Meagher v. Equity Oil Company

299 P.2d 827, 5 Utah 2d 196, 1956 Utah LEXIS 193
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 5, 1956
Docket8483
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 299 P.2d 827 (Meagher v. Equity Oil Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Meagher v. Equity Oil Company, 299 P.2d 827, 5 Utah 2d 196, 1956 Utah LEXIS 193 (Utah 1956).

Opinion

CROCKETT, Justice.

This litigation is before this court for its fourth engagement, having been here on three prior occasions. 1 These repeat performances are not due to the merit of the controversy nor to the popularity of the subject matter with this court. They seem rather to stem, to a considerable extent, from an unwillingness of defendants to recognize and perform their obligations to plaintiffs as adjudicated in prior proceedings.

The controversy centers around rights in a lease, referred to as the “Sheridan lease” in certain oil lands in Uintah County. The origin and history of this lease are set out in our prior decisions referred to above, and, except to the extent incorporated herein, do not warrant repetition here. The original bases of the rights of the parties in the Sheridan lease are immaterial here except to say that the defendant, Paul Stock, and one Ray Phebus were assignees of rights therein; and that in 1944, for reasons likewise not material here, Stock executed an instrument called a “Release” of his interest (hereinafter called the “Stock half”) in the lease to the fee holder, N. J. Meagher, Sr., which in this later phase of the litigation has been the subject of dispute between the parties. The other one-half interest (referred to as the “Phe-bus half”) is now owned by the defendants, Stock, Joe T. Juhan and Weber Oil Company, who derive their interest through Phebus, and which interest is not in dispute here.

*199 The original action was instituted by N. J. Meagher, Sr. in 1944. While the litigation has been pending, the Equity Oil Company, in 1948, with full knowledge of the parties, and under an agreement with Stock, Juhan and Weber Oil Company, entered upon the property, drilled and discovered oil; and since that date has continued to produce and sell the oil from the property. The parties, including the plaintiff, N. J. Meagher, Sr., and the defendants, Stock, Juhan and Equity Oil Company, stipulated in court that the ownership of these parties is 8V/¿% of the oil rights under the lease, there being 18^% interest therein outstanding as royalties not involved in the litigation. As to the one-half interest (the Stock half) claimed by Meagher, and his children, who are his assignees and present plaintiffs, it was agreed that Equity Oil, “has impounded, set aside and holds in a special account 40.75% of the gross crude oil runs from said property after deducting operating .expenses and will continue to so impound such per cent of gross crude oil runs as long as title questions persist and until the court otherwise orders” and the court made and .entered its minute entry in accordance with such stipulation.

The lower court decided the issue as to the effect of the Stock “release,” relating to the Stock half interest, in favor of Mea-gher, which was affirmed by this court in Case No. 7723 February 11, 1953. 2 Upon remand to the District Court Stock and Juhan, and Weber Oil Company, their successor, and Equity Oil Company failed and refused to account to the plaintiffs. This was based in part upon the ground that the latter two companies were not parties to the prior proceedings. Plaintiffs then, in May, 1954, commenced this action joining said companies as defendants with the individuals named, seeking to have the question of their ownership determined as against all of the defendants; for an accounting of the operation and proceeds from oil production on the leased property and payment of proceeds due them; and added a fourth count for damages for increased income taxes plaintiffs allege they will have to pay because the income was not paid to them as it accrued. Pursuant to motion, the trial court dismissed this fourth count in December, 1954.

The parties made motions, for summary judgment and the trial court heard arguments in support thereof in May, 1955. Thereafter on October 14, 1955, the court made and caused to be placed in the file his written “Rulings on Motions” by which he determined the following:

1. That the defendants Juhan and Stock are bound by the decision handed dqwn by this court in 1953 and are precluded from *200 litigating issues that were or could have been raised there;

2. That the Weber Oil Co., being in privity with Stock and Juhan, is also bound by the former judgment;

3. That the Equity Oil Company appears only as a stakeholder, and that it has maintained a special fund of at least 40.-75% of the “gross crude oil runs [returns]” after expenses of operations;

4. That the plaintiffs are entitled to a summary judgment against Equity Oil Company for an accounting of the operations and profits of the oil produced by that company on the lands in question, and for a judgment against Equity for an amount equal to one half the proceeds after operating expenses are deducted.

After considering proposed findings and judgments submitted by the respective parties, and objections thereto, on December 13, 1955, the court entered its Interlocutory Judgment and Decree in accordance with the above recited “rulings on motions”; adjudging that plaintiffs are entitled to an undivided one-half interest in the lease as against Weber Oil Company; and also as against Stock and Juhan, in accordance with the former judgment; that Equity Oil Company as stakeholder be required to render an accounting to the plaintiffs of the oil production and sale, and to pay to plaintiffs 40.75% of the gross proceeds, less one-half of the operating expense; and authorized said payment to be made from the impounded funds held by Equity.

A procedural difficulty developed which has given rise to much perplexity. On the same day as the Interlocutory Judgment was signed and entered, December 13, 1955, Judge Tuckett, at his chambers in Vernal, Utah, signed the order which has been the cause of the mischief. It was presented to him by attorney Burton W. Musser, without having served it upon opposing counsel or indicating to them that such an order was being presented to the court. It directed that Equity Oil Company pay to Stock and Juhan one-half of the funds impounded and held by Equity. It will be noted that there was no stipulation that proceeds due the Phebus half of the lease should be impounded; that Stock, Juhan and Weber Oil Company had been currently receiving that share (40.75%) of the proceeds, and that payment to them of an additional one-half of the other half of the funds which had been impounded, would give them a total of three-fourths of the proceeds. This was not in accordance with the prior decision of this court, nor with the subsequent judgment of the trial court which had just been entered.

Upon the same day as he signed the order, the trial judge advised plaintiffs’ counsel, Mr. Herbert Van Dam, Jr., by telephone of the fact that Mr. Musser had presented such an order. Mr. Van Dam asked the judge if it would affect the rights *201 of the plaintiffs, to which the judge answered that it was his understanding that it would not, hut would merely permit the defendants to withdraw the one-half of the proceeds to which they were entitled, and that it was their privilege to divide it among themselves as they saw fit. Within minutes thereafter, Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
299 P.2d 827, 5 Utah 2d 196, 1956 Utah LEXIS 193, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meagher-v-equity-oil-company-utah-1956.