Kraemer v. Graf

105 F.2d 117, 1939 U.S. App. LEXIS 4740
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedJune 22, 1939
DocketNo. 1840
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 105 F.2d 117 (Kraemer v. Graf) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kraemer v. Graf, 105 F.2d 117, 1939 U.S. App. LEXIS 4740 (10th Cir. 1939).

Opinion

WILLIAMS, Circuit-Judge.

C. D. Graf as plaintiff brought this action against defendants Mohrbacher, Kreamer, and Pulleine and the Elm Creek Oil and Gas Company.

In his complaint plaintiff alleged that the defendant, Elm Creek Oil and Gas Company, with the defendants, Kraemer, Mohrbacher, and Pulleine, together with F. A. Ellenbecker, and Edgar C. Bennett, entered into a joint adventure; that the Oil and Gas Company was in effect a de facto corporation organized, chartered, created, and existing under the laws of Kansas, with its principal place of business at Marysville, Kansas, having as its president J. W. Kraemer and its secretary Thomas Mohrbacher.

Plaintiff further alleges that on or about April 7, 1926, the defendants entered into a certain joint adventure under the firm name and style of the Elm Creek Oil and Gas Company, for the purpose of engaging in the business of prospecting for oil and gas and other minerals and for the purchase and sale of leases, lands, and royalties, and drilling a test well for oil and gas in Marshall County, Kansas; that on or about said date said defendants applied to the Charter Board of the state of Kansas for a charter for a corporation under the corp'orate name, “The Elm Creek Oil and Gas Company,” with its principal business and office in Marysville, Kansas, to take over, promote, and engage in the business of the joint adventure, having as its incorporators the said five joint adventurers, to exist for a period of 50 years, with a capital stock of $100,-000, divided into 2,000 shares of $50 each; that the application was approved by the Charter Board on April 9, 1926; that on said date a charter was issued for the Elm Creek Oil and Gas Company, having as its directors the said five joint adventurers, and as its officers, Kraemer, president, Ellenbecker, vice president, Mohrbacher, secretary, and Pulleine, treasurer, said charter in part reading as follows: “That the estimated value of the goods, chattels, lands, rights and credits owned by the corporation is One Hundred Thousand Dollars. That the amount of the capital stock of this corporation shall be One Hundred Thousand Dollars, and shall be divided into two thousand shares, of fifty dollars each. That the names and residences of the stockholders of said corporation, and the number of shares held by each, are as follows, to-wit: James W. Kraemer, Marysville, Kansas, 150; S. T. Pulleine, Marysville, Kansas, 150; Edgar C. Bennett, Marysville, Kansas, 1.”

That the charter was filed on April 15, 1926, in the office of the Secretary of the State of Kansas, and on or about May 5, 1926, the said defendants and Oil and Gas Company as an alleged corporation under the corporate name entered into a written contract with the plaintiff providing that plaintiff should drill a test well on a tract known as the Elm Creek block, for oil and gas to a depth of 3,000 feet; that as consideration therefor the plaintiff should receive certain leases described in the contract and be paid the sum of $15,000, payable $3,000 at the time the well was spudded in, $5,000 when a depth of 1000 feet had been reached, and $7,000 at the time of the completion of the well; that the contract further provided: “4. If sand, satisfactory to the owner, is encountered at a depth less than [119]*1193000 feet, or if the owner shall for any other reason order operation abandoned before a depth of 3000 feet shall have been reached, or if for any reason, through the fault of the owner, abandonment occurs, or if granite is encountered before a depth of 3000 feet is reached the contractor shall be entitled to the full compensation * * *

That the plaintiff erected a drilling rig and equipment and spudded in the well; that the defendants paid plaintiff the sum of $3,000; that plaintiff drilled the well to a depth of 1,000 feet and then demanded payment of the $5,000 installment; that the defendants refused to pay such installment ; that plaintiff continued the drilling to a depth of 1,220 feet; that the defendants failed and refused to pay the installment of $5,000 and thereupon plaintiff abandoned the drilling of the well; that after such abandonment the defendants made payments aggregating $3,000; that on October 23, 1926, the defendants executed a writing in which they admitted an indebtedness to the plaintiff of $9,000; that thereafter the defendants paid an additional $2,000 to one A. H. Krueger, which under agreement plaintiff credited on the indebtedness to him; that the defendants have failed and refused to pay the balance of $7,000 with interest. In his complaint in paragraph 20 plaintiff further alleged:

“20. Further complaining of the said defendants this plaintiff says that in order to induce this plaintiff, C. D. Graf, to enter into and execute the contract and agreement herein referred to as ‘Exhibit C,’ the said defendants, James W. Kraemer, Thos. Mohrbacher, and S. T. Pulleine, stated and represented to this plaintiff that the corporation known as the Elm Creek Oil and Gas Company had been formed and the incorporation completed and that more than Thirty-five Thousand Dollars ($35,000.00) had been subscribed for capital stock of the said corporation, and a large part of such stock had been issued and that the same either had been or would be paid for promptly and that stockholders and subscribers were liable for the payment of stock in the amount of their subscription and that funds were and would be available for the payment of the debt, created and evidenced by the agreement referred to herein as ‘Exhibit C’ and that the said defendants were financially responsible and capable and able to pay and carry out their said contract and agreement with this plaintiff. The said defendants further represented to this plaintiff that Thirty-five Thousand Dollars ($35,000.00) worth of stock certificates had been issued by the said corporation and paid for by the certificate holders, and that the said Thirty-five Thousand Dollars ($35,000.00) worth of stock certificates had been deposited with the Blue Sky Board of the State of Kansas as, and that the same was, full and ample security and protection for those dealing and transacting business with the said defendants. That this plaintiff, believed and relied upon the said statements so made by the said defendants, and was induced thereby to enter into the said agreement, herein referred to as ‘Exhibit C,’ and did the said work, provided for therein, and in the prosecution of the same, contracted and incurred debts to the extent of several thousand dollars, and relying upon, and trusting, and believing, the said defendants, and their said statements, proceeded in good faith and confidence to perform and carry out all of his agreements with the said defendants. But the said statements and declarations of the said defendants were false and untrue, and were well known by the said defendants, at the time they made them to this plaintiff to be false and untrue, and the said defendants made the said statements and declarations to this plaintiff for the purpose of deceiving him and defrauding him and inducing him to enter into the said agreement and its performance.”

That after the abandonment of the well, plaintiff learned that the incorporation of the Oil and Gas Company had not been completed; that it had not been authorized to do business; that no affidavit had been filed as required by law stating that no less than 20 per cent of the corporation’s authorized capital had been paid in cash or in property equivalent thereto; that only $170 had been expended by the defendants in acquiring all the property owned or pretended to be owned by the alleged corporation.

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Bluebook (online)
105 F.2d 117, 1939 U.S. App. LEXIS 4740, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kraemer-v-graf-ca10-1939.