Gum v. First Nat. Bank of Okmulgee

1925 OK 43, 244 P. 187, 116 Okla. 263, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 383
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 20, 1925
Docket13827
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1925 OK 43 (Gum v. First Nat. Bank of Okmulgee) 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
Gum v. First Nat. Bank of Okmulgee, 1925 OK 43, 244 P. 187, 116 Okla. 263, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 383 (Okla. 1925).

Opinion

Opinion by

ESTES, C.

Parties appear in the same order as in the trial court. Plaintiffs sued defendants to recover $5,000 deposited with defendant bank in escrow, under a contract between themselves and defendant Smith, as trustee for the owners of an oil and gas leasehold estate in certain 70 acres in Okmulgee county. Defendant Smith was described as first party, and plaintiffs as second parties, in thej contract. *264 tbe essential parts of which are that the first party bargained and agreed to sell and transfer to second parties the said leasej, describing it, to furnish abstract showing good title—

“And further agrees to furnish to parties of the second part the pipe line runs; and also complete statement showing the amount of gas sold, and it is agreed, that said statement and runs shall be in accordance with the exhibit hereto attached and marked exhibit ‘A’. If said pipe line runs and statements from the gas company are materially different from the runs and statements as shown in exhibit ‘A,’ then it shall be deemed and considered a material misrepresentation, and parties of the second part shall be entitled to the immediate return o£ the $5.,000 deposited in escrow with this contract. Party of the first part further represents that the itemized statement of material, as shown by exhibit, is true ¿nd correct and that the depth of the wells as shown by1 said exhibit ‘A,’ is also true and correct; and if there are any material divergencies between the said statemeint and the actual facts, they also shall be regarded as a material misrepresentation and shall entitle the parties of the second part to an immediate return of said $5,000. * * * Parties of the second part shall have until the 15th day of of July, 1919 in which to elect whether or not they will purchase said lease and all machinery, equipment, and wells located thereon. If parties of the second part do not elect to purchase said property on or before the 15tih day of July, 1919, then party of the first part shall be¡ entitled to said sum of $5,000 deposited in escrow in the First National Bank • of Okmulgee., Okla., provided said party of the first part complies with the terms and conditions of this contract.®

It was further provided that if second parties ejected to purchase the property on or before said date, then theyl should pay on the date of such election $45,000. which, together with the escrow deposit and $50,-000, sedured in deferred payments, made the total purchase price $100,000. Said option money and the contract wrere deposited with the defendant bank as escrow agent. Said exhibit, attached to th^ contract, consisted of a schedule of data of the eight wells arranged in columns under appropriate heads showing among other things, with reference to ^ach well, the depth, date of completion, number of barrels produced in first 24 hours, and also “present daily production in barrels.” This exhibit showed that wells Nos. 1, 2, 0 and 7 were dry; that the present daily production in barrels of No. 3 was 11; of No. 4, 12; of No. 5. 12; of No. 8, 38. Said exhibit also contained a plat or diagram of the 70 acres showing the location of the ejigh-t wells to- have been distributed over the tract. Among other data, the exhibit showed the pipe line runs for the year preceding May 1st. Plaintiffs attempted to rescind said contract and demanded the return of said deposit prior to the expiration of the option, on the ground that they had discovered that said wells in fact produced at date of contract, respectively, only 6%. 6%, 2, and 50 barrels of oil per day. On refusal of defendantsi to return the escrow deposit, plaintiffs filtíd this suit to recover same on the ground of misrepresentation, making the usual averments for sucihi purpose, based on the discrepancy between the alleged actual production of the individual wells and their production as shown biyi said exhibit. Judgment on verdict of jury was for defendants,' from which plaintiffs prosecute error. Defendants contend that the purchase was on tha pipe line runs and statement from the gas company, under thej clause of the contract first quoted above; that1 such clause limited the matter of misrepresentation to the pipe line runs and statement and excluded other misrepresentations by its very terms; that thereby the production of the individual wells was not made a material misrepresentation. Plaintiffs contend that the clause “and if there are any material divergencies between thej' said statement and the actual fects, they also, shall be regarded as material misrepresentations and shall entitle the parties of the second part to an immediate return of said $5,000,” is not limited to the material sold, or the depth of the wells, but has reference to all matters other than pipe line runs and statement of gas. set out in said exhibit; that said last clausej includes the production < f each well. If defendants’ contention be correct, the trial court should have instructed verdict for defendants as matter of law, on such construction of the contract, because there was no contention that the aggregate runs of oil and gas were materially different in fact from that shown by the exhibit. If said contract be so construed as to preclude plaintiffs from alleging and proving any other misrepresentation, then the judgment and verdict are correct, and any error in the instructions would be harmless. We cannot agree with defendants’ contention. All parties knew that the pipe line runs and gas statements covered the( aggregate production of the lease, and that the wells were not separately gauged. This clause is. therefore, a guarantee only against misrepresentation as to the) total production of the lease. There is nothing in this clause to indicate an intention that a misrepresentation in any other respect would be material. Plaintiffs were not thereby *265 precluded from pleading and proving other material misrepresentations. The evidence of plaintiffs tending to show that the lease on the 70 acres with four wells distributed and producing, as shown by the exhibit, would have been worth much more than in its alleged actual' condition — No. 8 producing practically all the oil, No. 5 producing two barrels, and the other two producing slightly more than half as represented in the exhibit. It is patent in the oil business that this might be very material to plaintiffs, if true;. Defendant Smith's representation in the exhibit, as to the production- of each well, was outside of his guarantee that the pipe! line runs and statements of the gas company should not be materially different from the exhibit. We can arrive at the intention of the parties from the four corners of this contract, since the language in this behalf is plain and unambiguous. The¡ first part of the clause, relied upon by plaintiffs, guarantees that the exhibit is correct as to the material sold with the lease and the depth of the wells. Following this is a semicolon, and then the provision that if there are any material divergen-cies between the exhibit and the actual facts, they also shall be regarded as a material misrepresentation. The reasonable and fair construction thereof, particularly since the word “also” is used, is that the parties intended thereby that said clause should cover any other matters and data contained in said exhibit, because the first clause relied on by defendants covers only the matter of the pipe line runs and statement of gas contained in the exhibit. Said first elausej does not attempt to exclude all other matters of misrepresentation.

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Related

First Nat. Bank of Okmulgee v. Gum
1930 OK 362 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1930)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1925 OK 43, 244 P. 187, 116 Okla. 263, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 383, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gum-v-first-nat-bank-of-okmulgee-okla-1925.