Nix v. Brogan

1925 OK 828, 251 P. 753, 118 Okla. 62, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 647
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 13, 1925
Docket15055
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 1925 OK 828 (Nix v. Brogan) 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
Nix v. Brogan, 1925 OK 828, 251 P. 753, 118 Okla. 62, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 647 (Okla. 1925).

Opinion

Opinion by

SHACKELFORD, C.

The plaintiff, Geo. W. Nix, trustee, commenced his action in the district court of Caddo county on the 28th day of April, 1921, for and on behalf of “various individuals” undisclosed by the petition, and against the principal defendant, J. E. Brogan, for the purpose of canceling a lien claim filed by such defendant upon land described as the northwest quarter of southeast quarter of section 11, township 5 north, range -.9, west I. ML, in Caddo county; and upon all the oil equipment located thereon including a producing oil well; and to ■quiet title as against the defendant J. E. Brogan. Other parties are made defendants because of ownership of royalty interests in the oil produced from the well. The attack made upon defendant’s lien claim is that it is for an exorbitant amount of $36,124.92, when in truth, as is alleged, the plaintiff owes only the sum of $5,225 which plaintiff tenders and offers to pay. The plaintiff prayed that defendant J. E. Brogan be required to accept the amount tendered in full settlement of his Hen claim, and for cancellation of his lien, and that the title be quieted as against defendant J. E. Brogan, and for the appointment of a receiver pending the litigation. A receiver was appointed and the property involved was taken charge of and operated by him.

The defendant J. E. Brogan filed answer and cross-petition. By his cross-petition he sought to foreclose his materialman’s and mechanic’s lien, claiming that the sum of $36,124.92 was due from the plaintiff, and' claiming a lien for said sum upon the property involved. Several parties were named in the cross-petition as claiming interests in the property, but such claims are alleged to be junior and inferior to the cross-petitioner’s rights in the property. Copy of the lien claim is attached and made a part of the cross-petition. Plaintiff answered the cross-petition of Brogan by general denial. The Tobacco Users Oil Company, a corporation, one of the defendants, filed answer and cross-petition against plaintiff and others of the defendants, seeking to have its rights in the property determined and adjudged to be superior to the rights of the plaintiff and defendants, other than the fee owners who were also made parties defendant. The pleadings of the various parties are voluminous, but other than above stated seem to be unimportant in a determination of this appeal.

The issues were made up and the case called for trial on the 29th of November, 1922. and the cause tried to the court without a jury. The trial resulted in a finding and judgment in favor of the defendant and cross-petitioner J. E. Brogan against the plaintiff Geo. W. Nix, trustee, in the sum of $27,274.92: and the said sum, together with an attorney’s fee in the sum of $2,500 and other costs, were decreed to be a lien on the entire leasehold estate and the oil equipment upon the lease. The trial court, by the judgment, fixed the rights of all the parties, and directed a foreclosure of the lien created in favor of defendant J. E. Brogan; and directed a sale of the property according to the priorities found in favor of the other parties. The court likewise found that the plaintiff had not complied with his contract with the Tobacco Users Oil Company, a corporation, and canceled and set aside the contract under which the plaintiff claimed as against said corporation. The plaintiff Geo. ~W. Nix, trustee, prosecutes appeal against J. E. Brogan and all the parties as defendants in error. The plaintiff, however, gave no supersedeas bond to stay the judgment, and in due course a special execution and order of sale was issued as directed in the judgment, levy was made upon the property, the property appraised and sale made, at which the defendant J. E. Brogan became the purchaser of the property upon a bid several thousand dollars less than the amount of the judgment; and the sale was confirmed by the court and the entire leasehold and other property involved passed into the hands of J. E. Brogan. The plaintiff in error presents as grounds for reversal, the following:

Brogan’s evidence is insufficient to support the judgment in his favor.

. The record shows that the greater part of the defendant’s claim is for expenses of a fishing job in the oil well. It is not in dispute that J. E. Brogan was to drill a well upon the lease under contract with plaintiff. The plaintiff had agreed to furnish a certain character of casing to be used in the hole. It seems to be admitted that the plaintiff did not comply with this provision of the contract. It is the contention of J. E. Brogan that plaintiff’s failure to furnish the character of casing agreed upon, *64 but did furnish an inferior grade of easing, was the cause of his haying trouble with the hole. This was the principal matter in dispute upon the trial. The evidence upon this disputed matter is voluminous and conflicting. The trial court resolved the conflict in favor of J. E. Brogan. We have examined the evidence and are unable to say that the conclusion reached by the trial judge is against the clear weight of the evidence. Under repeated holdings of this court, we are not authorized to disturb the finding of the trial court upon a disputed question of fact because of alleged insufficiency of the evidence, unless it be made to appear that the finding is against the clear weight of the evidence.

The plaintiff contends that Brogan waived • any claim for damages on account of defective casing, by accepting the casing that was furnished.

There was no express waiver. As to whether there was an implied waiver is primarily a question of fact to be determined from the conduct of the parties. The trial judge, in effect, found there was no waiver, and the record supports the conclusion that there was no waiver by conduct. The contention made is not supported by the record.

The plaintiff insists that the defendant J. E. Brogan failed in his proof to show that there was more due him than was tendered in the plaintiff’s petition.

The defendant Brogan claimed that there was due him the sum of $36,124.92. The court found that Brogan’s evidence did not support the entire claim, and reduced it the sum of $8,665, ‘and found for him the sum of $27,459.92, and rendered judgment for that amount. The amount found to be due and owing to Brogan is supported by the evidence.

The plaintiff contends that since a receiver was appointed by the court, plaintiff was not chargeable with negligence in the failure to carry out his contract with the Tobacco Users Oil Oompany.

It seems that the Tobacco Users Oil Oom-pany had and owned certain interests in the oil rights. These rights the company conveyed to the plaintiff by a contract in which the plaintiff agreed to keep the property free from liens in his operations, and if he should fail in so doing his rights under the contract should forfeit to the Tobacco Users Oil Oompany. It appears from the record that the lien claim of J. E. Brogan was filed sometime early in April, 1921. The court found it was a valid subsisting lien claim upon the property, and -amounted to a breach of the contract between the plaintiff and the Tobacco Users Oil Oompany; and under the contract, to permit the lien to be created upon the property, amounted to a breach. There was another condition of the contract which required the plaintiff to drill a second and other wells upon the lease, if the first was a producing well. This condition of the contract was not complied with.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1925 OK 828, 251 P. 753, 118 Okla. 62, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 647, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nix-v-brogan-okla-1925.