Murray Tool & Supply Co. v. Bridgeport MacHine Co.

1933 OK 403, 23 P.2d 165, 164 Okla. 136, 1933 Okla. LEXIS 787
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 20, 1933
Docket21356
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 1933 OK 403 (Murray Tool & Supply Co. v. Bridgeport MacHine Co.) 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
Murray Tool & Supply Co. v. Bridgeport MacHine Co., 1933 OK 403, 23 P.2d 165, 164 Okla. 136, 1933 Okla. LEXIS 787 (Okla. 1933).

Opinion

BAYLESS, J.

The Bridgeport Machine Company filed an action in the district court of Hughes county, Okla., against Anderson & Hill, a copartnership, Johnson & Ashe, a copartnership, and Murray Tool & Supply Company, seeking a personal judgment against the defendants, to foreclose a ma-terialman’s lien upon an oil and gas mining lease and the personal property thereon, and for other relief. The plaintiff dismissed as to Anderson & Hill, a copartnership, at the trial of the case. A personal judgment was rendered ip favor of the plaintiff against the defendants Johnson & Ashe and Murray Tool & Supply Company. These defendants prosecute this appeal. Due to the numerous parties involved in the discussion of this matter, we will refer to the plaintiff below as plaintiff and the various defendants by name.

The case was tried upon the amended petition of the plaintiff, the substance of which is: That on or about the 30th of April, 1926, the plaintiff entered into a contract with Anderson & Hill and Johnson & Ashe, whereby the plaintiff was to furnish said parties material to be used in drilling a test well on a certain lease in Hughes county, Okla.; that said property was so furnished to said parties and that they are indebted to the plaintiff in the sum of $1,5SS.23, which they have refused to pay; that sajd plaintiff perfected its lien of record as required by law; that Anderson & Hill and Johnson & Ashe were partners in the drilling of said well and are severally liable for said material furnished, and that the plaintiff is entitled to a lien upon the lease and the equipment used in drilling said well. The plaintiff further alleges that Mjirray Tool & Supply Company is liable to it, and we quote from (he amended petition to show the basis upon which plaintiff seeks to hold Murray Tool & Supply Company:

“Plaintiff further alleges that the defendant Murray Tool & Supply Company have purchased certain interests in said test well, derrick, machinery, tools, pipes and supplies belonging thereto, subject to the rights of this plaintiff, and plaintiff further alleges that said Murray Tool & Supply Company in their contract to purchase agreed to assume and did assume and agree to pay the obligation of this plaintiff; that said agreement to assume and pay was in writing, and signed by the Murray Tool & Supply Company, but this plaintiff does not have a copy of said agreement, bqt alleges the same to be in possession of defendants Johnson & Ashe, and plaintiff for that reason is unable to attach a copy of said agreement to this amended petition; that by reason thereof said defendant, Murray Tool & Supply Company, became liable to this plaintiff in the sum of $1,588.23, together with interest thereon at the rate of 6% per annum from the 13th day of July, 1926.”

To this amended petition, the Murray Tool & Supply Company filed its answer, which is in the form of a denial, both general and specific, of the various allegations of the plaintiff’s amended petition in so far as it pertains to the Murray Tool & Supply Company, or the perfecting of record of its lien, and in addition alleges that its claim to the drilling equipment of Anderson & Hill was under and by virtue of a noté and chattel mortgage given to secure it. The separate answer of Johnson & Ashe .wás in the form of a denial, general and specific, of each allegation of the amended petition affecting Johnson & Ashe.

A portion of the written evidence introduced in behalf of the plaintiff disclosed that J. A. Culver executed an oil and gas lease upon the real estate in question^to W. G. Rogers, that W. G. Rogers in turn assigned the lease to Turman Oil Company, and that Turman Oil Company assigned a one-half interest therein to Johnson' Ashe. The answer of the garnishee, Atlantic Oil Producing Company, was admitted in evidence over the objections of deféná-ants, which answer disclosed that' Johnson & Ashe sold a one-fourth interest iii the lease to the Atlantic Oil Producing Company for $15,000, with the additional agreement that the sale included a complete well upon the lease free of cost to the Atlantic /Oil Producing Cbmpany contained in said answer. Since the Atlantic Oil Producing Company was not a party déf fendant, the matters were not binding upon anyone except itself. It appears from the record that Anderson & Hill had a written contract with Johnson & Ashe to drill a well upon this lease to a depth of 3.500 or 3,600 feet, for which they should receive, when' the well was completed, $8,000 in *138 cash and a one-eighth interest in the lease. This written contract was not introduced in evidence. It appears that Anderson & Hill entered upon the task of drilling this well, drilled it to a certain depth, and encountered trouble, and that they rented of the plaintiff certain fishing tools and equipment, and thereby incurred an indebtedness to the plaintiff of $1,287.70. Anderson & Hill plugged this hole back a certain distance, and were to continue their operations, when they encountered financial difficulties. It appears that Murray Tool & Supply Company then undertook the drilling of the well and completed it. The oral and written evidence of the plaintiff discloses that Anderson & Hill ordered from the plaintiff all of the tools and equipment used, that Anderson & Hill’s account was charged therefor, and nowhere does it appear that any other party or parties werg known in the transaction between the plaintiff and Anderson & Hill until the filing of the lien statement which iueluded Johnson & Ashe as debtors to the plaintiff. All of 'Ihe indebtedness was incurred before Murray Tool & Supply Company started to drill.

Based upon this evidence, and after the plaintiff had dismissed as to Anderson & Hill, the court entered personal judgment against Johnson & Ashe and Murray Tool & Supply Company in favor of the plaintiff for $1,287.70, and a further judgment giving the plaintiff a materialman’s lien upon the oil and gas leasehold estate, together with all derricks, tools, and other property thereon belonging to Murray Tool & Supply Company and Johnson & Ashe.

The brief of the appealing defendants, who are plaintiffs in error herein, assigns several grounds of error, but chiefly complains of uncertainty of the ground upon which the judgment was rendered, Johnson & Ashe denying that they were in any (manner Responsible! for the indebtedness incurred, and Murray Tool & Supply Company denying it had assumed and agreed to pay the indebtedness incurred by Anderson & Hill, and each of them asserting that these allegations on the part of the plaintiff had not been proven. The plaintiff in its brief and its oral argument before this court supports t£ie judgment of the trial court upon two grounds, namely: (1) It had proven that Murray Tool & Supply Company assumed and agreed to pay the indebtedness of Anderson & Hill to the plaintiff; or (2) if this was not shown, then a state of facts sufficient to constitute a mining partnership between Johnson & Ashe and Anderson & Hill was proven, and that Murray Tool & Supply Company by stepping into the shoes of Anderson-. & Hill thereby became a member of the mining partnership and liable for its obliga tic ns. The view we take of this, case necessitates a discussion of these two grounds only.

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Related

Holloman v. Britton
1959 OK 187 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1959)
Conley Drilling Co. v. Rogers
1943 OK 3 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1943)
Defenbaugh v. Purcell
1942 OK 227 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1942)
Consolidated Cut Stone Co. v. Seidenbach
1937 OK 701 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1937)
Thacher v. International Supply Co.
1936 OK 136 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1936)
Kissinger v. G. E. Burgher Oil & Gas Co.
1935 OK 897 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1935)
McAnally v. Cochran
1935 OK 81 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1935)

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Bluebook (online)
1933 OK 403, 23 P.2d 165, 164 Okla. 136, 1933 Okla. LEXIS 787, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murray-tool-supply-co-v-bridgeport-machine-co-okla-1933.