Kaufman v. C.R.A., Inc.

243 F. Supp. 721, 1965 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7694
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Missouri
DecidedJuly 23, 1965
DocketNo. 14645-1
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 243 F. Supp. 721 (Kaufman v. C.R.A., Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kaufman v. C.R.A., Inc., 243 F. Supp. 721, 1965 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7694 (W.D. Mo. 1965).

Opinion

JOHN W. OLIVER, District Judge.

This case pends on defendant’s motion for partial summary judgment directed to Count I of plaintiff’s amended complaint.

As will later be made apparent in detail, the parties agreed, after one day of actual trial' before the Court without a jury, to present the statute of limitations question raised by defendant’s pending motion on what, in effect, is an agreed statement of facts. In order that the general factual background of the litigation and relevant dates be put in focus at the outset, we quote a portion of defendant’s statement of those matters which plaintiff, in his brief, acknowledged to be substantially correct and accurate :

This action was originally filed to recover for the alleged fraud of defendant. Plaintiff alleged that defendant fraudulently over-stated certain oil reserves, thereby inducing him to invest in further oil leases. These leases were not productive and, as a consequence of the claimed fraud, plaintiff alleged substantial damages.
At the commencement of trial plaintiff changed his theory from fraud to negligent misrepresentation. After a partial trial, and at the suggestion of the Court, the case was stipulated into posture for a motion for partial summary judgment based upon the bar of the statute of limitations. * * * The [722]*722issues in Count II of the amended complaint concerning a work-over on the Howland lease remain outside the scope of the motion.
Defendant assumes for purposes of this motion that plaintiff has stated and can prove a claim for negligent misrepresentation (Tr. 13, 17, 18). * * * The assumed facts are set out in the following paragraphs.
Plaintiff bought from defendant 50% of the working interest in the Byer lease on December 10, 1951. Defendant drilled the Byer lease and it was an oil producing lease. Plaintiff bought from defendant 50% of the working interest in the Howland lease on July 10, 1953, and it too proved to be a producing lease.
At various times between December, 1951 and October, 1954 plaintiff consulted with Owen W. Simonton, a petroleum* engineer employed by defendant, concerning the development of the oil and gas properties which he and defendant jointly owned and developed. On various occasions during this period Simon-ton gave plaintiff his opinion on the amount of recoverable oil reserves underlying the Byer and Howland leases, the last such occasion being on June 17, 1955 (Tr. 23, 30). Simonton’s reserve estimates proved to be substantially greater than the actual production attained on the Byer and Howland leases (Tr. 8). In reliance upon the Byer and How-land reserve estimates supplied by Simonton and upon Simonton’s recommendation, plaintiff invested in six additional oil and gas ventures from July 10, 1952 to October 24, 1954, by purchasing fractional portions' of the working interest in leases owned by defendant (amended complaint, paragraph 15). None of these leases were commercially productive.
Plaintiff’s evidence would establish negligence on the part of Simonton in making the oil reserve estimates on the Byer and Howland leases.
Plaintiff made his last lease development payment to defendant on September 16, 1955 (Tr. 28). That is the date of the last damage suffered by plaintiff in regard to the cause of action alleged in Count I of the amended complaint and which is being tested by this motion (Tr. 11,18).
It first came to plaintiff’s attention in 1960 that Simonton’s reserve estimates were very substantially overstated. In 1962 plaintiff concluded that the cause of the overstatement was Simonton’s negligence (Tr. 23, 24). The original complaint was then filed October 17, 1963.
Plaintiff does not contend that the mere continuation of his relationship with defendant with regard to the Byer and Howland leases, subsequent to September 16, 1955, means that any portion of the cause of action accrued subsequent to September 16, 1955 (Tr. 14, 15). Nor is there any contention that plaintiff was fraudulently or negligently induced to invest in Byer and Howland (Tr. 15).
The theory of plaintiff’s case is based on negligent misrepresentation, as stated in Section 552 of the Restatement of Torts (Tr. 22, 26).
******
It is stipulated that plaintiff made his last lease development payment to defendant on September 16, 1955. He suffered no damage as a result of the alleged negligence of defendant after that date. The last allegedly negligent act occurred no later than June 17, 1955, the last time defendant supplied plaintiff with any reserve estimates. The complaint in this action was filed in October, 1963, more than eight years after the date of plaintiff’s last damage or defendant’s last allegedly negligent act.

[723]*723The facts need not be stated in further detail because it has been agreed that none of the material facts are in dispute (Tr. 34). The transcript of the proceedings reflecting that the parties’ factual agreements and stipulations of record is made a part of this memorandum by this reference.

Both parties are also agreed that the statute of limitations question presented by defendant’s pending motion is controlled by Missouri law and that Section 516.120 RSMo 1959, V.A.M.S., is the applicable statute.

Plaintiff stated for the record that “the Court may accept September 15, 1955, [this date was later changed to September 16, 1955 (Tr. 28)], as the date of the last damage suffered by the plaintiff in regard to the cause of action that will be tested by the motion for summary judgment” (Tr. 11) and that plaintiff does not intend “to stretch the date of the sufferance of damage beyond the date of September [16], 1955” (Tr. 18). Plaintiff made clear that he does not contend either that “the mere continuation of a relationship in regard to both the Byer lease and the Howland lease, subsequent to the September [16] 1955 date is designed to support any contention that any portion of the cause of action accrued subsequent to the September [16] 1955 date” (Tr. 14-15) or that either of the two leases mentioned “was induced either by fraud or by negligence” (Tr. 15).

Plaintiff also concedes that the statute bars the Count I cause of action unless it can be said that the date the statute commenced to run is to be “measured from the date on which plaintiff first had the opportunity to learn of the existence of his claim” (plaintiff’s suggestions, page 9). That date is to be distinguished from the date plaintiff sustained his last damage; a date which admittedly would bar plaintiff’s claim.

The determination of the question posed turns on whether the Missouri courts would hold that a cause of action alleged under the theory of Section 552 of The Restatement of Torts1

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Bluebook (online)
243 F. Supp. 721, 1965 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7694, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kaufman-v-cra-inc-mowd-1965.