Indian State Oil Co. v. McCutchen

183 S.W.2d 692, 1944 Tex. App. LEXIS 953
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 20, 1944
DocketNo. 14636.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 183 S.W.2d 692 (Indian State Oil Co. v. McCutchen) 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
Indian State Oil Co. v. McCutchen, 183 S.W.2d 692, 1944 Tex. App. LEXIS 953 (Tex. Ct. App. 1944).

Opinion

McDONALD, Chief Justice.

This appeal is from a judgment of one of the District Courts of Dallas County, entered in a receivership suit which began in the year 1931. It appears from the record that the Indian State Oil Company, the appellant here, became insolvent, and that in the year 1931, “on the petition of Stidham & Thrasher, Roger L. Tennant was appointed Receiver of the Indian State Oil Company of Texas and all its properties.” Tennant took possession of certain oil properties, as receiver, and developed them by drilling oil wells and operated them up to and including the time of the judgment appealed from. Appellant does not challenge the validity of the appointment of the receiver, or his authority to develop and operate the properties.

The transcript filed here obviously does not purport to cover all the proceedings that have been had in the receivership action. Apparently only such pleadings and orders have been included in the transcript as have been considered material to the issues raised on this appeal.

*694 The first instrument shown in the transcript is the petition in intervention of R. W. Sheegog, filed on December 28, 1931. The petition recites that the intervener adopts each and every part of the plaintiff’s first amended original petition (which fs not included in the transcript), and complains of the parties named as plaintiffs and defendants in said plaintiffs petition, and also complains of more than two hundred other persons, setting out their names. Complaint is also made of all unknown claimants and owners of the lands described in the plea. The plea alleges that the parties collectively own certain described properties, and describes assignments of interests in such properties which had been made by the Indian State Oil Company in favor of a large number of persons whom we shall hereafter call unit holders, and attaches copies of the forms of two of the assignments used. The plea in intervention describes in detail the transactions had between the parties, the effect of which may briefly be said to be that the Indian State Oil Company sold to the unit holders certain undivided interests in the properties described, with the result that the Indian State Oil Company and the unit holders thereafter became the owners, as tenants in common, of the properties. The plea also alleges that Tennant has been appointed as receiver, and “has been given full power, possession and control over the property of said company with authority to operate same under order of the Court.” The plea in intervention seeks a continuation of the receivership. The prayer is that the defendants be required to appear and answer, and that the interests of the parties in the property be adjudged incapable of partition in kind; that the interests be ordered sold; that the receiver be appointed for all parties so far as they may own or claim any interest in the properties; that the receiver operate the properties, and sell the oil produced therefrom, as' well as the properties themselves ; and' that upon final hearing the court enter judgment finding and determining the interests of ■ all claimants in the property, and directing the proper partition of the properties and the distribution of proceeds of sales thereof, the petition concluding with, a prayer for general relief. '

The Indian State Oil Company is an unincorporated.- joint stock company, organized in 1931,; under what are now articles 6133 et seq., Vern.Tex.Civ.St.

The next instrument in the transcript, following the Sheegog plea in intervention, is a pleading purporting to be that of C. W. McCutchen and several other persons, filed on April 12, 1941. The petitioners in this pleading describe themselves as unit holders under assignments of interest made to them by the Indian State Oil Company, and allege that as such they own and are interested in the subject matter of the receivership suit. It is recited that the application, as it is called, is made for and on behalf of themselves, as well as all other unit holders similarly situated, etc. It is alleged' that the assignments of interests each conveyed a one two-thousandth interest in certain properties described in the receiver’s, final report. The pleading continues in a substance to allege that under the terms, of the assignments the Indian State Oil Company obligated itself to bear certain of the costs of developing the properties; that it did not do so; that the receiver paid such-costs from the funds coming into his hands, as receiver; and that in the final adjustment of the rights and claims of the unit holders and the stockholders of the Indian State Oil Company, proper and equitable-adjustments should be made, and that an-equitable lien should be decreed upon the interests of such stockholders to secure the unit holders in the repayment to them of the moneys which the receiver had so used in the discharge of liabilities and obligations of the Indian State Oil Company. The prayer is that the application of unit-holders be heard “in conjunction with the-Receiver’s final report, and the application of Z. J. Spruiell, Trustee, et al, for partition and sale of the 5½ acre Lum Talia-ferro lease (one of the properties involved)”; that the court determine the amount to be charged against the stockholders of the Indian State Oil Company;, that the amounts found be decreed to constitute equitable liens; and for general relief.

These unit holders filed an amended application a few days later, setting up somewhat the same matters.

Upon answer of the Indian State Oil Company, the trial court entered an order sustaining a plea in abatement, decreeing in effect that the persons named in the application could not maintain, a class action-in favor of all the other unit holders; and later all of these persons, .except Mc-Cutchen, filed a petition, dismissing their-application.

*695 R. W. Sheegog died prior to the judgment herein appealed from, and according to the judgment, C. W. McCutchen was substituted for Sheegog as his successor in title. In his third amended plea McCutchen alleges that Sheegog was the owner of five units during his lifetime, and that Mc-'Cutchen is now the owner of them by virtue of Sheegog’s will. In the prayer the petitioner seeks to have the petition heard in “conjunction with the Receiver’s final report and the Master’s report and the intervention of R. W. Sheegog for partition.”

On August 5, 1943, Mrs. Katherine Lain, John White and Edna White filed a plea seeking, among other things, an adjustment for the moneys disbursed by the receiver in payment of obligations of the Indian State Oil Companay.

Judgment was rendered by the court without a jury. The judgment is lengthy. Its findings and decrees may be summarized as follows: The case came on to be heard in August, 1943. The receiver Tennant came in person and by his attorneys, and presented his report and final account. The Indian State Oil Company appeared by its attorneys. McCutchen, Mrs. Lain, John White and Edna White appeared by their attorneys, as did certain other named parties not involved in the appeal. Referring to the large number of unit holders, the judgment names them, and then recites that they, “although properly before the court by intervention, came not but wholly made default, with the following exceptions,” naming Mrs. Lain, Edna White, Sheegog, McCutchen, and certain others who from the record appear to have been claimants of the stock of the Indian State Oil Company.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Wilkinson v. Paschall
210 S.W.2d 215 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1948)
Greer v. Poulter
189 S.W.2d 883 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1945)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
183 S.W.2d 692, 1944 Tex. App. LEXIS 953, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/indian-state-oil-co-v-mccutchen-texapp-1944.