Hancock Oil Co. v. Hopkins

153 P.2d 993, 67 Cal. App. 2d 218, 1944 Cal. App. LEXIS 1299
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 8, 1944
DocketCiv. 13746
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 153 P.2d 993 (Hancock Oil Co. v. Hopkins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hancock Oil Co. v. Hopkins, 153 P.2d 993, 67 Cal. App. 2d 218, 1944 Cal. App. LEXIS 1299 (Cal. Ct. App. 1944).

Opinion

SHINN, Acting P. J.

Plaintiffs, lessees under an oil and gas lease, brought this action to enjoin defendants, their lessors, from declaring a forfeiture of the lease for failure to

pay landowner’s royalties to defendants. The judgment was in favor of plaintiffs. It ordered plaintiffs to pay to the clerk of the court all landowner’s royalties accruing under the lease and enjoined defendants from declaring a forfeiture of the lease for failure to pay royalties, pending the final determination of another action then pending in which third parties claimed title to the demised land and the royalties. Defendants appealed from the judgment.

The lease was entered into December 18, 1936. Wells were drilled and brought in, with production which proved the land to have great value. All royalties were paid to defendants until January, 1941, when plaintiffs received a letter from a Mr. Schaeffer, attorney for Independent Distributing Company, notifying them that his client claimed to be the owner of the land and would hold plaintiffs accountable for all royalties payable under the lease. It was not stated in this letter whether Independent Company claimed to have been the owner at the time the lease was made. Plaintiffs answered the letter, to the effect that they would have to continue to pay royalties to defendants, and sent a copy of the letter and *220 their reply to defendants. Plaintiffs received a second letter from Mr. Schaeffer stating that an action .had been commenced by Independent against defendants hérein, asserting title to the lánd and the royalties as of the date of the lease and at all times thereafter. Upon request of plaintiffs, defendants furnished plaintiffs a copy of the complaint of Independent and shortly thereafter were advised by plaintiffs that it would be necessary to impound the royalties until the claims of Independent were disposed of. On February 27, 1941, defendants gave plaintiffs notice that they were in default in the payment of royalties for the month of January and that unless the default should be remedied within sixty days thereafter the lessors would terminate the lease in accordance with the provisions thereof. Plaintiffs then filed a suit in interpleader against defendants herein and Independent, paid into court royalties for the months of January, February and March, and ever since have deposited with the clerk all royalties accruing under the lease. The present action also was instituted seeking an adjudication of the rights of plaintiffs and defendants under the lease and an injunction against a forfeiture of the -lease' for nonpayment of royalties. In the interpleader action a demurrer of the defendants herein was sustained without leave to amend and judgment was entered in their favor. Plaintiffs appealed from that judgment. That appeal and the one in, the instant ease were on the calendar of this court at the same time. Inasmuch as an affirmance of the judgment in the interpleader action would have made it necessary for plaintiffs herein to continue to pay royalties to defendants or to resist a claim of forfeiture for failure to make payment, submission of the present appeal was deferred pending a final determination of the appeal in the interpleader action. The judgment in that action has been reversed by the Supreme Court (Hancock Oil Co. v. Hopkins (1944), 24 Cal.2d 497 [150 P.2d 463]) and it has been finally determined that upon the facts alleged in the complaint therein plaintiffs have a right to interplead their lessors and the third party claimant, Independent Company.

Although a judgment on the merits in the interpleader action, when it is rendered, will determine the conflicting rights to the royalties, the question whether the failure to continue royalty payments to defendants furnishes the latter with a ground for termination of the lease will not have been *221 determined. That question is before us and calls for a construction of paragraph 17 of the lease, which reads as .follows; “If it should hereafter appear that the lessor, at the time of making this lease, owns a less interest in the demised premises than the fee simple estate or the entire interest in the oil and gas under the demised premises, then the rentals and/or royalties accruing hereunder shall be paid to the lessor in the proportion which its interest bears to the entire fee simple estate or to the entire estate in said oil and gas.” The trial court held that upon the facts alleged in the complaint, the substance of which we have stated, the lessees are justified in withholding royalty payments until a determination of the adverse claims thereto asserted by Independent Company. The parties agree that the case turns upon the meaning to be given to the word “appear” as used in the quoted paragraph— whether it justifies action from appearances or only from proven facts. “Appear” is synonymous with “seem” (Douvier, 1926). It may mean “have the semblance or aspect of being; seem or seem likely; without implying reality or unreality” (Funk & Wagnall’s New Standard Dictionary, 1940), or it may mean “to be known as a subject of observation or comprehension, or as a thing proved; to be obvious or manifest” (Webster’s New International Dictionary, 1929). In Lecklieder v. Chicago City Railway Co. (1912), 172 Ill.App. 557, the court said: “The word ‘appears’ is commonly used in two senses: in one sense it has the same meaning as manifest, obvious or true, but in another sense it means only seems or probably true. In legal documents such as orders of court, etc., and among lawyers it is commonly used as having the first of these meanings, such as in the phrase ‘it appears to the court,’ but to the layman the expression ‘it appears to me.’ ordinarily carries no other significance than ‘it seems to me’ in the sense that it is probable or likely.” A more apt statement and one which better illustrates the meaning of the word as it is commonly used is found in Rice v. Palmer (1906), 78 Ark. 432 [96 S.W. 396], as follows: “ ‘If it shall appear that a majority,’ etc., is the language employed. The Century Dictionary gives six definitions of the word ‘appear’; comprehending all shades of meaning attached to it and none of them conveys the idea of judicial or final determination or decision, but all convey the thought of the apparent, the obvious, that which is to he seen at first sight.” (Italics ours.) The *222 italicized words, we think, define “appear” as the parties used it in the lease. The trial court found that defendants, in entering into the lease, used the word in its ordinary or popular sense as meaning “seem” or “seem likely” and not in its technical or legal sense as meaning “appear by final judgment.” While the word may be used correctly to denote something proved, it is ordinarily used in the sense of denoting “that which is to be seen at first sight.”

The court did not err in taking the word in its ordinary and popular sense. There was nothing before the court indicating that the parties used it in a technical sense or that it had acquired a special meaning by usage. (Civ. Code, § 1644; Code Civ. Proc., § 1861.) This conclusion is fortified by a consideration of the purposes for incorporating paragraph 17.

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Bluebook (online)
153 P.2d 993, 67 Cal. App. 2d 218, 1944 Cal. App. LEXIS 1299, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hancock-oil-co-v-hopkins-calctapp-1944.