Johnson v. Barnwell Production Company

391 S.W.2d 776, 23 Oil & Gas Rep. 666, 1965 Tex. App. LEXIS 2687
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 1, 1965
Docket7595
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 391 S.W.2d 776 (Johnson v. Barnwell Production Company) 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
Johnson v. Barnwell Production Company, 391 S.W.2d 776, 23 Oil & Gas Rep. 666, 1965 Tex. App. LEXIS 2687 (Tex. Ct. App. 1965).

Opinions

FANNING, Justice.

Elsie G. Johnson (who as found by the trial court went under various names, including the name L. C. Johnson) and L. E. Ostrom, as plaintiffs, on Aug. 21, 1959, in suit No. 20,635, sued Barnwell Production Company, Edward L. Green, Frank C. Green, Sr., Receiver, and many other named defendants, in the District Court of Harrison County, Texas, to recover title and possession to an undivided interest in four tracts of land, and to set aside and/or declare void a receivership proceeding had in Cause No. 20,378 in said court and to set aside, cancel and to declare void and/or voidable a certain oil, gas and njineral lease made by the receiver to Barnwell and seeking an accounting and other relief stated in plaintiffs’ pleadings.

[779]*779On Jan. 24, 1959, in Cause No. 20,378, in said court, styled Edward L. Green v. L. C. Johnson, the District Court of Harrison County, Texas, appointed Frank C. Green, Sr., receiver of part of appellant Johnson’s undivided mineral interest pursuant to Art. 2320b, Vernon’s Ann.Tex.Civ.St., wjiich. statute is found below.1 The petition seeking the appointment of a receiver is quoted in part below.2 The order granting the [780]*780application and appointing the receiver is quoted in part below.3 The receiver sold the lease in question to Barnwell Production Company for a cash bonus of $162.50, which was more than $25.00 per acre based on the undivided interest of the defendant L. C. Johnson as set out in the order, which interest of Johnson at that time was assumed to be ¾2⅛ of the first tract and a ½2⅛ of a Jiith interest in the second, third and fourth tracts. This assumed interest amounted to 6.393 acres and the proper payment for such an interest at $25.00 per acre would have been $159.82½. (The $162.50 was paid into the District Clerk’s office by the receiver as directed by the order.) It was determined later upon the trial of the case that Johnson’s interest in the first tract was correct but that he owned a ⅛⅛ of a ½1⅛ interest in the second, third and fourth tracts. The receivership lease in question also contained an inclusive clause known as a “Mother Hubbard Clause” which ostensibly covered all of Johnson’s interest. Barnwell drilled a commercial well on one of the tracts and unitized the acreage for development.

After observing the receivership lease in the Harrison County records in the latter part of January or the first part of February, 1959, the plaintiff-appellant L. E. Ostrom on April 3, 1959, purchased an oil, gas and mineral lease from plaintiff-appellant Johnson, after locating Johnson in Chicago, Illinois.

No motion was filed by plaintiffs-appellants to vacate the receivership judgment and the receivership judgment was not appealed from by writ of error. The receivership judgment was first attacked in suit No. 20,635 on August 21, 1959. Trial was to the court with the aid of a jury. (Plaintiffs suit for an accounting was severed and reserved for future decision.) The jury in response to the special issues submitted found to the effect as follows: (Issue No. 1) That Edward L. Green and those assisting him, if any, did not make a diligent effort to locate the plaintiff Johnson prior to Jan. 24, 1959; (Issue No. 2) that the lease from Frank C. Green, Sr., Receiver, to Barnwell Production Company on January 24, 1959, was not made for a grossly inadequate price; (Issue No. 3) that Edward L. Green would not have suffered substantial damage or injury by failure to appoint a receiver on January 24, 1959; (Issue No. 4) that Barnwell Production [781]*781Company was the real party at interest in the proceeding of January 24, 1959; (Issue No. 5) that Barnwell Production Company caused said proceeding to be had in order to secure the lease on the property of the plaintiff Johnson; and (Issue No. 6) the conduct, if any, of Barnwell Production Company, did not constitute a fraud.

Both sides filed motions for judgment. The trial court rendered judgment mainly for the appellees, upholding the receivership proceeding and the receiver’s lease to Barn-well of Johnson’s ¾2⅛ interest in the first tract, and Johnson’s ¾2⅛ of ¾ith interest in the second, third and fourth tracts. Johnson’s remaining interest of ¾2⅛ of ¾1⅛ in the second, third and fourth tracts and Ostrom’s lease on said remaining interest of Johnson of ⅝2⅛ of Jiith interest in the second, third and fourth tracts were upheld and judgment therefor was rendered for appellants. Appellants Johnson and Ostrom have appealed.

Johnson heired his interest from his deceased wife, Charlie Mae Green, who died intestate in childbirth in 1934, in Tyler, Texas, (with her child being born dead) while married to Johnson. She had no other children. Charlie Mae Green was a sister of appellee Edward L. Green. Charlie Mae Green heired her interest in the property in question from her family antecedents.

A considerable portion of the trial was focused on proof of appellant Johnson’s first name. It appeared from evidence in the record that appellant Johnson had used the following names: Elsie Johnson, Elsa Johnson, Elsie Glover Johnson, Elsie G. Johnson, E. G. Johnson, Elsar J. Johnson, Elsar Joseph Johnson, Glover J. Johnson, Gloveer J. Johnson and L. C. Johnson, and other similar names. However, at the trial appellant Johnson testified that he had used the initials L. C. and that “all of those names are of one person”. Based upon ample evidence, the trial court expressly found (no issue having been submitted) with respect to this matter in part as follows : “ * * * and the Court finds, that the plaintiff L. C. Johnson is not a ficticious person, but is one and the same person as Elsie G. Johnson, Elzar J. (Joseph) Johnson, Glover (Gloveer) J. Johnson, Elsa Johnson, Gloveer Joseph Johnson, E. J. Johnson, G. J. Johnson, and Glover Johnson.”

Appellants contend that their attack upon the receivership judgment is a direct attack. Appellees contend that such attack is not direct, but is a collateral attack. For an excellent discussion of this problem we refer to an article by Professor Gus M. Hodges, entitled “Collateral Attacks on Judgments”, appearing in two sections in 41 Tex.L.Rev., beginning at pages 163 and 499, with particular reference to Part II, “Distinctions Between Direct and Collateral Attacks.”

The essentials of a Bill of Review are well stated by Justice Williams of the Dallas Court of Civil Appeals, in American Spiritualist Ass’n v. City of Dallas, Tex.Civ.App., 366 S.W.2d 97, no writ (1963) as follows:

“A Bill of Review, or a petition in the nature of a Bill of Review, is a proceeding in equity having for its purpose the reversal of a prior judgment of the trial court. 22 Tex.Jur. 2d 569, § 28. One of the prime essentials of a proceeding of this nature to have a judgment set aside by Bill of Review is that it must be shown that there existed a meritorious defense to the cause of action; that the complainant was prevented from presenting that defense through extrinsic fraud, accident, or mistake wholly unmixed with any fault or negligence.of his own, so that he was compelled to suffer the judgment by circumstances beyond his control; that he has . not been guilty of a lack of diligence in failing to avail himself of any means to set the judgment aside, and that no other remedy is available. 22 Tex. Jur.2d 572, § 30.” (Emphasis added.)

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Johnson v. Barnwell Production Company
391 S.W.2d 776 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1965)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
391 S.W.2d 776, 23 Oil & Gas Rep. 666, 1965 Tex. App. LEXIS 2687, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-barnwell-production-company-texapp-1965.