Linn v. Houston

255 P. 1105, 123 Kan. 409, 1927 Kan. LEXIS 156
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMay 7, 1927
DocketNo. 27,104
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 255 P. 1105 (Linn v. Houston) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Linn v. Houston, 255 P. 1105, 123 Kan. 409, 1927 Kan. LEXIS 156 (kan 1927).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Dawson, J.:

The plaintiff brought this action against the defendants to recover damages for the breach of a contract to drill for [410]*410oil on certain lands in Wyoming covered by a lease which plaintiff had acquired on the faith of defendants’ undertaking.

Plaintiff alleged that in 1920 the defendants, Stinson, Houston, Howland, Geiger, Quinn, J. E. Wheeler and three other persons, one of whom, Henry Rodenbeck, is now deceased, organized themselves into a common-law trust for the exploitation and development of oil and gas lands and business incident thereto, and for sundry other purposes not here pertinent; and that these six defendants and Rodenbeck named themselves as trustees of this trust, and selected the title “The Quinn Oil Company,” as its business name and designation, and chose one of their number, J. E. Wheeler, as their agent for the general management and conduct of the business affairs of the trust, and that he assumed the duties and powers thus conferred upon him.

Plaintiff further alleged that in July, 1920, Wheeler, on behalf of this common-law trust, the Quinn Oil Company, and the defendant trustees thereof, proposed to plaintiff that he should purchase and procure an oil and gas lease on a certain acreage of lands and assign every alternate 40-acre tract thereof, 640 acres in all, to the Quinn Oil Company, and that the latter would commence and diligently prosecute, the work of drilling on such leased lands in conformity with the conditions prescribed by the lessors in the leasing contract. Accordingly, plaintiff proceeded to purchase and procure a lease as desired by Wheeler, for which he paid the reasonable price of $2,500, and that he assigned to the Quinn Oil Company the acreage required by Wheeler; and plaintiff and Wheeler, on behalf of the Quinn Oil Company, executed'in writing a drilling contract covering in detail the obligations thereby undertaken by defendants’ institution. Part of the concluding paragraph of that contract reads:

. . Second party hereby agrees to be held liable for the fulfillment of the covenants herein made and hereby agrees to indemnify first party in the amount of $2,500 in the event that second party fails to protect first party’s interests under the terms of this lease, and hereinbefore described, and as set forth in said lease.
, r„ . . , D. W. Linn [first party],
“The Quinn Oil Company [second party].
“By Dr. J. E. Wheeler, Secretary.”

Attached to plaintiff’s petition as exhibits were a copy of defendants’ trust agreement, a copy of the gas and oil lease covering 1,280 acres procured by plaintiff at the instigation of Wheeler, and copy [411]*411of the assignment thereof to the Quinn Oil Company with special reference therein to the drilling contract above mentioned. The gas and oil lease provided that drilling operations should commence within 120 days from the signing of the lease and should be diligently prosecuted thereafter, and that a failure on the part of the lessee to comply therewith would subject the lease to forfeiture at the lessors’ option on fifteen days’ notice.

Plaintiff also alleged that defendants failed to perform the acts agreed to in the drilling contract and as prescribed in the lease, and that the lessors had exercised their privilege of forfeiting the lease in Conformity with its terms, whereby plaintiff was damaged in the sum of $2,500, and that by the terms of the drilling contract defendants had stipulated and agreed that a breach of contract on their part would damage plaintiff in that amount.

Plaintiff prayed judgment accordingly.

The Quinn Oil Company made a special appearance, objecting to the jurisdiction on the ground that it was a “citizen” of Wyoming.

The defendants Houston, Stinson, Geiger, Howland, and Chas. A. Rodenbeck, administrator of the estate of Henry Rodenbeck, deceased, filed separate demurrers to plaintiff’s petition. These were sustained; and after plaintiff’s request to amend his pleading in a minor matter was denied, this action was dismissed.

Plaintiff appeals, assigning various error's, but the vital matter pertains to the ruling on defendants’ demurrers to plaintiff’s petition, and this point depends upon the question of the liability of the defendants as trustees of the Quinn Oil Company to answer for the contractual obligations of that concern.

At the time the trial court ruled on this demurrer, it did not have the benefit of our late decision in Weber Engine Co. v. Alter, 120 Kan. 557, 245 Pac. 143, in which, after a thorough investigation of the subject, and which renders needless an extended dissertation on the characteristics of a common-law trust at this time, it was held that the trustees of a common-law business trust are individually liable for the obligations of the trust, notwithstanding their attempted limitations of liability, so far, at least, as concerns all those dealing with the trust who are not apprised of the limitations of liability which the creators of the trust had prescribed. Such was the situation in the present case as pleaded in plaintiff’s petition and conceded to be true by defendants’ demurrers.

[412]*412A common-law trust is or may be a very convenient device for the accumulation of sufficient assets to give commercial prestige in the conduct of business, and may be more elastic and adaptable to the business undertakings and projects of its creators than a limited partnership or ordinary corporation would be. So, too, it is less handicapped with ultra vires problems and the necessity of conforming to discordant state laws governing corporations and the payment of burdensome corporation taxes. But a common-law trust certainly has none of the attributes of limited liability or freedom from personal liability which attach to limited partnerships and ordinary corporate organizations. Freedom from personal’responsibility for breach of their business contracts is not a matter which a group of men can confer-upon themselves by the creation of a trust, without the sanction of a statute to that effect, or without the intelligent contractual consent of the parties with whom they deal. (Weber Engine Co. v. Alter, supra, 46 A. L. R. 158, 171 et seq.)

Nothing was pleaded in plaintiff’s petition which would give rise to an inference that in Wyoming, where this contract -with plaintiff was made, a common-law trust had any peculiar privileges which it would not enjoy in Kansas where the majority of the trustees reside. And if the Wyoming law does confer upon the trustees of a common-law trust freedom from personal liability for its breach of contract, that fact would have to be pleaded and proved. It could not be inferred in determining the propriety of a demurrer to a petition.

Touching briefly on the other assignments of error: It was within the trial court’s discretion to overrule plaintiff’s motion to amend his amended petition so as to allege more precisely that service of process could not be obtained in Wyoming. But that matter is immaterial because the petition and attached exhibits did show the whereabouts of all the trustees except Wheeler; they all resided outside of Wyoming except Wheeler; and the allegation as to him was “that the residence of the defendant J. E.

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Bluebook (online)
255 P. 1105, 123 Kan. 409, 1927 Kan. LEXIS 156, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/linn-v-houston-kan-1927.