Kirby Royalties, Inc. v. Texaco Inc.

458 P.2d 101, 1969 Wyo. LEXIS 155
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 27, 1969
DocketNo. 3748
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 458 P.2d 101 (Kirby Royalties, Inc. v. Texaco Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kirby Royalties, Inc. v. Texaco Inc., 458 P.2d 101, 1969 Wyo. LEXIS 155 (Wyo. 1969).

Opinion

Justice McINTYRE

delivered the opinion of the court.

Texaco Inc. brought an action to qu<et title to the minerals in 80 acres of land in Carbon County, Wyoming. Kirby Royalties, Inc., was named as a defendant. The State of Wyoming, through its Board of Land Commissioners, has intervened. The district court found for Texaco and held it was the owner of the oil, gas and other minerals in the subject lands and entitled to the possession thereof as against Kirby and the State of Wyoming.

[102]*102Most of the pertinent facts were set forth in a stipulation of facts filed by the parties; and there seems to be no material dispute as to what the facts are.

The common source of title which all parties recognize is the Carbon Oil Company. It received a quitclaim deed for the minerals involved, in 1929, from E. N. Munson. Carbon Oil Company was incorporated in 1925 in the State of Nebraska. Its authorized capital stock was $10,000 divided into 100 shares with a par value of $100 each.

An annual report for the corporation filed with the Nebraska Secretary of State on June 9, 1926 reported $10,000 in capital stock was authorized, paid up and issued. However, the next annual report, filed July 13, 1927, reported $10,000 of stock authorized and no stock paid or issued. A notation in this report indicated oil rights in lands were to be acquired; that incorpora-tors had been delayed in acquiring title to the lands and so no stock had been issued. The next annual report, filed June 2, 1928, reported the titles to lands were still in court and incorporators had not succeeded in completing the litigation; that when litigation was completed they would get the title and issue the stock.

The annual reports for 1929 and 1930 were both filed January 6, 1931. These reports showed the president of the company to be E. N. Munson and the secretary and treasurer to be C. C. Johnson. The directors were shown to be E. N. Munson, B. F. Roth and C. C. Johnson. These reports stated the authorized capital stock was $10,000. The amount subscribed, issued and outstanding and paid up was marked $10,000. The nature of the business of the corporation was designated as “holding title to some mineral lands.”

Parties have stipulated that Carbon Oil Company was dissolved by the Secretary of State of the State of Nebraska for nonpayment of taxes on March 23, 1933. The persons comprising the last board of directors of the corporation, according to the last annual report, were E. N. Munson, C. C. Johnson and B. F. Roth. All of these directors are deceased and the last survivor was B. F. Roth who died January 13, 1946.

Undisputed evidence shows that a diligent search has been made for stock in Carbon Oil Company; for the owners or holders of such stock; for former officers or directors of the corporation; for heirs or successors to any of the former officers or directors; and for creditors, if any. All that could be found was Eliza I. (Isabelle) Roth, widow and sole heir and beneficiary of B. F. Roth. She had possession of Certificate No. 4 dated January 28, 1929 for ten shares of stock in Carbon Oil Company. ■ The certificate had been issued to B. F. Roth. No other stock or stockholders have been found despite a diligent search for such.

On the basis of the evidence adduced and stipulated to, a total of 100 shares ($10,000 in value) of stock in Carbon Oil Company was issued and became outstanding; Roth owned ten shares or one-tenth of the total outstanding stock; and title to such stock passed to his widow, Eliza I. (Isabelle) Roth. There are no known owners as far as nine-tenths of the stock is concerned.

In 1961 Thomas F. Stroock, acting for Texaco Inc., took two quitclaim deeds from Mrs. Roth, individually and as trustee for creditors and stockholders of Carbon Oil Company, covering all minerals in the lands we are concerned with. He then conveyed over to Texaco. The consideration paid by Stroock to Mrs. Roth was $7.50 per acre.

On the theory that Mrs. Roth had become successor trustee for creditors and stockholders of Carbon Oil Company, after the death of her husband, or that she succeeded to the legal title — subject to a trust for all creditors and stockholders — Texaco claims to be the owner of the property we are dealing with.

In 1966 Mrs. Roth, as the widow and sole heir of B. F. Roth, executed an assignment and a bill of sale by which she purported to sell, transfer and convey to Kirby Royalties, Inc., all of her right, title and interest [103]*103in and to the ten shares of stock Roth had owned in Carbon Oil Company.

In 1964 the State of Wyoming issued, without warranty, an oil and gas lease on the 80 acres here involved to Kirby Royalties, Inc. The state’s claim of ownership is based on the theory that the minerals in the land had escheated to the State of Wyoming because they did not belong to any person or persons. Kirby therefore claims an interest, as lessee of the state, in and to the oil and gas contained in the land. In addition, it claims under whatever rights it may have obtained, if any, on account of its assignment and bill of sale from Mrs. Roth pertaining to Stock Certificate No. 4.

Nebraska and Wyoming Statutes

Opposing counsel have argued rather pointedly over whether the statutes of Nebraska or the statutes of Wyoming apply with respect to who acts as trustee for creditors and stockholders of the dissolved corporation Carbon Oil Company.

On behalf of Kirby it is argued the Nebraska law applies; and the applicable statute in effect when the corporation was dissolved was § 24-107, Compiled Statutes, Nebraska, 1929. This statute provides the directors or managers of the affairs of the corporation, acting last before the time of its dissolution, and the survivors of them, shall be the trustees of the creditors and stockholders of the corporation dissolved. The statute specifies that in case of the death, resignation, inability or refusal to act, of such directors or managers or the survivors thereof, the district court of the proper county may, on the application of any persons interested, appoint trustees to fill the vacancy.

On behalf of Texaco the argument is that Wyoming law applies; and the applicable statute in effect when the corporation was dissolved was § 44-1101, Wyoming Compiled Statutes 1945. The statute is essentially the same as § 24 — 107 of Nebraska, except it does not have the provision for a court to appoint a successor after the last survivor of the last directors has died.

That, Texaco argues, is the critical difference. Since the Wyoming statute does not provide for a successor after the last survivor dies, the argument is, the common law would apply; and it is claimed that under the common law the trust devolves upon the heirs of the last trustee.

When the last survivor of the last directors of Carbon Oil Company died, Wyoming corporation law was not materially different from Nebraska law, insofar as provisions for trustees of a dissolved corporation are concerned. »

Section 44 — 1107, Wyoming Compiled Statutes 1945, which was a part of the same act as § 44-1101, specified nothing in the act shall be construed to impair the power of any court of competent jurisdiction to appoint receivers or trustees to settle the affairs of any corporations dissolved. It also specified all trustees or managers of any corporation, acting after dissolution of the corporation, shall in all things be subject to control of the court.

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Bluebook (online)
458 P.2d 101, 1969 Wyo. LEXIS 155, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kirby-royalties-inc-v-texaco-inc-wyo-1969.