McCartney v. McKendrick

85 So. 2d 164, 226 Miss. 562, 5 Oil & Gas Rep. 533, 1956 Miss. LEXIS 434
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 23, 1956
Docket39794
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 85 So. 2d 164 (McCartney v. McKendrick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCartney v. McKendrick, 85 So. 2d 164, 226 Miss. 562, 5 Oil & Gas Rep. 533, 1956 Miss. LEXIS 434 (Mich. 1956).

Opinion

*570 McGehee, C. J.

This is a suit to enforce the alleged rights of one partner against another as joint adventurers in the development of an oil field, and was instituted in the Chancery Court of Jefferson County by the appellant William R. McCartney against the appellee Charles S. McKendrick. The defendant McKendrick is a nonresident living in New Orleans, Louisiana, and there was named as garnishee in the suit the Ashland Oil & Refining Company, which, on August 12, 1953, according to its answer as garnishee, had on hand the net sum of $170,-728.43, derived from oil production, one-half of which is claimed by the appellant, together with a similar interest in any further sum that may have subsequently accrued from the joint adventure which led to the development of the oil field known as the “Churchill Field” in Jefferson County, Mississippi. This appeal is being prosecuted from a final decree dismissing the suit.

During the early part of the year 1950 J. B. Claypool and his partner W. C. Proctor, oil men with headquarters *571 in Jackson, Mississippi, entered into two separate letters of agreement with the Pure Oil Company, under the terms of which the Pure Oil Company agreed to assign to them certain oil and gas leases covering property in the vicinity of Churchill in Jefferson County, in consideration of an agreement that the said assignees would drill two test wells. One of these was to be a shallow well, to approximately 6,500 feet in depth, and to be known as the Allen well. The other or deep well is referred to in the record as the G-aylor or Kemp well. The complainant McCartney learned from Claypool, an old friend of his, about this so-called “farm-out” that the latter held from the Pure Oil Company as aforesaid. With Claypool’s consent, the complainant McCartney undertook to make arrangements to get the two wells drilled. He saw the defendant McKendrick in New Orleans and told him about this prospect. They then came to Jackson together where McCartney introduced McKendrick to Claypool. Then McCartney and McKendrick agreed to go forward with this venture as joint adventurers in the undertaking, with all the dealings and transactions to be in McKendrick’s name on behalf of the two of them. McCartney then contacted another long-time friend, W. A. Jacobson, by a telephone call to him at Lake Charles, Louisiana. The result was that Jacobson met McCartney and McKendrick in Jackson, where it was arranged for Jacobson to take McKendrick to Laurel, Mississippi, and introduce him to Lyle Cashion, President of the Lyle Cashion Company, whom Jacobson had known for many years. McCartney and McKendrick needed an oil drilling contractor to drill the wells, and the Lyle Cashion Company was engaged in that business.

In due time Lyle Cashion met with McCartney, McKendrick and Jacobson in Jackson. They then met with Claypool and Proctor and with the result that a letter agreement was reached between the latter two and Cash- *572 ion, dated February 27,1950, which was later supplanted by a similar agreement dated March 20, 1950. Under the terms of the letter and the agreement, Claypool and Proctor agreed to convey unto Cashion all of their rights in the letter agreement from the Pure Oil Company relative to the shallow well upon Cashion’s agreeing to drill this well. Arrangements were also made with the Kemp Drilling Company to drill the deep well. There was testimony on the trial to the effect that there came with the deal approximately $40,000 in contributions for the drilling of the deep well and $3,500 for the shallow well.

The testimony of Cashion, McCartney, McKendrick and Jacobson, was to the effect that McCartney and McKendrick were to be associated as partners and joint adventurers in the undertaking and that all transactions were to be handled in the name of McKendrick on the part of McCartney and McKendrick and that Cashion was to receive 50% of the profits and that the complainant McCartney and the defendant McKendrick were to receive the other 50%, to be divided equally between the two of them. In fact, McKendrick admittedly dictated a letter on February 25, 1950, for the signature of the Lyle Cashion Company, by Lyle Cashion, addressed to C. S. McKendrick and W. R. McCartney, which recited, among other things, that: “It is understood that we are, after all costs have been deducted, to divide the profits whether they be acreage, overrides or interest in this block on a basis of 50% to myself and 50% to C. S. McKendrick and W. R. McCartney.”

The letter last above referred to, although not signed by Lyle Cashion Company, reflects McKendrick’s understanding of what the parties had orally agreed upon. Claypool also testified that McKendrick represented that he and McCartney were partners; and Cashion who was < told that they were partners was never advised of any change in this relationship. This testimony of Cashion *573 is supported by the fact that when he later (in September 1950) was trying to work out his settlement of the joint adventure and under the contract of April 29, 1950, he required as a condition that McKendrick produce a writing from McCartney showing his concurrence.

Moreover, the decree of the chancellor appealed from herein contains as its first finding of fact by the chancellor “that the complainant McCartney and the defendant McKendrick entered orally into a joint venture to drill an oil well on the Allen lease on a farm-out from Claypool and Proctor, which farm-out was assigned by Lyle Cashion Company by Claypool and Proctor * * *.”

In fact, there is no dispute in the evidence that McCartney and McKendrick had orally agreed with Cashion that he was to have one-half of the profits from the joint adventure and that McCartney and McKendrick were to receive the other half, after all costs had been deducted. Although the chancellor found that the parties were joint adventurers in the undertaking, he further found from circumstances hereinafter to be related that McCartney had abandoned the undertaking and had told McKendrick to “count him out of it,” whereas it is now contended by the appellee McKendrick on this appeal that all of the parties had abandoned the original joint adventure, and that he and Cashion entered into a new and different agreement on April 29,1950, to which he claims that McCartney was not a party, and whereby he claims that he and Cashion each agreed to bear one-half the costs of drilling the Allen well, with Lyle Cash-ion Company advancing the costs, and which last above mentioned contract also contained a provision that either party had the option to purchase from the other one-half of the leases, royalty, etc. acquired by the other within a radius of ten miles of the well site within six months following March 1, 1950.

The deep well was tested and found to be dry on April 22, 1950, and the Allen well on May 12, 1950, but *574 the information secured from the drilling of the two dry wells prompted the drilling of what was known as the Davis No. 1, discovery well in the Churchill Field, within the ten-mile radius of the Allen well.

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Bluebook (online)
85 So. 2d 164, 226 Miss. 562, 5 Oil & Gas Rep. 533, 1956 Miss. LEXIS 434, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccartney-v-mckendrick-miss-1956.