinafter be designated as plaintiffs and defendants, according to their respective titles in the trial court.

In their brief, counsel for plaintiffs dis-euss only the first, sixth, seventh, and ninth assignments of error under the following proposition:

“The partnership agreement was in full force and effect when the William Tillis lease was taken by Carlock, and said lease, therefore, belongs to the partnership.”

Asserting that the action is one in which the. parties were not entitled to a trial by jury, counsel for plaintiffs insist that we examine the evidence and reverse the judgment on the ground that it is contrary to the evidence and inconsistent with the findings that a partnership was formed on August 12, 1913.

The action is not one for the recovery of money, or of specific real or personal property, but is an action for the dissolution of an alleged partnership, to declare a trust, and for an accounting. We do not agree with counsel for defendants that in every case where the existence of a partnership is at issue either party is entitled to a jury trial as a matter of right. Our Code clearly contemplates that issues of fact are to be determined by the court, except in civil actions for the recovery of money or of specific real or personal property, subject to the court’s power to order any issue or issues to ue tried by a jury, or referred as provided in the Code. Sections 4993, 4994, Rev. Laws 1910; Childs v. Cook, 68 Okla. 240, 174 Pac. 274.

We concur then with counsel for plaintiffs that this action is one in which it is the duty of this court to examine and consider the whole record, to weigh the evidence, and if the judgment of the trial court is found to be clearly against tho weight of the evidence it is our duty to render, or cause to be rendered, such judgment as the trial court should have rendered in the first instance. Shock et al. v. Fish, 45 Okla. 12, 144 Pac. 584; Wimberly v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1919 OK 58, 179 P. 38, 72 Okla. 104, 1919 Okla. LEXIS 318, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gorman-v-carlock-okla-1919.