Lowrance v. Henry

1919 OK 170, 182 P. 489, 75 Okla. 250, 1919 Okla. LEXIS 85
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 10, 1919
Docket9015
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 1919 OK 170 (Lowrance v. Henry) 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
Lowrance v. Henry, 1919 OK 170, 182 P. 489, 75 Okla. 250, 1919 Okla. LEXIS 85 (Okla. 1919).

Opinion

JOHNSON, J.

This is an appeal from^the district court of Nowata county, and this action was commenced by E. M. Lowrance, plaintiff in error, as plaintiff below, against Wade S. Stanfield and D. W. Henry, defendants in error, who were defendants below. on the 4th day of October, 1912, and on the 7th day of May, 1913, the plaintiff, by permission of the court, filed an amended petition making the Prairie Oil & Gas Company, a corporation, a party defendant.

The amended petition, upon which the case was tried, alleged that in 1904 plaintiff resided in what is now Nowata county, Okla., and had under his control a considerable body of land thought to be valuable for oil and gas. and was well acquainted with persons in that neighborhood owning and controlling simiiar lhnds; that in that year it was agreed between the plaintiff and defendants Henry and Stanfield that they would form a partnership for the purpose of procuring and operating oil and gas leases in the neighborhood of Alluwe, Okla.; that it was agreed that the plaintiff and .defendant Stanfield should each contribute his time and services to procuring land and oil leases on land, that the defendant Henry should pay the expenses for procuring the leases, and that after the leases were procured they should belong to all three of the parties jointly and should be operated by them jointly under the name of the Terre Haute Oil &.Gas Company; that pursuant to the said agreement all three of the parties contributed some means and some time to procuring oil and gas leases, and as a result of their joint labors a large amount of leases and the fee to some land were secured, some in the name of D. W. Henry and some in the name of Wade S. Stanfield. The lands *251 apon which it is alleged that leases were procured are then described, and it is alleged that in the operation of such leases and the profits derived therefrom the parties were to share equally. Then follows a description of certain lands alleged to have been purchased in fee. It is alleged that it was the agreement that plaintiff should go on the land and operate the same, that defendant Henry should have charge of the books of the partnership and the handling of the finances thereof, and that all operations should be carried on in the name of the Terre Haute Oil & Gas Company. It is further alleged that the defendants have received $100,000 more than was necessary to pay the expenses of operation, and have refused to account to the plaintiff for any part thereof, or to recognize him as a partner or as having any right or interest in the alleged partnership. And the plaintiff prayed a decree declaring him a partner with the defendants and defining the extent of his interest in said partnership and for an accounting.

The separate answers of the defendants Henry and Stanfield denied that in 1904, or at any other time, the plaintiff had under his control a considerable body of land, or any body of land whatever, thought to be valuable for oil and gas. They alleged that the plaintiff was a white man, not entitled to an allotment, and that it was contrary to public policy and in violation of the laws and treaties governing for the plaintiff to have under his control any land except the individual allotments of his minor children, Edith Lowrance, Addie L. Lowrance, and Arthur Lowrance, of whom he was the natural guardian, and of whose land he had control, if at all, solely as trustee of the said children, and with which he was precluded from dealing for his own profit, and on which he was forbidden by law to take or give any oil or gas lease for himself or in which he was personally beneficially interested, and on which he had no power to execute an oil and gas lease at all, or to contract to do so.

The defendants denied that in the year 3904, or at any other time, any contract or agreement was made or entered into with the plaintiff to the effect that they would form a partnership for the purpose of securing and operating oil and gas leases in the neighborhood of Alluwe, Okla., or at any other place, or for any other purpose whatever, and the defendants denied that any partnership between them and the plaintiff was ever entered into and that they ever sustained a partnership relation with the plaintiff. The defendants further specifically denied all and singular the other allegations in plaintiff’s amended petition.

The defendants alleged that certain lands in said answers described, upon which plaintiff in his amended petition alleged that oil and gas leases were procured for a partnership consisting of plaintiff and these defendants, were the tribal allotments of plaintiff’s daughter, Addie L. Lowrance, and his son, Arthur Lowrance; that they were each minors in 1904, and continued to be so until June 28, 1911; that in the year 1904 the plaintiff solicited the defendant Henry to take a lease upon the said allotments of said children and to advance him some money thereon as a bonus for the use and benefit of said minors, which Henry did, the plaintiff representing that he would be appointed legal guardian of said minors, and would execute to the said Henry a departmental lease upon the said lands for oil’ and gas, purposes upon the customary terms, but there was no agreement or understanding that plaintiff was or was to become a partner of the said Henry with respect to said lands or leases, or any other lands or leases, or that the plaintiff was to have any interest therein whatever; that if there had been any such agreement or understanding, the same would have been a contract for the violation of a trust to be assumed, a contract to do a thing forbidden by law, and that said agreement and any contract into which the same entered would have been and would be illegal, contrary to public policy and void.

The defendants further allege that thereafter the plaintiff was duly appointed by the United States Court for the Northern District of the Indian Territory as the legal guardian of the persons and estates of his said two minor children, Addie L. Lowrance and Arthur Lowrance; that he accepted said appointment and duly qualified thereunder, and thereafter on or about the 23d day of March, 1907, that plaintiff as such legal guardian filed in the United States Court for the Northern District of the Indian Territory at Vinita, where said guardianship causes were pending, an application for an order of said court authorizing and directing plaintiff, as the legal guardian of said two minor children, to execute to the defendant Henry oil and gas mining leases upon the lands of said two minor children during the period of their minority, on the forms and under the rules and regulations prescribed by the Secretary of the Interior; that said application was duly heard and granted by the court, and thereupon the court made and entered its order authorizing the plaintiff, as the legal guardian of said two minors, to lease to the defendant Henry for oil and *252 gas purposes, during the minority of said minors, their said lands, said leases to be made upon the forms and under the rules and regulations prescribed by the Secretary of the.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1919 OK 170, 182 P. 489, 75 Okla. 250, 1919 Okla. LEXIS 85, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lowrance-v-henry-okla-1919.