Haddock v. Sticelber Mong

1917 OK 215, 165 P. 1138, 65 Okla. 254, 1917 Okla. LEXIS 75
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 8, 1917
Docket7882
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 1917 OK 215 (Haddock v. Sticelber Mong) 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
Haddock v. Sticelber Mong, 1917 OK 215, 165 P. 1138, 65 Okla. 254, 1917 Okla. LEXIS 75 (Okla. 1917).

Opinion

Opinion by

RUMMONS, C.

This ' action was commenced in the district court of Rogers county by the defendants in error, hereinafter called plaintiffs, against the plaintiff in error, hereinafter called the defendant, to recover the sum of $1,118 for work* and ma-' terial furnished in drilling an oil and gas well and to foreclose a lien upon certain real estate in Rogers county to satisfy said debt. The defendant answered, admitting that the plaintiffs entered" into parol contract with the defendant and the Westerly Oil Company and P. P. Daulgren to drill a well upon -the premises described in the petition, one-half of the cost of. the drilling said well to be paid by the Westerly Oil Company and P. 3?. Daulgren, and one-half by the defendant. Defendant further alleges that, when the well was drilled to .the depth of 900 feet, the Westerly Oil Company and P. T.’ Daul-gren ordered drilling stopped and declared the well to be a dry hole, at which time the defendant entered into an agreement with the plaintiffs that, if they would collect one-half of the amount due them for drilling said well 900 feet from the Westerly Oil Company and P. P. Daulgren, the defendant would enter into a new contract with plaintiffs for the drilling of said well to a greater depth, at which time the Westerly Oil Company and P. P. Daulgren agreed to pay plaintiffs the sum. of $400 of the. cost price of drilling- said .well to a depth of 900 feet, and the plaintiffs agreed to accept said Westerly Oil Company and P. P. Daulgren- for said sum of $400. and defendant agreed to pay the balance of $410 for drilling said well. Defendant further alleged "that-upon the agreement aforesaid the defendant entered into a new contract with the plaintiffs 'by which he agreed to pay them the sum of 90 cents a foot to drill said well deeper until further orders from him, and alleges that at the depth of 1,220 feet he ordered plaintiffs to stop drilling after they had struck a gas well. Defendant admits that he is indebted to plaintiffs in the sum of $410 under the original contract and the sum of $288 on the last contract and the siim of $20 for tubing, making a total of $718, and alleges payment thereon of the sum of $98, and tenders plaintiffs thé sum of $620i. Plaintiffs replied, denying generally each allegation contained in the answer, and admitting the payment by defendant of $98.

Defendant,- as a witness in his own behalf, testified in substance that he and P. P. Daul-gren, of the Westerly Oil Company, and Mr.-Mong, one of the plaintiffs, had several conversations about drilling an oil and gas well, and that it was finally agreed between them that the plaintiffs should drill a well upon the premises of defendant to the shallow sand, or about 900 feet in depth, and that the price for drilling said well should be 90 cents per foot, and that in the event they struck oil .or gas the defendant should pay plaintiffs the amount due for drilling said well, and that in the event they had a dry-hole and no oil or gas was struck defendant should pay plaintiffs one-half of the drilling bill and Mr. Daulgren the other half; that, after plaintiffs had drilled the well to the depth of 900 feet, or to the shallow sand, Mr. Daulgren was unwilling to go any further and declared the well to be a dry hole. Defendant was anxious to drill to a greater depth, and proposed to the plaintiff Mong to settle up for the drilling of the well to the depth of 900 feet, defendant to pay $410, and plaintiffs to collect $400 from Mr. Daulgren, and proposed -to enter into a new contract with the plaintiffs, upon such settlement being made, to drill to a greater depth at the price of 90 cents a foot. Defendant says that, when he told Mr. Mong that Mr. Daulgren said stop, Mr. Mong said it was all off and they would stop, and that upon his proposal to Mr. Mong that the plaintiffs take Mr. Daulgren’ for $400 of the bill and look to him .for only $410 thereof and enter into a new contract for drilling the well further Mr. Mong proposed to talk to ■ Mr. *256 Daulgren over tlie telephone. Defendant and Mr. Mong went to defendant’s house, and Mr. Mong talked with Daulgren over the telephone in the presence of defendant. Aftei the conversation between Mong and Daulgren Mong told defendant that Daulgren agreed to pay the plaintiffs $400, and the plaintiffs would agree to take Daulgren for the $400; that the-plaintiffs then continued to drill to an additional depth of 320 feet, when they struck gas. At the conclusion of the evidence plaintiffs demurred to the evidence of the defendant, which demurrer was sustained by the court, and the jury was instructed by the court to render a verdict for the plaintiffs against the defendant. The defendant, having saved proper exceptions to the sustaining of the demurrer and direction of the verdict, moved for a néw trial, which motion was overruled. The defendant excepted, anu brings error.

Under several assignments of error the defendant complains.of the action of the trial court in sustaining the demurrer to his evidence and directing a verdict for the plaintiffs. From a reading of the briefs of both counsel for plaintiffs and defendant it seems that the trial court took the view that the defendant rested his defense upon a novation, but that his evidence failed to establish a valid contract of novation, and therefore plaintiffs were entitled to recover. We have reached the conclusion that the case of defendant does not depend alone upon the principles applicable to a contract of novation. The evidence of defendant, which for the purposes of this opinion may be taken as true, shows that plaintiffs and defendant and P. P. Daulgren entered into an agreement for the drilling of the well by plaintiffs and for the payment for such drilling in one contingency by defendant, and in another contingency for the payment of one-half by the defendant and one-half by P. F. Daul-‘ gren; that the latter contingency arose, and the defendant and P. F. Daulgren each became liable to plaintiffs for the cost of drilling the well. Defendant says in his testimony :

“I have- told you it was fairly understood that this agreement was a partnership matter for 900 feet and there we had an agreement and he accepted the $400 from Mr. Daulgren and left me „$410, and I would not go further until that agreement was made, because X did not think we had any neces sity for having a dry hole and X was not willing to quit my part of it. I was willing to bet a little more money; if he quit and got out, and we went on down, I was willing to take my chances. It is fair enough to dissolve partnership when you quit.”

It thus appears that the parties to this agreement understood that the defendant and P. F. Daulgren were partners in drilling this test well; that in the event the test delevoped a paying well the defendant, receiving the benefit, was to pay the whole of the cost of drilling; in the event it did not each was to pay one-half of the cost of drilling. The well at the depth to which it was agreed to drill produced nothing, and the defendant and P. F. Daulgren became liablfe to contribute to the payment of the cost of drilling the well. The defendant then proposed to the plaintiffs to employ them to drill deeper if they would agree to look alone to P. F. Daulgren for the payment of half of the cost of drilling to the shallow sand.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1917 OK 215, 165 P. 1138, 65 Okla. 254, 1917 Okla. LEXIS 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haddock-v-sticelber-mong-okla-1917.