Graham v. Dunlap

1935 OK 1067, 65 P.2d 538, 179 Okla. 295, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 1217
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 5, 1935
DocketNo. 24458.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1935 OK 1067 (Graham v. Dunlap) 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
Graham v. Dunlap, 1935 OK 1067, 65 P.2d 538, 179 Okla. 295, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 1217 (Okla. 1935).

Opinion

RILEY, J.

This action was commenced by defendants in error, Elizabeth Dunlap, Priscilla Graham, Arthur Turner, and Joella Crenshaw, joined by Eugene Walker, against A. E. Graham and the Superior Oil Corporation.

Before service of summons was had upon defendant A, E. Graham, he died, leaving as his heirs at law his widow, Alice B. Graham, and two children, Mary Lou Graham and A. Staneart Graham.

Alice B. Graham was duly appointed ad-ministratrix of the estate of A. E. Graham, deceased, and later a second application was made to revive in the name of the heirs at law of A. E. Graham, naming them, parties defendant.

Thereafter an order was made reviving the cause in so far as it affected the estate of A. E. Graham, deceased, in the name of Alice B. Graham, administratrix of the estate of A. E. Graham, deceased, and Alice B. Graham, and Mary Lou Graham, a minor, heirs at law of A. E. Graham, deceased; an order was made appointing a guardian ad litem for defendant Mary Lou Graham, a minor. A. Staneart Graham appeared to have been a nonresident.

Later an order was made, upon proof of service by publication of notice of application to revive, reviving the cause in the name of A. Staneart Graham as heir at law of A. E. Graham, deceased.

Thereafter an amended petition was filed alleging in substance that plaintiffs were the owners of an undivided interest in 120 acres of land described as the N,y2 N.E.% and the S.W.% N.E.%, section two (2) township 9 N. range 5 E., in Seminole county. That about August, 1927, A. E. Graham, then a practicing attorney, was employed by plaintiffs as their attorney in connection with straightening up their title in and to said land; that in consideration of his services, it was orally agreed that plaintiffs should execute an oil and gas *296 lease to said A. E. Graham, who was to negotiate with some oil company or companies for the drilling of a well on the land, and that in payment of his services in that behalf, he, Graham, was to receive one-half of whatever bonus he might receive from the sale of such lease, and that plaintiffs did execute an oil and gas lease covering their interest in said land to said A. E. Graham; that thereafter Graham entered into an agreement with the Superior Oil Corporation whereunder he assigned said lease to said oil corporation, for which the oil corporation agreed to pay to Graham the proportionate part of a three-eighths working interest under said lease; that pursuant thereto the Superior Oil Corporation went into possession of said land, and developed the same for oil and gas and produced large quantities of oil therefrom, and under said agreement paid said Graham large sums of money covering the three-eighths working interest under said lease, and that said Graham had failed and refused to account to plaintiffs for their one-half part thereof.

The prayer was for an accounting against the estate of said A. E. Graham, and for a decree declaring plaintiffs to be entitled to one-half of the money derived from said three-eighths overriding' working interest.

The Superior Oil Corporation filed its separate answer, neither affirming nor denying the allegations of plaintiffs, but did plead that by the amended petition the only relief sought by plaintiffs was that said Superior Oil Corporation be enjoined from making further payments to the estate of A. E. Graham, as to the interest claimed by plaintiffs, and in this regard pleaded that said corporation had been placed in the hands of a receiver in an action theretofore brought in the district court of Tulsa county, and that John Rogers had been appointed and was then acting as receiver for said company, and suggested that whatever relief plaintiffs were entitled to as against the oil corporation should be applied for in an appropriate application to the court appointing the receiver, and not by injunction against the Superior Oil Corporation.

The other defendants, after unsuccessful demurrers, filed their separate answers, but only the answer of Alice B. Graham, as administratrix, need be noticed. She pleaded that she neither admitted nor denied the ownership alleged by plaintiffs, but admitted that at one time plaintiffs were the owners of an interest in the real estate described. She then pleaded that no claim for any money alleged to be due to plaintiffs had ever been presented to her as administratrix.

She specifically denied that A. E. Graham at the time of his death was under contract of any kind to pay plaintiffs or either of them any part of the proceeds received from the oil produced from said land, and denied that deceased was holding any interest in said property in trust for plaintiffs, and alleged that whatever interest deceased held in the leasehold estate created by the lease to him was absolute, and that if it had ever been contingent or conditional, the condition had been fully performed prior to the death of A. E. Graham; she specifically denied that A. E. Graham, deceased, was indebted to plaintiffs in any sum. She also pleaded, by way of an alleged former adjudication of the rights of the parties, that;

“By way of further answer, this defendant says that in consolidated causes No. 9070 and 10539, tried in the district court of Seminole county, Oklahoma, the parties plaintiff herein and the said A. E. Graham, deceased, were parties plaintiff and defendant in said consolidated causes, and the rights of the parties in and to the oil and gas lease and leasehold estate covering the lands described in plaintiff’s amended petition were fully determined and adjudicated. That a true and correct copy of the journal entry of judgment in said consolidated causes is hereto attached, marked ‘Answering Defendant’s Exhibit A,’ and made a part of this answer.

“That on account of said judgment and decree in said consolidated causes fixing, decreeing, and establishing the title in and to said leasehold, and on account of said judgment becoming a final judgment of the district court of Seminole county, Oklahoma, and the question of plaintiff’s title to an interest in said leasehold estate is now res adjudicata, the same having been determined in said consolidated causes.”

The cause was tried to the court without a jury, a part of the issues being referred to a referee for report, resulting in a judgment in favor of defendant as against plaintiff Eugene Walker, and in favor of the other plaintiffs sustaining their contention to the effect that the land was lhased to deceased by plaintiffs under an agreement to pay plaintiffs one-half of whatever bonus might be recovered for the assignment of the lease, and that Graham had received therefor a bonus in oil amounting to three-eighths of the seven-eighths of the oil produced from the lease after paying *297 the expense of production, and that .plaintiffs were entitled to their proportionate part of the one-half of the three-eighths working interest retained by deceased.

From this judgment and decree Alice B. Graham, administratrix, appeals.

There are 24 assignments of error, a number of which are not covered by the motion for a new trial. They are presented under four general propositions, “A,” “B,” “O,” “D.”

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

Related

Wisel v. Terhune
1949 OK 22 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1949)
Superior Oil Corp. v. Wilson
1940 OK 196 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1940)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1935 OK 1067, 65 P.2d 538, 179 Okla. 295, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 1217, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/graham-v-dunlap-okla-1935.