Iowa Park Producing & Refining Co. v. Seaboard Oil & Gas Co.

296 S.W. 697, 1927 Tex. App. LEXIS 490
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 11, 1927
DocketNo. 2826.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 296 S.W. 697 (Iowa Park Producing & Refining Co. v. Seaboard Oil & Gas Co.) 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
Iowa Park Producing & Refining Co. v. Seaboard Oil & Gas Co., 296 S.W. 697, 1927 Tex. App. LEXIS 490 (Tex. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

JACKSON, J.

The Iowa Park Producing & Refining Company, the appellant, instituted this suit in the district court of Wichita county, Tex., against the appellee, the Seaboard Oil & Gas Company of Texas, for debt and to foreclose a vendor’s lien securing the payment thereof.

The appellant alleges that on or about June 5. 1923, it sold and conveyed to the Seaboard Oil & Gas Company, of Delaware, seven-eighths of the oil and gas on certain leases situated in Archer county, Tex., for a consideration of $525,000 to be paid as follows: *698 $25,000 in cash; a series of notes aggregating the sum of $325,000; and the balance, or the sum of $175,000, was to be paid out of seven-sixteenths of the oil produced, which seven-sixteenths was to be run to a solvent pipe line company until said $175,000 was paid; that in the conveyance a vendor’s lien was retained to secure all of the deferred payments;- that about March ■ 15, 1924, the Seaboard Oil & Gas Company, of Delaware, sold and conveyed said leases to the appel-lee and as a part of the consideration therefor the appellee assumed and promised to pay to appellant the unpaid part of the consideration for said leases; that a balance of $68,000 evidenced by the last six of the series of notes, was due, and unpaid, on February 16, 1926, the date this suit was instituted; that said notes contained the usual stipulation as to the payment of attorney’s fees, and because the appellee had made default it was necessary, and the appellant had placed them in the hands of its attorneys for collection and promised to pay the 10 per cent, attorney’s fees, $6,800, as provided therein; that, in addition to the balance of $68,000 evidenced by said six notes, there was, of the $175,000 to be paid out of oil, a balance of $21,431.36, which appellant designates as the contingent oil fund account, due and unpaid; that, since the sale of the leases on the request of appellee, the appellant has stored certain oil for which it is entitled to a balance of $597.-79.

The appellee answered by general denial, admitted the sale of the leases by appellant to its predecessor for the consideration alleged; that it purchased the property and assumed the payment of the unpaid purchase money; and that it was bound by the provisions of the contract of sale with, and the conveyance from appellant to, its predecessor.

The appellee pleaded that under the terms of said instrument seven-sixteenths of the oil from the premises was to be run in a solvent pipe line company to the credit of the appellant until the $175,000 was paid; that seven-sixteenths of the oil was run into the lines of the Texas Pipe Line Company, which was solvent, to the credit of appellant from May 22,1923, to December 1,1924, after which time the seven-sixteenths was run in the lines of the Humble Pipe Line Company, a solvent company, to the credit of appellant; that from May 22, 1923, until July 1st, thereafter, the appellant received and paid the appellee for the seven-sixteenths according to the posted price of the Texas Company on the dates it was delivered to the Texas Pipe Line Company; that the seven-sixteenths run in the Texas Pipe Line Company, for the credit of appellant from July 1, 1923, to December 1, 1924, was not sold by appellant, but was diverted from the pipe line company and was received in its refinery near Iowa Park, refined and consumed, and appellant now seeks to pay for said oil at less than the-contract price, which was the posted price of the Texas Company; that after July 1, 1923, the appellant refused to account for the oil so consumed, but falsely represented that it was storing it; that the price of oil, and the posted price of the Texas Company in July, 1923, to September 3d, thereafter, was $2 per barrel; that on the 3d of September the price was $1.80 per barrel; on the 20th of September it was $1.30 per barrel, and on October 9th, $1.25 per barrel; which last price continued until December 11th; that during all this time the appellant was receiving and consuming seven-sixteenths-of the daily production of oil from said leases, and not storing it for the account of ap-pellee ; that about December 1, 1923, the appellant allowed appellee a false and fictitious-price of $1 per barrel on all of said oil; that it was the true intent and meaning of the contract that the posted price of the Texas Company, at the dates and times the oil was delivered to the Texas Pipe Line Company, should be accepted as the standard price at which the seven-sixteenths should be paid for, and if, in fact, it is not so provided in the contract, the omission was by mutual mistake of the parties; that, should it be determined that the daily posted price of the-Texas Company was not to be the standard of value, then the appellee says it should be credited with the market value of the oil, or the amount the oil brought the appellant, and in either event the oil received by appellant amounts to a sum greatly in excess of $175,000, and a credit should be allowed it upon the outstanding notes therefor; that, but for the false representations made to appellee that appellant was storing the oil for appellee’s account, and the failure of appellant to allow a credit for the oil consumed' at the posted price of the Texas C.ompany, or at-the fair market value of said oil, or credit it for what the oil actually brought appellant, the appellee would have liquidated all of said indebtedness, for which reason it should not pay any attorney’s fees upon any balance that might be due; and that said attorney’s fees as claimed are unreasonable and unjust.

The appellant, by supplemental petition, says that the true purpose and meaning and intent of the contract was that appellee and its predecessor would take possession and management of the premises, and have exclusive control and sale of the oil, for such prices as it desired, with the limitation only that the oil should be delivered to a solvent pipe line company, and the purchaser thereof should make payment for the seven-sixteenths direct to appellant, and if said contract does not so provide, it was due to an oversight or mistake on the part of the parties, and that the instrument should be so reformed as to *699 give it such meaning and effect; that the sale was consummated on July 3d, when actual possession was delivered, and the ap-pellee and its predecessor has continued from that date to operate the property and sell and •dispose of the oil produced therefrom. The •appellant denied that it contracted to pay the posted price or any other price for the oil until it purchased a quantity of storage oil from appellee, about October 31, 1923, which had been run from the lease from July 3, to October 31, 1923, at which time it purchased, and credited appellee at the posted price for such oil, October 31st.

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Bluebook (online)
296 S.W. 697, 1927 Tex. App. LEXIS 490, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/iowa-park-producing-refining-co-v-seaboard-oil-gas-co-texapp-1927.