Kunkel v. Rattray

1924 OK 1014, 231 P. 541, 110 Okla. 289, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 792
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 12, 1924
Docket14773
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 1924 OK 1014 (Kunkel v. Rattray) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kunkel v. Rattray, 1924 OK 1014, 231 P. 541, 110 Okla. 289, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 792 (Okla. 1924).

Opinion

Opinion by

PINKHAM. C.

The two above entitled cases were tried together in the trial court upon a stipulation that the evidence should be considered in both cases, but that separate verdicts should be rendered.

The cases will be referred to in this opinion as the “Rattray” case and the “Steyne” case.

The defendant in error E. I). Rattray was the plaintiff in the Rattray ease, and the defendant in error Allen N. Steyne was the plaintiff in the Steyne case. The plaintiff in error, John C. Kunkel, Jr., was the 1 defendant in both cases.

The parties will be designated as they appeared in the trial court.

In the amended petitions in both cases, in addition to the defendant, John C. Kunkel, Jr., Louise Kunkel, J. F. McGuigan, for themselves, and the Eli Oil Company, a corporation, and J. 0. Kavanagh, receiver, of the Eli Oil Company, were made parties.

There were two causes of action in each suit.

In the first cause of action in the Rattray case the plaintiff claims to have negotiated for and procured certain royalties called the Brown and. Partridge royalties, which were to go into' the Eli Oil Company, but were taken in the name of John C. Kunkel, Jr., who refused to put them into the company and then dissolved the company; that the company being dissolved Rattray sought, to recover these royalties.

In his second cause of action. Rad''ay sought to recover $5 000 damages for the fraud of defendant in the conversion of the property of the company resulting in this loss to him by reason of the depreciation in the value of 668 shares of stock held by him :n the company.

In the first cause of action in the Steyne case the plaintiff, Allen N. Steyne “for himself and Mrs. Miriam Wardwell’’ and ten others against John C. Kunkel, Jr., J. F. McGuigan, Louise S. Kunkel, and J. C. Kav-anagh, receiver, alleged that he was the holder of stock in the Eli Oil Company in 'the sum of $3,888 and that Mrs. Wardwell was the owner of stock in the sum of $200 and each of the others named in certain amounts; that the Eli Oil Company was the owner of properties of the value of $100,-000, which defendants conspired to take and which they converted to their own use to the damage of plaintiff in the sum of $50,-000.

In the second cause of action Allen N. Steyne and the other parties represented by him as their attorney in fact, sought to recover the money they had put into the proposition under the circumstances minutely detailed in said cause of action.

Defendants answered separately by general denial and the consolidated cases proceeded to trial before a jury. The trial court sustained a demurrer to the evidence in the first cause of action of Rattray’s petition. During the trial the plaintiffs dismissed as to all defendants except Kunkel; and at the close of the trial the plaintiff dismissed the first cause of action in the Steyne case, which appears to have left both' cases pending and tried on the second causes of action.

That is to say, in the Rattfiay case for his alleged loss in the depreciation in value of the stock he held in the company; and in the Steyne and the other parties’ ease for the amount of money they had put into the company.

The jury returned a verdict for Rattray in the sum of $1,745, and a verdict for Steyne and the other parties in the sum of $3,256, of which sum, as determined by the verdict, Allen N. Steyne was to receive $1,-544 and the eleven other parties above mentioned the balance.

*291 Judgment was entered in both cases against the defendant, John O. Kunkel, Jr., in accordance with the verdict of the jury.

The motion for a new trial in the Rattray case was overruled, exception taken, and the case duly appealed to the Supreme Court.

The motion for a new trial in the Steyne and the other parties’ case was sustained except as to Steyne and a new trial granted as to the other parties, to wit, Miriam War dwell, Mrs. Ralph Getchell, Lillian R. Staples, Daniel Rooney, Carlton 1?. Bryant, Myrtle Hall, W. C. Rattray, A. J. Mutty, A. W. Staples, Robert H. Washburn, and G. A. Washburn, to which the said .mentioned parties and each of them excepted and appealed to this court.

Motion for a new trial was overruled in so far as it applies to the judgment in favor of the plaintiff, Allen N. Steyne, to which the defendant, John C. Kunkel, Jr., excepted and duly appealed to this court.

For reversal of the judgment the defendant, John C. Kunkel, Jr., assigns numerous errors which are substantially the same in both cases.

The propositions discussed in the brief of plaintiff jn error relate to the action of the trial court in admitting in evidence a certain instrument' written by the defendant. Kunkel, and directed to the plaintiff Rat-tray, with reference to a settlement of their differences and to certain instructions given by the court, and instructions offered by the plaintiff in error and refused by the court.

The important facts in the Rattray case are as follows:

The plaintiff Rattray and defendant, John C. Kunkel, Jr., were students at Yale University and had been for a long time associated together prior to the organization o-f the Eli Oil Company in 1819, Rattray came to Tulsa, Okla., after having heard of the oil business while stationed at Ft. Sill, Okla., and decided to make it his business. It appears that he worked in the oil fields a number of months and then returned to Yale to school. While in Tulsa he had written the de.endant, Kunkel, about the oil business, and when he went back to Yale he took with him some pictures of oil wells and other oil field scenery, and entered into an arrangement with the defendant with respect to acquiring oil interests in Oklahoma.

The arrangement entered into by the defendant and plaintiff, briefly stated, was to the effect that an oil company should he organized and stock sold to parties in the East to carry out the plan agreed upon. Ag a result of their agreement the Eli Oil Company, a Delaware corporation, was formed with a capital stock of $50,000.

The plaintiff, Rattray, was in the first instance made president of the company and the defendant, secretary-treasurer.

Thereafter Rattray sold some stock of the company to his personal friends and acquaintances who resided for the most part in the state of Maine, which parties are referred to in the record as “the Maine parties'’, and will be so referred to in this opinion.

It was concluded by Rattray and Kunkel that it would be necessary to have an expert oil man connected with the company and Rattray, authorized so to do by Kunkel, employed one J. F. McGuigan, who had large experience in the oil business, to approve the purchase of royalties and oil and gas leases.

It may be said to be substantially without dispute that Rattray devoted a considerable portion of his time and his services in securing options on royalties in various counties in this state and in the state of Kansas, for the benefit of the company. It appears that the most valuable options acquired by Rattray consisted of what is termed the “Brown and Partridge royalties.’’ These two properties were taken ultimately in the name of the defendant, Kunkel, but were never assigned by him to the Eli Oil Company.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1924 OK 1014, 231 P. 541, 110 Okla. 289, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 792, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kunkel-v-rattray-okla-1924.