Hamill & Smith v. Parr

173 S.W.2d 725, 1943 Tex. App. LEXIS 519
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 28, 1943
DocketNo. 11314.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 173 S.W.2d 725 (Hamill & Smith v. Parr) 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. Parr, 173 S.W.2d 725, 1943 Tex. App. LEXIS 519 (Tex. Ct. App. 1943).

Opinion

SMITH, Chief Justice.

George B. Parr brought this action against Claud B. Hamill and R. E. Smith, comprising the firm of Hamill and Smith, to recover an undivided one-fourth interest in an oil and gas lease upon a tract of 420 acres of land in Webb County, and one-fourth of the net profits derived from oil operations on the land. Parr recovered as prayed for and Hamill and Smith have appealed.

Prior and subsequent to the transactions involved here, appellants and appellee were personal friends, as well as business associates in other matters.

In April, 1936, appellants were operating upon what was known as the Bruni tract, and were about to bring in what they believed would prove a producing oil well on that tract. The 420-acre tract involved, belonging to the Benavides heirs, *727 adjoined the Bruni tract and lay just across the boundary from the prospective well. This proximity led appellants to seek a lease on the Benavides, believing it would be as productive as the Bruni promised to be. The Benavides heirs were represented by Albert Martin, who resided at Laredo. Appellants were not acquainted with Martin, but knew or surmised that appellee and Martin were personal and political friends, and decided to invoke appellee’s influence and efforts to procure the coveted lease through Martin. They called appellee by phone at his home in San Diego, 106 miles away, and asked him to meet them the next day at the Bruni well. Appellee met them, as requested, and the three men went over the situation in detail, and then entered into a parol agreement that if appellee would procure the desired lease from Martin and the heirs he would have an undivided one-fourth interest therein and appellants the remaining three-fourths interest. In short, the parties agreed to engage in a joint adventure to procure the lease; that to this end appellee was to contribute his services in acquiring the lease and have an undivided one-fourth interest therein for his services, while appellants were to pay appellee’s expenses in procuring the lease and contribute the full purchase price therefor and have the remaining three-fourths interest therein. It was a familiar transaction, the validity and enforceability of which is uniformly recognized in this State. The agreement of the parties included the further stipulation that appellee, if successful in procuring the lease, should take the same in his own name and pay the $19,000 consideration therefor and that appellants would reimburse him for his outlay. These agreements were carried out; appellee procured the lease, gave the lessors his personal check for $8,000 and agreed to pay them the balance of $11,000 upon perfection of title. Appellants covered appellee’s check for $8,000 when presented at the latter’s bank for payment, and also furnished him $11,000 with which he made the final payment to the lessors. By these processes appellee took the legal title to the lease, as well as his equitable title to one-fourth interest, and held the remaining three-fourths interest in implied trust for appellants. Appellants then took possession of the leased premises and began operations thereon for oil and gas purposes. During these transactions appellee was at large under the terms of a two-year suspended sentence given him in a federal court for income tax evasion. Two or three months after acquiring the lease appellee, having violated his parole, was arrested and imprisoned in a federal reformatory in Oklahoma. It developed that it might become necessary or convenient to use the title to the lease for the purpose of financing the operations thereon through mortgages and the like, and in order to facilitate those operations and because of appellee’s inaccessibility, appellants proposed to appellee that he transfer the lease to them, for the convenience of all. In this situation it was agreed between the parties that appellee transfer the lease to appellants upon the express condition that appellants would hold appellee’s one-fourth interest in trust for him until he was freed, and that in the meantime they would proceed with their operations and, as the jury found, “take care of the financing and would develop and operate said lease for the mutual benefit of” appel-lee and appellants. In reliance upon this agreement appellee executed and delivered the assignment of the lease to appellants. Upon appellee’s release from prison a few months later he returned to his home. Subsequently appellants repudiated and refused to perform their agreement, and ap-pellee brought this action to enforce the same.

The cause was submitted to the jury which found in accordance with the foregoing facts. As appellants do not specifically challenge any of those findings they must all be given full effect in this decision, the same as if based upon uncon-troverted testimony in the record. It is true that appellants assert in their sixth point that the evidence adduced in support of the theory of a trust was not as clear and satisfactory as the law requires. We conclude that the evidence was sufficient to meet that requirement and accordingly overrule the point.-

In their points one, two and three appellants contend that appellee was prohibited from recovering, upon the asserted ground that he received and appropriated secret profits in the transaction involved, which, it is alleged, he concealed from appellants. The facts in this connection show that when appellee undertook in appellants’ behalf to procure the lease, and after negotiations with the agent of the prospective lessors, he reported back to appellants the fact that the price asked fór the lease was *728 $19,000, and that he would want or required $2,000 additional to cover his “expenses, costs or what not, to get the lease.” Appellants readily agreed to this expenditure and later on paid appellee the $2,000. Upon the" trial appellee accounted for expenditures by him out of said $2,000, except $300 to $500. Appellee’s explanation of how he applied those expenditures was somewhat hazy and unsatisfactory, perhaps, and even implied that some of it was parceled out in satisfying personal or political debts or obligations of his own. But that implication, even if justified, does not bring appellee within that class of agents who accept secret profits from others with whom they may be dealing in behalf of their principals, such as in Bute v. Stickney, Tex.Civ.App., 160 S.W.2d 302, cited and relied on by appellants. There was nothing secret about this transaction, for here appellants willingly gave appellee $2,000 demanded by him for his use in his discretion in procuring the lease. The fact that he may not have expended the entire amount to accomplish the object intended, or that he may have spent some of it unwisely, or for his personal benefit, could not be given effect to invalidate appellants’ agreement that appellee have an interest in the lease procured by him for appellants. If appellants had any remedy against appellee in that incident, which is doubtful under the facts, it was one for an accounting to them of his application of the fund. We overrule appellants’ points one, two and three.

In their fourth point appellants contend that the parol agreement upon which appellee was awarded an undivided one-fourth interest in the lease in question contravened the Statute of Frauds. We overrule the point. It is well settled that the Texas Statute of Frauds does not operate upon agreements creating a trust in lands, such as in this case. 20 Tex.Jur. pp.

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Bluebook (online)
173 S.W.2d 725, 1943 Tex. App. LEXIS 519, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hamill-smith-v-parr-texapp-1943.