Graham-Loftus Oil Corp. v. Mountain View Development Corp.

99 P.2d 357, 37 Cal. App. 2d 315
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 15, 1940
DocketCiv. 2293
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 99 P.2d 357 (Graham-Loftus Oil Corp. v. Mountain View Development Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Graham-Loftus Oil Corp. v. Mountain View Development Corp., 99 P.2d 357, 37 Cal. App. 2d 315 (Cal. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

THOMSON, J., pro tem.

This is an appeal by plaintiff from a judgment of the court, sitting without a jury, in a claim and delivery suit to recover oil well drilling equipment, adjudging that defendants are entitled to a bill of sale from plaintiff for said drilling equipment theretofore purchased under a conditional sales contract; and that interveners may foreclose and sell said equipment under a subsequent chattel mortgage executed by defendant corporation.

Under date of January 10, 1934, certain individuals entered into an oil and gas lease, as lessors, with Walter M. Crawford, as lessee, covering 80 acres of land in Kern County. The lessee’s interest was subsequently assigned to the defendant corporation. The lease stipulated that other than one assignment of the entire interest of lessee to a California corporation, assignments might be made only upon the written consent of lessors first had and obtained. On May 12, 1934, plaintiff, as seller, entered into a contract with defendants, excepting defendant Pishfader, as buyers, whereby said defendants agreed to purchase from plaintiff a rotary oil well drilling outfit. The agreement contained the following clause: “Price: The cash purchase price for said equipment shall be Ten Thousand Dollars ($10,000.00) ...” Then follow clauses providing for the payment of monthly installments *319 of $1,000 each. The agreement also provides that “in addition to the cash price above mentioned and as further consideration for said equipment, the buyers agree to deliver to seller five per cent (5%) of the gross amount of all oil and gas which may hereafter be produced by buyers, their successors or assigns” on said land “on which Mountain View Development Company now holds a lease”. As a further consideration the defendants agreed to abandon plaintiff’s “Well No. 1” in Fresno County, where the drilling equipment was located, in compliance with law and the rules of competent public authority. The buyers also agreed that “until the said cash purchase price shall have been paid buyers shall use and maintain said equipment in a careful and workmanlike manner. ...” A default clause provided that “in event of any default on the part of buyers in the payment of any installment of the cash purchase price . . . or in the observance or performance of any condition or covenant on their part hereunder. ...” plaintiff might declare the whole amount of the unpaid cash purchase price due and payable and might take such action to collect the same as it might elect, or it might repossess the property. Title to the equipment was reserved in the seller until the full purchase price was paid. The seller agreed to execute and deliver to the buyers a bill of sale to the equipment “when buyers shall have paid the full cash purchase price and are not then in any default in the observance or performance of any other covenants or conditions . . . ”; and it was agreed that “at such time buyers shall execute, acknowledge and deliver to seller” an “instrument in form satisfactory to seller as the latter shall designate, evidencing seller’s right to receive five per cent (5%) of all oil and gas thereafter produced by buyers ...” on said premises. There is evidence to the effect that the individual defendants do not claim any interest in the personal property or leasehold, but were guarantors of defendant corporation. The defendant corporation abandoned the well above mentioned at a cost of about $1500 and removed the equipment to said leased premises, where it drilled a well. It paid plaintiff all installments of the cash purchase price and, upon payment of the last installment, requested a bill of sale of said equipment, but plaintiff refused to execute such bill of sale on the ground that defendant corporation was not entitled to a bill of sale until it had exe *320 cuted an assignment of five per cent of such oil and gas. At that time defendants were unable to execute such an assignment because some of the lessors declined to sign a consent to such assignment until the well was completed. However, such consent was later secured and defendants also obtained a permit from the corporation commissioner to make such assignment, and on February 9, 1939, while this case was pending, defendant corporation deposited such an assignment with an escrow holder approved by the corporation commissioner, in accordance with the requirements of such permit, and filed a supplemental answer setting forth those facts. On February 17, 1935, Oil Well Supply Company, a corporation, assignor of the interveners, took a note and chattel mortgage on said equipment for $6,500, which the interveners assert was executed and accepted with the consent of plaintiff, and they seek to foreclose said chattel mortgage and sell said equipment. The trial court rendered judgment that plaintiff take nothing by its complaint and directing plaintiff to execute a bill of sale of said equipment to defendant corporation and directing the foreclosure of the chattel mortgage and the sale of the mortgaged property.

Appellant presents numerous points in its briefs, but they may be fairly summarized in two main issues. As between plaintiff and defendants the principal issue is whether or not the defendants, as buyers, complied with the requirements of the conditional sales contract so as to be entitled to a bill of sale from plaintiff; and as between plaintiff and the interveners the principal issue is whether or not a chattel mortgage taken from defendants by the assignor of the interveners, with knowledge of said conditional sales agreement, was valid by reason of an alleged estoppel claimed by the interveners.

Appellant urges that the trial court’s conclusion and judgment that defendant corporation is entitled to possession of, and to the bill of sale to, the drilling equipment, is contrary to the findings of fact and the evidence, in that defendants breached the conditional sales contract because they failed to execute and deliver to plaintiff an instrument, as required by said contract, evidencing plaintiff’s right to receive 5 per cent of the gas and oil produced on the leased premises.

We think the evidence shows that defendants have not failed or refused to execute and deliver to plaintiff an instru *321 ment evidencing appellant’s right to receive said percentage of oil and gas provided for in the conditional sales agreement. On March 6, 1935, plaintiff, through its attorneys, wrote to defendants, stating, among other things, that it would be necessary for the defendant corporation to obtain a permit from the corporation commissioner authorizing said defendant to execute and deliver to plaintiff the assignment of royalty provided for in the conditional sales contract. Plaintiff also prepared and delivered to defendants a form of application for such permit. After defendant corporation received said permit it executed such an assignment and deposited it with an escrow holder approved by the corporation commissioner, in accordance with a requirement of said permit. It is true that, at the time the last installment of the cash purchase price was paid, when defendants requested a bill of sale, they were not in a position to make an assignment of any royalty interest, because it required the consent of the lessors above mentioned, and some of them declined to give such consent until the well was completed.

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Bluebook (online)
99 P.2d 357, 37 Cal. App. 2d 315, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/graham-loftus-oil-corp-v-mountain-view-development-corp-calctapp-1940.