Merinos Viesca y Compania, Inc. v. Pan American Petroleum & Transport Co.

49 F.2d 352, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1293
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedApril 22, 1931
DocketNo. 2839
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 49 F.2d 352 (Merinos Viesca y Compania, Inc. v. Pan American Petroleum & Transport Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Merinos Viesca y Compania, Inc. v. Pan American Petroleum & Transport Co., 49 F.2d 352, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1293 (E.D.N.Y. 1931).

Opinion

GALSTON, District Judge.

On the pleadings the defendants have moved for judgment dismissing the complaint pursuant to rule 112 of the Rules of Civil Practice, and on the further ground that this court is forum non conveniens.

Señora Cruz, the owner of certain lands in Mexico, in' the State of Yera Cruz, on June 21, 1902, executed and delivered to one Adolfo Merinos a power of attorney concerning the leasing of the lands.

The complaint alleges that under the laws of Mexico this power of attorney is a general power and gave Merinos no authority to sell property, either real or personal, or to confer title to the rights to the subsoil or to the products thereon.

Subsequent to the making of this power of attorney, Merinos executed and delivered to the Pan American Company a lease covering these premises, for a period of thirty years beginning on July 1, 1906. By this instrument Merinos undertook to grant to the Pan American Company a license to mine, drill, explore, exploit, extract, and export the crude oil and analogous substances such as petroleum, gas, etc., which might be found on the surface or in the subsoil. It is then alleged that this license from Merinos to the Pan American Company, so far as it attempted to confer upon that defendant the privilege of exploiting and removing the subsoil and extracting the petroleum products, was by virtue of certain sections of the Codes of Mexico and Yera Cruz null and void.

It is alleged that the Pan American Company, at the time of the execution of the Merinos lease, had full knowledge of the limitations of the authority of Merinos under the power of attorney granted to him by Señora Cruz; that subsequently on July 20, 1907, this company assigned to the defendant Tamiahua Petroleum Company its rights under the lease, and that the Tamiahua Petroleum Company also had knowledge of the limited authority of Merinos under the alleged general power of attorney from Señora Cruz, and of the laws of the State of Yera [353]*353Cruz and of the United States of Mexico in respect to powers and leases of lands.

It is then alleged that in violation of the rights of Señora Cruz, and without her written consent, the Tamiahua Petroleum Company drilled and mined the -subsoil and removed and exported oil therefrom to the extent of approximately one hundred and twenty-two million barrels.

Señora Cruz remained the owner of the property up to the time of her death on December 2, 1919; leaving a will under which her natural son, Gerónimo Merinos, was made her sole and “universal heir,” as well as the executor of her estate; thereafter there was a meeting of the heirs of Señora Cruz on September 6, 1920, pursuant to the laws of Mexico, relating to the distribution of real and personal property, and at that meeting Gerónimo Merinos was declared to be the sole and universal heir of Señora Cruz. Thus ownership in the aforesaid lands is alleged to have been in Gerónimo Merinos from December 2, 1919, to March 18, 1921, at which time he elected to terminate the aforesaid leas? and to recover damages sustained to the premises by reason of alleged wrongful exploitation of the subsoil and the sale of the products extracted therefrom.

It is alleged that the value of the products thus removed, between July 20, 1907, and March 18,1921, was $97;600,000.

On November 11,1922, Gerónimo Merinos assigned his claim against the defendants to a partnership known as Merinos Viesca y Compañía. On December 29; 1925, that firm assigned its claim against the defendants to the plaintiff herein.

The first four causes of the complaint would seem to seek to recover damages for an alleged anticipatory breach of .the lease; the fifth cause of action is for an alleged conversion but based upon contentions in respect to the infirmity of the Merinos power of attorney and the limitations of said lease to the Pan American Company.

The answer consists of a general denial and of fourteen separate defenses. The first four defenses relate to various statutes of limitation in New York, Vera Cruz, Delaware, and Maine.

The fifth defense incorporates a copy of the power of attorney executed June 21, 1902, by Señora Cruz in favor of her son, Adolfo Merinos, and also a copy of the lease from Señora Cruz (aeting by Adolfo Merinos, her attorney in fact) to the Pan Ajnerican Company; and also alleges that Señora Cruz and her heirs had full knowledge of the acts of the Tamiahua Petroleum Company concerning the extraction of petroleum from the leased premises and from oil wells drilled thereon, and knowledge also of the construction upon said premises, at great expense to the lessee, of roads, highways, tanks, pumping stations, machinery, communication lines, etc.; that the defendant at all times paid.the rent called for in the lease; that Señora Cruz and her successors accepted such rent with full knowledge that the defendant was extracting petroleum from the subsoil of the leased lands, and that no ' attempt was made during this period by the lessor, or any one purporting to succeed to her interests, to repudiate the lease because of any alleged unlawful acts of the lessee, until March 18, 1921, when Gerónimo Merinos elected to terminate the lease on the grounds heretofore stated. This defense is, therefore, one of ratification.

The sixth defense sets forth a ratification by Señora Cruz in the form of a public document executed August 21, 1917.

The seventh defense alleges also ratification, this by a document executed by Gerónimo Merinos on April 28,1924. .

The eighth defense alleges an estoppel arising out of the failure of Señora Cruz, or any of her successors, to protest full knowledge on the part of Adolfo Merinos, her attorney in' fact, of the alleged unlawful acts of the defendants or any of them.

The ninth defense is one of estoppel arising out of the failure by the plaintiff or its assignors to return the rent or make any offer of restitution.

The tenth defense has to do with res adjudicata arising out of the adoption in the Republic of Mexico of the Constitution of 1917, and the enactment in pursuance thereof by the Mexican Federal Congress of a law concerning petroleum. In accordance with this Constitution and the Petroleum Law, the defendant Tamiahua Petroleum Company filed with the Secretary of Industry of the Department of Commerce and Labor, its application for a confirmatory concession upon Lot 165 Chinampa. The aforesaid Department is alleged to have found the application and the confirmatory concession of the defendant to be in all respects good and valid, with full knowledge on the part of and notice to all persons claiming ownership or rights in said lot; and that neither the plaintiff nor any of its alleged predecessors in title made application for a confirmatory concession in respect to lot 165, nor did they [354]*354oppose the application of the defendant Tamiahua Petroleum Company.

The eleventh defense alleges that the rights of the parties to this action are governed by foreign law and that by reason of the circumstances this court should decline to take jurisdiction of the action.

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Bluebook (online)
49 F.2d 352, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1293, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/merinos-viesca-y-compania-inc-v-pan-american-petroleum-transport-co-nyed-1931.