Overby v. Mona Marie Trust

240 S.W. 581, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 681
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 4, 1922
DocketNo. 10101.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 240 S.W. 581 (Overby v. Mona Marie Trust) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Overby v. Mona Marie Trust, 240 S.W. 581, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 681 (Tex. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinions

This suit was brought by W. E. Priddy and J. B. Hatchitt, trustees for the unincorporated trust estate known as the Mona Marie Trust Company, against J. H. Renfro, Joe Overby, and Jim Parker, for an injunction and damages. Upon a presentation of the petition, the court, without a hearing, issued a temporary writ of injunction against the defendants, and the defendants have appealed from an order of the trial court overruling their motion to dissolve the injunction.

The plaintiffs alleged that the Mona Marie Trust Company was organized for the purpose of developing 80 acres of land out of the H. G. M. Ry. Company survey upon which an oil and gas lease was held, and any other oil properties that the trust company night own or acquire, for the benefit of the stockholders of said trust. As grounds for the injunction prayed for, plaintiffs alleged that Parker, Renfro, and Overby had come upon the leasehold estate described in the petition, and without the consent and against the wish and desire of said trustees, and without legal authority had erected a derrick at a point about 150 feet from the south line of said leasehold estate aforesaid, and that they were attempting to and engaged in the laying of a line of water pipes for the purpose of drilling a well at said point; that said location was immediately between the plaintiff's location theretofore made and the derrick erected by the plaintiff at a cost of $800, for the purpose of drilling a well. That the derrick was located 300 feet from the plaintiff's south line, and that Jim Parker knew that plaintiff had made a location for *Page 582 the drilling of a well 300 feet from its south line, under and by virtue of an agreement with the Magnolia Petroleum Company, who owned the lease adjoining plaintiff's lease. Plaintiff further alleged that the defendants had established armed guards at the place of their avowed purpose to drill, who kept watch over said premises day and night, and that they were trespassers and without authority of law, and were willfully and maliciously and without permission and consent of the trustees of plaintiff doing and performing the things therein averred.

Plaintiff further alleged that it had entered into a contract with defendants Renfro and Overby, by virtue of which said defendants agreed to drill three wells on the lease to the 900-foot sand, and that if the well then being drilled by the Magnolia Petroleum Company should be a producing well, and make 100 barrels per day or over, the defendants agreed to drill one of the wells to the 1,600-foot sand; that all of the expenses connected with the drilling of these wells were to be borne by the defendants Renfro and Overby, and in payment therefor the plaintiff, through its trustees, agreed to transfer and assign $25,000 of its stock or units, the company being capitalized for $50,000; that this contract was entered into on the afternoon or night of January 11, 1922; that under said agreement the $25,000 worth of stock was to be placed in escrow with one of the local banks, together with a copy of the contract, and that upon the compliance by the defendants with their agreement to drill the wells according to the terms of the contract said stock was to be turned over to the defendants; that the defendants agreed to pay $1,750 in money to the plaintiff, one-third of which was to be paid cash, one-third in 60 days, and one-third in 90 days; that under said agreement plaintiff agreed to elect J. H. Renfro as one of its trustees, the declaration of trust providing for three trustees and one of them having resigned; that said contract was a personal one, and made by plaintiff because of the confidence and reliance of its trustees in said Renfo and because said trustees believed at the time that Renfro would faithfully and diligently fulfill the terms of said contract in person, and would assist, aid, and advise the other trustees of said trust estate in carrying out the purposes of said organization and in getting the most that was possible for the stockholders out of said trust estate. That had it not been for the confidence and personal trust in the defendants Renfro and Overby, and especially Renfro, they would not have made the contract with them. It was further alleged that the trustees were induced to enter into the contract by certain alleged false and fraudulent statements and conduct of defendants Renfro and Overby in leading the trustees to believe that the well then being drilled by the Magnolia Petroleum Company would not make a good producer, and that the driller in charge of said well had placed armed guards around it, and would not allow the trustees, or any one else, to visit the well in order to determine the character of production promised.

It was further alleged that the contract made with the defendants was nonassignable; that on the 12th day of January, 1922, defendants Renfro and Overby sold and assigned all their right and interest in said contract to defendant Jim Parker; that said Parker was a man of bad reputation, and not a suitable person to be associated with them as trustees of said trust estate, and that he had been charged with violation of the criminal statutes of the state, and was not a safe counselor and advisor; and that plaintiff's trustees did not confide in him, and would never have entered into a contract with Parker of the character of the one they made with Renfro and Overby.

Defendants answered by a general demurrer, and, further answering as to the writ of injunction only, they alleged that they had purchased $25,000 of the stock in said company, the same supposed to have been one-half of the stock of said company, and that defendants Renfro and Overby owned said one-half of the stock, and were given the right to drill three wells on the premises, in accordance with the contract made with the plaintiff's trustees, and that subsequently, on the 16th day of June, 1922, they transferred and assigned all their right and interest in and to said contract to defendant Jim Parker, and that said Renfro and Overby further agreed to fulfill and comply with the contract they had theretofore made as to the drilling of the wells, and they retained the right of supervision over the drilling until the completion of said wells. Such other allegations, by the plaintiff and defendants, as will be necessary to notice, will be mentioned hereafter in the course of this opinion.

Only two grounds to sustain the injunction need be noticed: First, that the contract made with the defendants Renfro and Overby was nonassignable; second, that by reason of the fraudulent statements and concealments of said Renfro and Overby the contract was voidable and subject to rescission.

The contract by the plaintiffs and defendants Renfro and Overby is as follows:

"The State of Texas, County of Wichita:

"Memorandum of agreement this day entered into between Mona Marie Trust, an unincorporated trust estate of Wichita county, Texas, acting herein by and through its trustees, W. E. Priddy and J. B. Hatchitt, party of the first part, and Joe Overby and J. H. Renfro, both of Wichita county, Texas, parties of the second part, witnesseth:

"1. Party of the first part agrees to sell, assign, and deliver unto parties of the second part twenty-five thousand dollars of its capital stock *Page 583 upon the following conditions and for the consideration hereinafter stated, as follows:

"Second party agrees and hereby obligate themselves to pay to first party the sum of seventeen hundred and fifty dollars in cash as follows: $583.35 in cash, the receipt of which is hereby acknowledged, and to make and execute their two promissory notes each in said sum of $583.35, payable in sixty and ninety days after date; said notes to bear interest at ten per cent.

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Related

Heffington v. Hellums
212 S.W.2d 245 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1948)
Phillips v. Oil, Inc.
104 S.W.2d 576 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1937)
Parker v. Mona-Marie Trust
278 S.W. 321 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1925)

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Bluebook (online)
240 S.W. 581, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 681, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/overby-v-mona-marie-trust-texapp-1922.