King v. Meabon

36 S.E.2d 211, 128 W. Va. 263, 1945 W. Va. LEXIS 81
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 27, 1945
Docket9704
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 36 S.E.2d 211 (King v. Meabon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
King v. Meabon, 36 S.E.2d 211, 128 W. Va. 263, 1945 W. Va. LEXIS 81 (W. Va. 1945).

Opinion

Riley, Judge:

Guy L. Meabon prosecutes this appeal from a de-cretal judgment pronounced against him by the Circuit Court of Cabell County in- a suit in equity in which Thomas M. King was plaintiff and petitioner was defendant.

The suit is based upon an agreement of assignment, dated May 27, 1940, between King and Meabon, in which the latter assigned to the former a three sixty-fourths *264 interest in the seven-eighths working interest in and to all of the wells to be drilled by Meabon under a contract dated May 22, 1940, between Meabon and H. W. Bowers, Trustee. The Meabon-Bowers contract contains recitals that Bowers, Trustee, was under contract to furnish gas to Barboursville Clay Manufacturing Company, hereafter to be referred to as the “Clay Company”, that he contemplated building a four-mile gas line into the area to- the south of the Clay Company’s plant at Barbours-ville, and that he had obtained certain oil and gas leases in Barboursville District, Cabell County, covering a tract of about twenty-five hundred acres of land and is attempting to obtain two other tracts known as the Ayers lease of seventy-three acres and the State Farm containing approximately five hundred acres. Bowers, Trustee, agreed therein to assign leases, to be selected by Meabon, in the district aforesaid, covering approximately fifteen hundred acres; and Meabon, the owner of two strings of tools, to proceed with the drilling on the leases so assigned to him. The production to be attained and maintained was placed at fifteen million cubic feet per month. Bowers, Trustee, was to, pay for the gas at the rate of twelve cents per thousand. In no event, the agreement provides, would Bowers, Trustee, be required to take more than fifteen million cubic feet of gas a month. It was further provided that should the production not reach the required volume before January 1, 1941, Bowers, Trustee, might make up the deficiency elsewhere. This contract was to remain in force for a period of ten years from the date thereof and so long thereafter as gas should be found in paying quantities. The foregoing contract was replaced by another, bearing date November 27, 1940, in which Industrial Fuel Company, hereafter referred to as “Fuel Company”, was substituted as party of the second part, and the time for reaching the maximum output was extended from January to April 1, 1941. This contract recited, among other things, that the party of the first part “has drilled certain oil and gas wells in Barboursville District * * * on the waters of Guyan River, and has drilled a well on the *265 L. E. Browning farm- and on the Hatfield farm, and is now drilling a well on the Alberts farm, and contemplates drilling other gas wells near and along the gas line now being constructed by the party of the second part” and provides that Meabon “will continue drilling upon leases now held by him or which may hereafter be obtained by him or which have been assigned or which may hereafter be assigned to him by H. W. Bowers, Trustee, along or near the gas line now being constructed or which may hereafter be constructed by the” Fuel Company.

A contract of like import to that of May 22, 1940, was entered into between Meabon* and the Fuel Company, under date of November 1, 1940, for the purchase of six million cubic feet of gas a month. There is a recital in this contract that the second party, the Fuel Company, owns certain leases in the Barboursville District “about one mile east of the L. E. Browning property, or about one mile southeast of the town of Martha in said district.”

The bill of complaint alleges, in substance, that on . or about May-, 1940, plaintiff entered into contract with Homer Wiseman, who was then and is now president of the Clay Company, and who was acting for and on behalf of himself and his associates, Harry W. Kelly and H. W. Bowers, in securing a supply of natural gas for resale to said Clay Company, for the production and sale of a maximum of fifteen million cubic feet of gas a month for ten years at the price of twelve cents a thousand cubic feet; that before the agreement was reduced to writing, plaintiff agreed to assign the contract when reduced to writing, to defendant, but before its execution, at defendant’s suggestion, a contract, bearing date May 22, 1940, was entered into between Meabon and Bowers, Trustee, the latter acting on behalf of himself, Kelly and Wiseman; that defendant entered into an assignment on May 27, 1940, with King and two contracts with the Fuel Company, dated November 1 and November 27, 1940, respectively, (the substance of the *266 aforesaid four instruments appears in the preceding paragraphs of this opinion). The bill of complaint further charges that all of the capital stock of the Fuel Company is owned by Wiseman, Kelly and Bowers; that the defendant proceeded to drill in four wells and did pay plaintiff in accordance with the assignment; that defendant has not accounted to plaintiff for any part of the proceeds from sales of gas produced and sold under contract of November 1, 1940; that after drilling the four wells under the contract of May 22, 1940, and one well under the contract of November 1, 1940, he removed his drilling tools from the territory covered by the contracts, ostensibly forfeiting his rights under the contract of May 22, 1940; that in May or June, 1942, he returned to the territory covered by contract of May 22, and commenced drilling wells, the number being unknown to plaintiff, and selling products therefrom in his or in the name of another to the Fuel Company for resale to the Clay Company; that Wiseman is president, Kelly, secretary, and Bowers, attorney, for the Clay Company, and the three are owners of the capital stock of the Fuel Company; that the latter sells gas to the Clay Company at eighteen cents a thousand cubic feet; that defendant’s removal of tools and his contractual relations with others in the production was an attempt to fraudulently avoid payment to plaintiff under his assignment and the contract of May 22, 1940; that plaintiff is entitled under the contracts to a three sixty-fourths share of the net proceeds received by the defendant and his assigns from sale of gas to Bowers, Trustee, and the Fuel Company, which has heretofore been or may hereafter be resold by them to the Clay Company, produced from the territory under contract of May 22, 1940'; that by reason of defendant’s failure to comply promptly with the contract of May 22, 1940, and assignment of May 27, 1940, plaintiff is entitled to an accounting; and that plaintiff has sustained substantial damages, to-wit, in the amount of fifteen thousand dollars.

*267 The bill prays that defendant answer under oath the allegations of the bill of complaint; that he be required to render a true and accurate account of all monies received from Bowers, Trustee, the Fuel Company and the Clay Company from May 22, 1940, to April 1, 1943, whether directly or indirectly; that he be required to disclose any agreements he now has with them for the supplying of gas from the territory covered by contract of May 22, 1940; that proper accounts be taken and had; that the amount due from defendant to plaintiff be ascertained and determined, and that plaintiff have a decretal judgment therefor; and for general relief.

In his answer defendant admits entering into the contracts of May 22, November 1 and November 27, 1940, as well as the assignment of May 27, 1940.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
36 S.E.2d 211, 128 W. Va. 263, 1945 W. Va. LEXIS 81, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/king-v-meabon-wva-1945.