Morco Properties, Inc. v. Cumberland Contracting Co.

19 F.R.D. 224, 1956 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4304
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Kentucky
DecidedAugust 22, 1956
DocketCiv. A. No. 853
StatusPublished

This text of 19 F.R.D. 224 (Morco Properties, Inc. v. Cumberland Contracting Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morco Properties, Inc. v. Cumberland Contracting Co., 19 F.R.D. 224, 1956 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4304 (W.D. Ky. 1956).

Opinion

SHELBOURNE, Chief Judge.

This action was instituted October 1, 1955 by the plaintiffs Morco Properties, Inc., a Florida corporation and Jack Cox an alleged citizen of Florida against the Cumberland Contracting Company, a Kentucky corporation, and the individual defendants Walter Sargent, J. H. Young, Belle Young and Annie Mae Woods, citizens of Kentucky.

It was alleged in the complaint that Dock Dulin died in 1944, leaving as his only child and heir at law Annie Mae Woods (nee Dulin); that the decedent was the owner of, and transmitted to Annie Mae Woods by inheritance, 15% acres more or less of land in Christian County, Kentucky; that on December 20, 1954 Annie Mae Woods, then a widow, executed an oil and gas lease to Cox Drilling Company, composed of the plaintiff Jack Cox, Carl A. Morrison and A. G. Wickersham. The oil and gas lease was for a term of five years and as long thereafter as oil or gas should be produced from the land, reserving to the lessor an amount equal to one-eighth part of all oil and gas produced from the leased premises as royalty.

[225]*225It is alleged that the lease was recorded December 23, 1954. Plaintiffs allege that in the lease the land was attempted to be described by the names of the owners of the adjoining lands and that in March 1955, it was discovered that the draftsman of the lease had incorrectly named the adjoining landowners on two sides of the land and that a correction or amendment was executed in which the property was more particularly and cor-, rectly described by metes and bounds.

The petition alleges that on January 6, 1955, there was recorded a deed dated March 5, 1950, purporting to be a deed from Annie Mae Woods to defendants J. H. Young and Belle Young conveying the 15 Y2 acres of land upon which the oil and gas lease had been executed and that said deed purported to have been acknowledged by Annie Mae Dulin Woods before Louis P. McHenry, a Notary Public for Christian County, Kentucky and that the notary’s certificate was undated and no information was conveyed therein as to the date it was signed or acknowledged.

Plaintiffs allege that defendant Annie Mae Woods neither signed nor acknowledged the deed and that the signature of Annie Mae Dulin Woods appearing on the deed was not in her handwriting nor affixed to the deed by her and that she did not acknowledge the deed before the notary whose name appeared thereon in the certificate of acknowledgment and alleged that the deed was a forgery and fraudulent and that the certificate of the notary was false and procured by fraud on the part of the grantees and a mistake on the part of the notary.

It is alleged that January 13, 1955, J. H. Young and Belle Young executed an oil and gas lease on the tract of land to Walter Sargent leasing the land for the mining and production of oil and gas for a term of five years and as long thereafter as oil and gas was produced, reserving to the lessors the equal of one-eighth part of all oil and gas produced from the lease; that on February 14, 1955, the lessee in the oil and gas lease from J. H. and Belle Young transferred and assigned the lease to Cumberland Contracting Company, with a definite commitment on the part of the latter to drill and develop same and the said Walter Sargent reserving to himself an overriding royalty of one-fourth of seven-eighths of the production from said lease until the Cumberland Company should recover its development cost and thereafter the royalty would continue at an additional one-fourth of the production under the lease; that the Cumberland Contracting Company had notice and knowledge of the lease to the Cox Drilling Company December 20, 1954 and notwithstanding such knowledge proceeded upon the land and drilled and completed two valuable producing oil wells from which Cumberland Contracting Company was producing and selling the oil.

It is alleged that September 19, 1955, Jack Cox, Carl A. Morrison and A. G. Wickersham, d/b/a Cox Drilling Company, transferred and assigned to Morco Properties, Inc. an undivided interest in the oil and gas lease of December 20, 1954, as corrected by the subsequent document of April 4, 1955, and in addition assigned to the associates of the Cox Drilling Company a one-fourth interest in any and all claims, choses of action or rights of action that Cox, Morrison and Wickersham and Cox Drilling Company “had against the lessor in said lease (Annie Mae Dulin Woods) for any breach of her covenant and warranty of title therein.”

It was alleged that the plaintiff Jack Cox, at the time of the institution of this suit, owned an undivided Wioo interest in the lease of December 20, 1954. It was averred that the value of the leasehold, considering the development and the undeveloped portion thereof at the time the suit was instituted, was in excess of $50,000 and that the undivided one-fourth interest of Morco Properties, Inc. had a valuation in excess of $12,-[226]*226500 and the undivided 3%oo interest of Jack Cox had a valuation in excess of $19,500.

Plaintiffs Cox and Morco Properties, Inc. aver that Walter Sargent and Cumberland Contracting Company had full notice and knowledge of the oil and gas lease of December 20, 1954 to the Cox Drilling Company and notwithstanding such knowledge, all of the defendants wrongfully trespassed upon the land, wrongfully extracted oil therefrom and ask that it be adjudged that defendants have no estate, right, title, or any interest whatever in said land.

It was then averred that if it should be determined and adjudged in this action that the deed from Annie Mae Woods to J. H. Young and Belle Young is valid and constitutes a legal conveyance and that the lease of January 13, 1955 from J. H. and Belle Young to Sargent constitutes a valid and effective lease on the lands, that it should then be adjudged that Morco Properties, Inc. and Cox should be entitled to recover from Annie Mae Woods on her covenant of warranty of title in the lease of December 20, 1954 each, a sum equal to its or his respective interest as alleged in the complaint.

October 20, 1955, the defendants Cumberland Contracting Company, Walter Sargent, J. H. Young and Belle Young, filed their joint motion under Rule 12(b) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, 28 U.S.C.A., first, to dismiss the action for lack of jurisdiction of the subject matter thereof because Jack Cox was alleged not to be a citizen of Florida but a citizen of Kentucky, and second, Carl A. Morrison and A. C. Wickersham had a joint interest in the claim asserted in the complaint and were indispensable parties and that the said Morrison and Wickersham were each and both citizens of Kentucky and third, it was alleged that a proper alignment of the parties in relation to their real interest in the matter in controversy would place the defendant Annie Mae Woods on the same side or as a plaintiff with Morco Properties, Inc. and Jack Cox. Said Annie Mae Woods was alleged to be a citizen of Kentucky and it was moved that the action be dismissed because of the failure of the plaintiffs to join Carl A. Morrison and A. C. Wickersham who were alleged to be indispensable parties.

October 22, 1955, Annie Mae Woods filed her answer, denying each and every material allegation contained in plaintiffs’ complaint except her heirship from Dock Dulin and her inheritance from him of the land described in the complaint and she affirmatively there alleges that she did not execute or deliver to J. H.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
19 F.R.D. 224, 1956 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4304, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morco-properties-inc-v-cumberland-contracting-co-kywd-1956.