Hamill Smith v. Ogden

163 S.W.2d 725, 1942 Tex. App. LEXIS 390
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 7, 1942
DocketNo. 11331.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 163 S.W.2d 725 (Hamill Smith v. Ogden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hamill Smith v. Ogden, 163 S.W.2d 725, 1942 Tex. App. LEXIS 390 (Tex. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

MONTEITH, Chief Justice.

This action was brought by appellees, Ralph Ogden and M. R. Reed, for the recovery of certain sums which were alleged to have been withheld from them by appellants, Claud B. Hamill and R. E. Smith, and Continental Oil Company, in the settlement of the affairs of jointly owned and operated oil leases.

Appellees pled four grounds of recovery: the sum of $9,237.55, alleged to be their ⅝ interest in a reduction in oil payments and overriding royalties made by the Pure Oil Company as a contribution to a settlement of a suit brought against appellants and the Pure Oil Company by one Amádeo Hubbard; ⅞ of $2,489.25, alleged to have been realized from a reduction in overriding royalties made by the Pure Oil Company in consideration of the drilling of certain test wells on a mineral lease known as the Ruiz lease (this ground of recovery was abandoned by appellees); $901.15, ⅝ of $2,703.47, alleged dividends claimed to have been paid to appellants, because of their record in avoiding accidents, on a workmen’s compensation policy covering employees on a lease in McMullen County; and $1,277.41, alleged to be due appellees on an accounting of the joint operations of said lease. .

The case was submitted to the jury on a general charge in answer to which the jury returned a verdict in favor of appel-lees and against appellants for the sVim of $5,000. Upon-this verdict and upon independent findings made by the trial court, judgment was rendered in favor of appellees against appellants for the sum of $8,775.92 and against Continental Oil Company, as purchaser of the oil, for the sum of $869.22..

The record shows that the Pure Oil Company, the owner of a ⅞ mineral lease on 320 acres of land in Duval County, Texas, known as Survey No. 77, assigned said lease to Claud Hamill, reserving a $40,-000 payment to be made out of ⅞2 of the oil and gas derived therefrom, and ⅛ overriding royalty on flowing wells and.a ¾e overriding royalty on pumping wells.

On January 1, 1936, Claud B. Hamill assigned an undivided ⅝ interest in this lease to Ralph R. Ogden, subject to the oil payment and overriding royalty reserved to the Pure Oil Company. Ralph Ogden assigned to M. H. Reed an undivided ½ of said ½ interest on February 10, 1936.

On January 23, 1936, Amadeo Hubbard-filed suit against Claud H. Hamill, R. E. Smith, the Pure Oil Company and others to-recover this land and the' sum of $600,000-damages for oil produced therefrom. Ap-pellees were not made parties to this suit.. A settlement of this suit was arranged, under the terms of which the Pure Oil-Company agreed to contribute and later-paid to George B. Parr, the attorney representing Amadeo Hubbard, through appellants, the sum of $6,666.66 of its $40,000-oil payment and ½8 of its overriding royalties on flowing wells and ½6 of its royalties on pumping wells. Under this settlement,. Amadeo Hubbard gave Smith and Hamill a fs mineral lease on said land, which was-later assigned by them to the Pure Oil Company to protect its remaining oil payments, and overriding royalties, and a release of' his claim -for damages for the oil removedi *727 from the land. Smith and Hamill paid him $1,000 in cash for this' release.

On July 29, 1936, Ádolpho Patterson et al., filed suit in the district court of La Salle County, Texas, against Amadeo Hub-hard, Claud” B. Hamill, R. E. Smith and Ralph R. Ogden for the title and possession of the land in question and for damages for the oil removed therefrom..

Appellants and appellees paid plaintiffs $1,000 in settlement’ of this suit.

Thereafter, at the instance of said George B. Parr, appellants advanced $16,972.55 to drill a test well on a block of land in Mc-Mullen County, Texas. Appellants reimbursed themselves for George B. Parr’s half of the expenses of drilling this well by withholding one-half of the cost of drilling the well from the oil .payments on the reduction in overriding royalties and oil payments contributed by the Pure Oil Company in the settlement of the Amadeo Hubbard suit. Appellees contended that they were improperly charged by appellants with this sum."

On December 22, 1936, appellants and ap-pellees executed a partition deed, partitioning and setting aside to each their interests in various properties, including 120 acres of the Hubbard lease and 13 wells' thereon.

From the time these interests were acquired by appellees until December 31, 1936, the date on which said partition became effective under said partition deed, the properties had been jointly operated by appellants and appellees, the actual supervision being in charge of Hamill and Smith.

Appellants contend that the court having submitted this case to the jury orí a general charge embracing all grounds of recovery relied upon by appellees and the jury having returned a verdict thereon in favor of appellees for -the sum of $5,000, it was error for the trial court in rendering its judgment, to consider findings of fact not found by the jury, even if they had been supported by uncontradicted evidence. This contention, we think, must be. sustained.

The trial court submitted to the jury a general charge embracing appellee's’ three alleged grounds of recovery. The jury returned a verdict against -appellants for-the sum of $5,000. In rendering his judgment, the trial court found, in substance, in addition to the verdict of the’jury, that appellants had collected and been paid the sum of $3,318.67 on account of the reduction in overriding' royalties and oil payments by the Pure Oil Company on oil marketed by appellants during the years 1937, 1938, 1939, and through June 1940, from that part of the Hubbard lease set apart to appellees under said partition deed, and that appellees were entitled to recover this sum from appellants with 6% interest from January 31, 1937, the date upon which said partition became effective. This sum was added to the sum of $5,000 found by the jury, and judgment was rendered by the trial court against appellants for the sum of $8,775.92 and against Continental Oil Company for the sum of $869.22.

It is apparent from "a reading of the court’s charge that the entire case was submitted to the jury therein and that the court did not therein limit appellees’ recovery to the oil runs covering the reduction in oil payments and overriding royalties prior to December 31, 1936, the effective date of the partition.

It is,, we think, the established law in this state that in a case submitted on a general -charge a trial court cannot render a judgment on findings made by him in addition to those found by the jury in the general verdict, even where the trial court’s findings are supported by uncontradicted evidence.

In the case of Houston Packing Co. v. Griffith, Tex.Civ.App., 164 S.W. 431, 432, the facts were similar in all material respects to those in the instant case. In that case Griffith sued the Packing Company for damages for breach of contract because of the refusal of the Packing Company to accept delivery of certain cattle. The trial court submitted the case on a general, charge. The jury returned the following verdict: “We, the jury, find for plaintiff damages to amount of $1,732.26, less freight.” The court entered judgment for plaintiff for $1,732.26.

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163 S.W.2d 725, 1942 Tex. App. LEXIS 390, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hamill-smith-v-ogden-texapp-1942.