Kinne v. Duncan

48 N.E.2d 375, 383 Ill. 110
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 16, 1943
DocketNo. 26995. Affirmed in part and modified in part.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 48 N.E.2d 375 (Kinne v. Duncan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kinne v. Duncan, 48 N.E.2d 375, 383 Ill. 110 (Ill. 1943).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Gunn

delivered the opinion of the court:

In March, 1940, appellee Dick Duncan became the owner of an oil lease in forty acres of land known as the Knolhoff lease. He was engaged in the business of drilling oil wells. In June, 1940, Allen Borton acquired one half of the interest of Duncan, and thereupon they entered into an agreement to develop said lease with Duncan doing the drilling. June 12, 1940, Borton assigned one half of his interest in the lease to Harry and Uella Kinne, appellants, and the other one half to Elnora Horton, his mother-in-law. July 19, 1940, Borton executed an assignment of $7500 of the oil runs from one half of his interest in the lease to the First United Finance Corporation. This assignment was later released and a like one, dated July 20, for the same amount and in lieu thereof, was executed by Harry and Uella Kinne and Elnora Horton. In August, 1940, Elnora Horton made a further assignment of oil runs on her interest to the finance corporation in the amount of $7500; and in September, 1940, the Kinnes made a further assignment of the oil runs from their interest in the amount of $9000. In August and October, 1940, Duncan made assignments to the finance corporation of oil runs from one half of his interest totalling $25,000. The greater part of the proceeds received from the assignments made by the Kinnes and Horton was paid to Duncan to apply upon the costs of drilling wells upon the lease,

Between June and September, 1940, Duncan drilled and equipped nine wells on the lease, of which the first four were substantial producers, two were small producers, and three of them were dry. In October, 1940, Duncan filed a claim for an oil-and-gas lien under the statute, and a like lien against the interests of Kinne and Horton upon the theory their joint interest in owning and developing the oil leases constituted a mining partnership. The total of •the claims for lien of Duncan amounted to $15,200.83. After Duncan filed his lien claims, appellants filed suit in the circuit court of Clinton county praying for a removal of his claims for liens as a cloud upon the interest of plaintiffs, and for an accounting, and for the appointment of a receiver. Duncan filed a counterclaim setting up a mining partnership existed between the parties, and also alleging Borton’s assignments to the plaintiffs were not bona fide; and if, in the alternative, it should be established they were bona fide, in such case Borton was acting as agent for the plaintiffs in connection with the development and operation of the lease.

Upon a hearing, the court found that a mining partnership existed between the parties, and that Borton was acting as agent for the Kinnes and for Horton and had full knowledge of the manner in which Duncan was developing the oil lease, and entered a decree finding that Duncan was not entitled to an oil-and-gas lien but was entitled to a partnership lien against Elnora Horton in the amount of $3037.48 and against the Kinnes in the amount of $6537.48. It also found that the Fox Rig & Lumber Company was entitled to a prior lien in the sum of $838.78 for materials furnished. The decree also found that the interest of appellee Duncan should be subordinated to the rights of the First United Finance Corporation until the money advanced upon the oil runs to the Kinnes and Horton had been paid.

Upon appeal to the Appellate Court for the Fourth District the decree of the circuit court was affirmed with the exception that it was held that the decree against the Kinnes, instead of being against them jointly for the sum above mentioned, should have been against them severally in the sum of $3268.74 each, and also that, instead of allowing the Fox Rig & Lumber Company an oil-and-gas lien, the amount should have been added to the partnership lien of Duncan. A more detailed statement of the facts may be found in the opinion of the Appellate Court reported in 315 Ill. App. 577. The above is sufficient for the purposes of determining the questions raised by appellants on the appeal allowed to this court.

At the outset it is contended Judge Dady had no power to deliver the opinion of the court after his term of office had expired and he had been assigned to another division of the Appellate Court. The record discloses that May 26, 1942, the Appellate Court convened with Justices Lawrence E. Stone, Ralph J. Dady and John T. Culbertson, Jr., present. June 9, 1942, an order of the Supreme Court of Illinois was filed appointing John T. Culbertson, Jr., Lawrence E. Stone and George W. Bristow justices of the Appellate Court for the Fourth District, and this new court met and organized June 22, 1942. June 27, 1942, the opinion in the case was handed down as being written by Justice Ralph J. Dady, and on the same date an order was entered by Justices Stone, Dady and Culbertson reversing the decree of the circuit court in part, and affirming the same in part, as stated in the opinion.

The statute of the State provides that two judges of the Appellate Court shall constitute a quorum, and the concurrence of two shall be necessary to the court’s decision. (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1941, chap. 37, par. 31.) The record in this case shows all three of the judges concurred in the opinion, and if it be considered that Justice Dady at the time of the handing down of the opinion was not a member of the court, his opinion, nevertheless, was concurred in by the two remaining members of the court, and the fact the opinion bore his name would be immaterial, as it appears it was concurred in by a quorum of the court, which is sufficient to give it force and validity. The case of Waite v. People ex rel. Smith, 228 Ill. 173, is not in point because in that case the court consisted of one member, and the order entered was made by the judge after his term of office had expired.

It is well established in this State that where there is an association of individuals for producing oil or minerals from property, and the expenses of development and production and sale of the oil are divided and shared according to the holdings of the members in the leasehold property, a partnership exists. In such a partnership, in the absence of a specific agreement, the ordinary rules applying to commercial partnerships do not apply. In a mining partnership each copartner has a right to sell his interest in the firm property whenever and to whomsoever he may choose. By such a sale he ceases to be a partner, and at the time he ceases to be such copartner his vendee or assignee becomes a partner in his stead with the remaining members of the firm. Such a sale does not dissolve the partnership, and the death of a member does not dissolve it. The incoming partner will not be liable for the antecedent debts of the firm as between the partners, but he takes his interest subject to the payment of antecedent partnership debts. Each member has a lien upon the partnership property for the debts due to the creditors of the partnership, which lien he may enforce in equity. Harris v. Young, 298 Ill. 319.

Appellants do not contend that a mining partnership did not exist. They claim, however, that appellants did not authorize Duncan to drill more than four wells upon the lease, and that all expenses of wells five to nine should not be charged to the interest of appellants. This was one of the controverted facts in the case.

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Bluebook (online)
48 N.E.2d 375, 383 Ill. 110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kinne-v-duncan-ill-1943.