Lasswell v. Prairie Oil & Gas Co.

1935 OK 692, 47 P.2d 598, 173 Okla. 278, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 600
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 18, 1935
DocketNo. 24073.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 1935 OK 692 (Lasswell v. Prairie Oil & Gas Co.) 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
Lasswell v. Prairie Oil & Gas Co., 1935 OK 692, 47 P.2d 598, 173 Okla. 278, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 600 (Okla. 1935).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

Plaintiff in error is referred to as J. I. Lasswell and defendant in error as gas company, for brevity.

On tlie 10th day of May, 1927, S. R. and .J, I. Lasswell executed to the Prairie Oil & Gas Company division order providing as follows:.

“Division Order.
“To The Prairie Oil & Gas Company.
“The undersigned certify and guarantee that they are the legal owners of all royalty and all working interest wells Nos. 1 and up on the lots 12, 13, 14, 15, block 4, Illinois Add Morris (Pt. SW% of NE% 18-13-14) Okmulgee county, state of Oklahoma, including the royalty interest,, and until further notice you will credit for all oil received from said wells as per directions below :
“Credit to Division of Post Office
Interest (Address — Give
Box No. or Street Address)
“J. I. Lasswell All Box 444, Morris,
Okla.”

Then following the order shows that the oil company becomes purchaser of oil at prevailing market price with certain deductions agreed upon! for sedimentation, and for steaming when necessary to render same marketable. Then followed this provision:

“Fourth. In ease of adverse claim of title to the land from which such oil is pro--duced, or adverse claim of title to the oil sold and purchased under this division order, the Prairie Oil & Gas Company shall be protected against all reasonable cost and expense necessarily incurred in defending against such claim, and may retain the purchase price of such oil until such adverse claim is settled and determined, or until it has been furnished satisfactory indemnity.
“J. I. Lasswell
“S. R. Lasswell”.

On May 23, 1928, J. N. Burroughs sued S. R. Lasswell and Prairie Oil & Gas Company, in cause No. 15838, district court of Okmulgee county, Okla., alleging that he and S. E. Lasswell were joint owners of the working interest of all oil produced from said premises, and that S. R. Lasswell had fraudidently conveyed said property and all oil and gas thereon in fraud of the rights of said Burroughs. J. I. Lasswell was named defendant in the petition, but plaintiff did not have summons issued and served upon him.

S. R. Lasswell filed motion to make more definite and certain plaintiff’s petition in said cause.

Prairie Oil & Gas Company filed on June 21, 1928, answer alleging that all the oil and gas purchased from said premises which *279 had been settled for had been purchased by It in good faith for value and without any knowledge of Burroughs’ rights, if any, and denying interest in the controversy between plaintiff and defendants, and as to oil runs not paid for, it had a right to withhold until determination of suit. No request for an order directing J. I. Lasswell to appear and intervene was asked for.

On February 13, 1923, Burroughs filed amended petition.

On March 8, 1929, Prairie Oil & Gas Company filed another answer containing same plea of innocent purchaser for value, alleging no interest in the controversy,, except its rights to withhold runs not settled for until final determination of title thereto, not requesting order to require J. I. Lasswell to intervene nor offering to pay into court when he should appear to defend.

The company further showed that it had been garnisheed by Okmulgee Abstract & Title Company as debtor of S. R. Lasswell and J. N. Burroughs, and attached its answer in such garnishment cause in the jus tice court, Okmulgee county, showing that it had in its possession $900.46, representing proceeds of oil produced by it from lots 12, 13, 15, and 16, block 4, Illinois addition to town of Morris, Okla.

It is unnecessary to set out various mo tions and orders made upon issues of law between Burroughs and S. R. Lasswell. S. R. Lasswell nor the Prairie Oil & Gas Company ever had summons or order issued for J. I. Lasswell.

Suit No. 15838 was dismissed, the court reciting in the journal entry that plaintiff, Burroughs, had not had summons served upon J. I. Lasswell, the person as appears from the division order to whom the proceeds of all oil purchased were payable, and suit was dismissed and no determination of title made, since plaintiff, Burroughs, had not amended his petition as recuired by the court, and had failed to make J. I. Lasswell party defendant. Judgment also ordered the Prairie Oil & Gas Company to pay proceeds of all oil runs in its. possession into court.

The Prairie Oil & Gas Company appeared on May 8, 1929, and moved that said judgment as to it be set aside because the judgment showed that the cause was not determined upon the merits and claim of adverse title on the part of Burroughs still existed, and on June 7, 1929, the court set aside final judgment in caus.e No'. 15838, in so far as it ordered the gas company to pay into court the amount due on purchase of all runs from property described.

Thereafter J. I. Lasswell, on January 27, 1930, sued the Prairie Oil & Gas Company for the amount due him under said division order upon same property in cause No. 16684, district court of Okmulgee county, Okla., and he did not make J. N. Burroughs party defendant. The gas company answered on February 27, 1930, admitting there was due under said division order for oil, received by it the sum of $1,090.59 as proceeds, and alleged that J. N. Burroughs had since May 10, 1927, continuously and frequently claimed said proceeds and oil produced from the premises described in said division order, and then alleged the further claim of said Burroughs by reason of said suit No. 15838, and the proceedings therein, and the garnishment proceedings in justice court, all showing that J. N. Burroughs and Okmulgee Abstract & Title Company were asserting adverse claims to said fund, and asked that J. I. Lasswell be required to make said Burroughs and said abstract company parties defendant to determine who was entitled to said proceeds. Treasurer of the company filed a sworn statement that “Prairie Oil & Gas Company now holds proceeds of said oil runs in the sum of $1,090.59 which it is ready, able, and willing to pay to the true and lawful owner thereof after all adverse claims thereto had been conclusively and finally determined; otherwise the treasurer’s affidavit set up same matter as the company’s answer.

On March 15, 1930, the company filed a supplemental answer showing it had been, in cause of J. N. Burroughs v. J. I. Lass-well et al., served with an injunction issued out of the circuit court of Howell county, Mo., restraining it from paying proceeds of said oil purchased by it under said division order to J. I. Lasswell. It appears said injunction was issued February 17, 1930.

Lasswell did not undertake to make Burroughs and the Abstract & Title. Company defendants, but, on April 9, 1930, filed motion for judgment on pleadings, which he withdrew on April 30th and took leave to file reply to the company’s answer, but refiled the motion March 10, 1931, without filing reply.

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Bluebook (online)
1935 OK 692, 47 P.2d 598, 173 Okla. 278, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 600, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lasswell-v-prairie-oil-gas-co-okla-1935.