Holmes Oil Co. v. Rule

1937 OK 370, 70 P.2d 86, 180 Okla. 405, 1937 Okla. LEXIS 442
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 8, 1937
DocketNo. 26970.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1937 OK 370 (Holmes Oil Co. v. Rule) 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
Holmes Oil Co. v. Rule, 1937 OK 370, 70 P.2d 86, 180 Okla. 405, 1937 Okla. LEXIS 442 (Okla. 1937).

Opinion

PHELPS, J.

This was an 'action for the recovery of salary for labor performed by the plaintiff, and for the enforcement of a lien therefor. The trial court awarded personal judgment against the Hoburt Drilling Company ’and the Holmes Oil Company, employers, and decreed that a mechanic’s lien should be foreclosed against the property of the Glidden Oil Corporation. The defendants appeal from that judgment.

There is one brief filed on behalf of all appealing defendants. The contentions set forth in the assignments of error which could affect the Hoburt Drilling Company and the Holmes Oil Company, other than *406 the one considered in the latter part of this opinion, are not supported by citations of authorities in the brief, and will not be considered.

We think, however, that the argument therein set forth in beh'alf of the Glidden Oil Corporation is meritorious. It is asserted on behalf of that defendant that the trial court erred in adjudging a lien against its property. The facts are that about eight separate and distinct producing oil and gas leases were owned by separate parties. Some of the leases were owned by the Hoburt Drilling Company and Holmes Oil Company and some by others. The owners of the various leases, including the Glidden Oil Corporation, contracted with the Hoburt Drilling Company to pump and operate their leases. The Hoburt Drilling company employed the plaintiff on a monthly salary basis to work for it, in operating these respective leases. The plaintiff traveled almost daily from tóase to lease; in short, worked on all of the leases. He moved from one lease to another as occasion demanded. His employer, the Hoburt Drilling Company, became behind in the payment of his salary, and the present action w'as for the collection of some four years thereof. During those years the Glidden Oil Corporation had paid the Hoburt Drilling Company, plaintiff’s employer, for operating its leases in accordance with the contract between them.

The plaintiff did not file 'any lien statement, but did file this action within 60 days after the last work or labor was performed. The defendants -concede that the filing of this lawsuit within the statutory period for the filing of liens took the place of said filing, but they assert that the plaintiff could not validly file a blanket lien statement covering all of the different leases, but would be compelled to file a separate lien as to each lease, and that, therefore, having filed no liens at all, and the filing of this action being the equivalent of an attempted blanket lien, the plaintiff was not entitled to a lien. It is unnecessary to decide whether a blanket lien could be filed and enforced in this manner, for, after a careful review of the evidence, we have concluded that, even if it should be decided that such a blanket lien could be enforced, nevertheless the evidence is insufficient to support the judgment in so far as the fastening of the lien upon property of the Glidden Oil Corporation is concerned. The Glidden Oil Corporation has preserved this ground of review in the assignments of error.

There was little dispute over the amount. owing by the employer, Hoburt Drilling Company, to the plaintiff as salary. But when any portion of that indebtedness was attempted to be enforced by a lien against the property of the Glidden Oil Corporation, the evidence required was on a different issue; namely, the amount of such work performed on the property of said Glidden Oil Corporation. There was no contractual relationship between the Glidden Oil Corporation and the plaintiff. There was a contractual relationship between the Glid-den Oil Corporation and the plaintiff’s employer. The Glidden Oil Corporation satisfied that obligation. In order, then, for the plaintiff to enforce collection of his salary against the property of the Glidden Oil Corporation, it would be necessary in any event for his evidence to establish with some degree of clarity and certainty the amount of his time which he devoted to work on that company’s leases, and the value of that time. This he did not do. On the eight leases there were 16 producing wells. The plaintiff worked on all of these. I-Ie “guessed” that he devoted about one-ninth or one-tenth of his time to the property owned by the Glidden Oil Corporation. But when he spoke of such ffiaetional part of his time he included in the total of his time a considerable amount of work on four or five other leases, which were in addition to the leases being operated by his employer, the Hoburt Drilling Company. It is thus apparent that he did not devote his full time to the work of his employer, but interspersed it with work on distant leases, and in such work as welding a pipe line in another county, not in any way connected with' this lawsuit. As between him and his employer, if the employer was willing, this was proper, but as between him and some third person, such as the Glidden Oil Corporation, whose property he would seek to impress with a lien for the payment of said salary, the matter is very important. We have read this record in its entirety, and we are impressed with the claim of the deféndant Glidden Oil Corporation that the plaintiff nowhere made it appear, in his testimony, how much of the period of time for which he is claiming salary he spent on work outside of the property being operated by his employer.

The trial court decreed enforcement of a mechanic’s lien against the property of the Glidden Oil Corporation for one-ninth of the amount of salary found owing by the plaintiff’s employer to the plaintiff. If we should assume that it was proper to do so, in case the plaintiff had devoted all of his time to his employer, we are met with the *407 fact that the plaintiff did not devote all of his time to his employer, and that he is unahle to show how much of the total time was devoted to separate and independent work. If the work which the plaintiff performed on leases outside of the group involved in this lawsuit was half of his total time, then obviously the Glidden Oil Corporation’s property should not he subjected to the same liability as if he had devoted, say, a fourth, or three-fourths, of his time to such outside work. Plaintiff admitted that he spent a part of his time during all of the years involved in this lawsuit on these “outside” leases, yet he did not know how much time he spent on those leases. This important fact appears to have been overlooked by the trial court.

The instant lawsuit is governed by the same rules of evidence, the same burden of proof, and the same requisites as other lawsuits in general. The burden of proof was upon the plaintiff. He was seeking to avail himself of a remedy which was purely statutory. It was incumbent upon him to produce evidence which with some degree of certainty would have indicated how much of his time was used on the property which he would subject to a lien, and the value of said time. This is the recognized duty of the plaintiff in all lien cases. Whether the debt is for labor or material the principle is the same. For instance, in DeBolt v. Farmers Exchange Bank, 51 Okla. 12, 15, 151 P. 686, 687, we said:

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1950 OK 307 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1950)

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Bluebook (online)
1937 OK 370, 70 P.2d 86, 180 Okla. 405, 1937 Okla. LEXIS 442, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holmes-oil-co-v-rule-okla-1937.