Larmon v. Miller

243 S.W. 939, 195 Ky. 654, 1922 Ky. LEXIS 400
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJune 23, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 243 S.W. 939 (Larmon v. Miller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Larmon v. Miller, 243 S.W. 939, 195 Ky. 654, 1922 Ky. LEXIS 400 (Ky. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Sampson

Affirming.

This controversy arose out of a sale by appellee, A. E. Miller, to appellants, Larmon, et al., of the Ike Eickman oil and ;gas. lease on 37% acres of land situated in Allen county at the price of $60,000.00. Appellants, who were defendants below, by counterclaim asked a cancellation of three promissory notes aggregating $15,000.00, executed by them, on the ground of fraud. On the lease are several oil producing wells and a large quantity of valuable machinery, including power plant, vacuum pumps, pipes and tanks. After Eickman and wife granted the lease it was transferred several times until it reached the Covington Oil Company* incorporated, with offices in the city of Covington, Kentucky. At that time the lease was undeveloped, but there were some wells on farms nearby. The Covington Oil Company gave $10,000.00 for the undeveloped lease. It then employed oil well drillers to sink wells on the property and this was done at great expense. After pumping the wells for several months and marketing oil to the amount of about $6,000.00, the company decided it could increase its production from the wells by installing a certain character of vacuum pumps, and it gave an order for these pumps, which were in the course of a few months delivered on the premises at a cost of about $9,000.00. These pumps were about to be installed when appellee, William Brown, conceived the idea of purchasing the lease from the Covington Oil Company before these pumps were put in operation, anticipating that the flow of oil would be greatly increased by the use of the pumps. He was not able to swing the deal by himself although he was the owner of some oil drilling machinery and some oil leases and perhaps wells. At that time the market price of [656]*656crude oil from that district was almost $4.00 per barrel, and there was great activity among oil men in the district. Lease prices were high. He approached appellants, John H. Larmon, Roy W. Hogan and Cr. .1. Bunnell, and suggested that they join him in the purchase of the property at the price of $60,000.00, he proposing to take a one-half interest 'at $30,000.00. Bunnell agreed to take a one-fourth interest at $15,000.00, and pay $7,500.00 cash and give his note for a like amount; Hogan agreed to take a one-eighth interest at $7,500.00, paying one-half cash and give his note for the remaining one-half; and Larmon agreed to take a one-eighth interest on the same terms, and they each gave their checks for the cash payments and executed their notes to the Covington Oil Company for the balance. A few days later they executed to Miller a mortgage on their interest in the leasehold to secure the $15.000.00 unpaid purchase money. In the meantime Larmon, who lived in about twelve miles of the oil lease, went with Brown to look at the property and according to some of the evidence he visited the property on other occasions and made investigation of the amount of oil produced at the time by the wells. He talked to the man on the lease in charge of the pumping and also to Rickman, who owned the land, and they gave him information concerning the amount of oil produced from the lease per day. Hogan resided in Bowling Green and operated a garage. He did not visit the property until after the purchase. Bunnell lived in Lexington, was about seventy-two years of age, engaged in the oil' business, but he never saw the Rickman lease until after it was purchased from the Covington Oil Company. The notes given by Larmon, Bunnell and Hogan were payable six months after date, and were due on July 26, 1920. They were not paid. Each of the payees asked further time and promised to pay as soon as they could raise the money. In the meantime the vacuum pumps had been installed in the wells and a large quantity of oil extracted which, when marketed, brought almost $10,-000.00. After same delay, in which the holders of the notes were pressing for payment, and the buyers, Larmon, Bunnell and Hogan, were asking for further time, this action was instituted in the Allen circuit court by A. R. Miller, the then holder of the notes, against John H. Larmon, G. I. Bunnell and' Roy W. Hogan, as payees, and William Brown, an alleged joint owner of the lease, and I. H. Rickman and wife, the owners of the lands and [657]*657grantors in the original lease, to recover $15,000.00 with interest on the notes, have the same adjudged a lien upon the leasehold and its equipments and a sale of the property, if necessary, to the payment of the judgment.

The defendants answered and admitted the execution of the notes but denied their liability on the same, avering that the said notes were obtained through fraud on the part of the Covington Oil Company, A. R. Miller and William Brown, and by cross-petition and counterclaim all the facts as understood by Larmon, Hogan and Bunnell were set forth, concluding with a prayer for a cancellation of the notes and the recovery of damages from plaintiff Miller, defendant Brown and the cross-defendant, Covington Oil Company. The company filed answer to the cross-petition and counterclaim, the plaintiff, Miller, filed reply and defendant Brown filed answer, each denying the allegations of fraud contained in the cross-petition and counterclaim of Larmon, Hogan and Bunnell. Issue being joined the parties took a large volume of evidence, principally directed to the issue of fraud in the sale and transfer of the leasehold by the Covington Oil Company and A. R. Miller to Brown, Larmon, Hogan and Bunnell. To support their averment that the notes were obtained by fraud and deceit the defendants, Larmon, Hogan and Bunnell, testified and introduced witnesses to prove that defendant Brown approached them and induced them to buy an interest in the Rickman leasehold with its equipments on the basis of $60,000.00 for the entire property, representing to them at the time that the wells on said lease were then producing forty barrels per day and would produce twice that amount as soon as the vacuum pumps were installed and put into operation, and that defendants believing and relying upon said representation, and not knowing otherwise, bought the interest set forth in their pleading and gave their checks for one-half of the price to Brown, whom they thought was the agent of the Covington Oil Company, and which checks were made payable to said company, and at the same time executed and delivered to him for the said company the notes sued on; that they afterwards learned for the first time that the wells on the leasehold were producing only about ten barrels of oil per day, and the installation of the vacuum pumps had failed to increase the production to eighty barrels per day, or to increase it at all; or, if any but very little. They further testified that Brown repre[658]*658sented to them that the Covington Oil Company’s price on the lease was $60,000.00; that he would take one-half interest in the lease at $30,000.00 and pay the cash, and produced and exhibited to them a cheek made out to the Covington Oil Company for $30,000.00, which he represented to them he was going to deliver to the company as soon as the transfer was made; that, after the trade was made and they had paid their money and executed their notes, each of them learned for the first time that Brown did not acquire a one-half interest in the lease or any interest in it, nor paid $30,000.00 or any sum on the purchase price of the lease. It was also stated in evidence that Miller, who lived in Covington, and Brown, who operated oil well drilling machines in Warren and Allen counties, were in partnership in the drilling of wells and the owning of oil well machinery and oil leases.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
243 S.W. 939, 195 Ky. 654, 1922 Ky. LEXIS 400, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/larmon-v-miller-kyctapp-1922.