Petroleum Royalties Co. of Oklahoma v. Hartford Accident & Indemnity Co.

106 F.2d 440, 124 A.L.R. 1403, 1939 U.S. App. LEXIS 4714
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 6, 1939
DocketNo. 1841
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 106 F.2d 440 (Petroleum Royalties Co. of Oklahoma v. Hartford Accident & Indemnity Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Petroleum Royalties Co. of Oklahoma v. Hartford Accident & Indemnity Co., 106 F.2d 440, 124 A.L.R. 1403, 1939 U.S. App. LEXIS 4714 (10th Cir. 1939).

Opinion

HUXMAN, Circuit Judge.

The Petroleum Royalties Company, hereinafter called the Trust Estate, is a common law trust organized in the State of Oklahoma by a declaration of trust dated September 19, 1925, and filed for record in said state.

[442]*442The Petroleum Royalties Company of Oklahoma, hereinafter called the Corporation, is a Delaware corporation organized under the laws of Delaware, January 13, 1931. The trustees of the Trust Estate were F. H. Greer, L. L. Greer and J. A. Ruffer. F. H. Greer, L. L. Greer and J. A. Ruffer also were the managing officers and directors of the Corporation at the time of its organization and during all the time involved in this action.

Upon the organization of the Corporation, L. L. Greer, F. H. Greer and J. A. Ruffer, trustees of the Trust Estate, conveyed to the Corporation all of the property of the Trust Estate, and then concocted a scheme to procure from the owners of the beneficial interests in the trust estate an exchange of their beneficial interest in the trust estate for preferred stock in the Corporation. In some instances they were successful. In others they failed.

On April 20, 1931, T. J. Booth, who had refused to consent to the exchange, on behalf of himself and other shareholders in the Trust Estate, commenced an action, against the Corporation. The bill prayed that the transfer of assets of the Trust Estate to the Corporation be canceled and set aside and that the trustees be required to account for a large number of alleged trust violations, and that the trustees of the Trust Estate be removed and new trustees appointed.

On October 5, 1931, the trial court entered its decree and adjudged and decreed that the transfer of the assets of the Trust Estate to the Corporation be set aside as void, and that the Corporation should assign, transfer and deliver back such assets to the new trustees. An appeal was taken by the Corporation from this decree to the Circuit Court of Appeals, (Greer Inv. Co. et al. v. Booth et al., 10 Cir., 62 F.2d 321) which court, on the 19th day of December, 1932, affirmed the decision rendered by the trial court.

Among the assets conveyed by the trustees of the Trust Estate to the Corporation was a royalty interest known as the Jackson lease. The title of the Trust Estate to its interest in this lease was questioned and suit was instituted to adjudicate the title. The Carter Oil Company was the producing company of the Jackson lease. Upon filing of this suit the Carter Oil Company refused to pay any further royalty payments on account of this interest, and impounded the money from this interest!

To procure this money, the Corporation, on the 17th day of March, 1931, made an application to the Hartford Accident and Indemnity Company, herein called the Indemnity Company, for a bond, and on the same day the Indemnity Company wrote a bond in the principal sum of Twenty-Five Thousand Dollars ($25,000) agreeing to indemnify the . Carter Oil Company against loss on account of the payment of said oil royalties of the Corporation. After the issuance of this bond the Carter Oil Company paid to the Corporation Twenty-Four Thousand, Two Hundred Thirteen Dollars and Eighteen Cents ($24,-213.18) . On the 4th day of February, 1935, judgment was entered, holding void the title of the Trust Estate in the Jackson lease, whereupon demand was made by the prevailing parties in said litigation upon the Carter Oil Company for the payment to them of the money which had been wrongfully paid out. The Carter Oil Company made said payment and thereupon made demand both upon the Trust Estate and upon the Indemnity Company for reimbursement.

The Indemnity Company reimbursed the Carter Oil Company to the amount of Twenty-four Thousand, Two Hundred Thirteen Dollars and Eighteen Cents ($24,-213.18) , and took from the Carter Oil Company an assignment and subrogation agreement of its right against the Corporation and the Trust Estate. The Indemnity Company then filed suit against the Trust Estate seeking to recover the amount which it had paid under said bond to the Carter Oil Company. Judgment was entered by the trial court in favor of the Indemnity Company and against the Trust Estate for Twenty-Four Thousand, Two Hundred Thirteen Dollars and Eighteen Cents ($24,213.18), with interest at six per cent, and for an attorneys’ fee of One Thousand Five Hundred Dollars ($1,500). From that judgment an appeal was taken by the Trust Estate to this court.

The Corporation, by virtue of the wrong which had been committed by the faithless trustees of the Trust Estate, who were also the managing officers and directors of the Corporation, became a constructive trustee, a trustee ex maleficio, of [443]*443all the trust property, and was restricted in its dealings with the property to such duties as the law imposed upon it as such trustee.

The Indemnity Company, in writing the bond for the Corporation, dealt with the Corporation as such and not with it as a trustee. 'It is confined in its quest for recovery of the loss which it had suffered by virtue of the writing of said bond to its rights and remedies against the Corporation, unless some equitable principles have intervened which would permit it to seek recovery against the Trust Estate.

The theory of the Indemnity Company is that it has a right to pursue the assets reconveyed to the Trust Estate. It alleges: “that said shareholders of said estate are the owners of the property thus taken from said corporation, and are enjoying the benefits thereof, that the transfer of said assets to said trust estate was without consideration; that, as aforesaid, said corporation became then and there wholly insolvent and unable to pay any of its debts or to discharge any of its obligations and liabilities; that having acquired all the assets of said corporation and said corporation being totally insolvent, and no provision having been made for the payment of the debts or the performance and discharge of its obligations and liabilities, and the shareholders of the said trust estate, through said trustees, and said receiver having continued the business of said corporation, as aforesaid, the said trust estate and the shareholders thereof are liable to this plaintiff for the payment to it of the said amount so expended by it by virtue of said indemnity agreement, bond, Hi Hi ❖

This is hardly a fair statement of the transaction as it was. The transfer of said property back to the Trust Estate was not without consideration; the transfer from the Trust Estate to the Corporation was the transaction without consideration, and the Trust Estate was simply receiving back what was its own and that of which it had been despoiled by the faithless trustees. The Trust Estate did not acquire all of the assets of said Corporation. It simply acquired that which was its own and which never had been the property of the Corporation.

Neither is it correct to say that the trustees of said Trust Estate are continuing the business of the Corporation. The purposes for which the Delaware corporation was formed were entirely different from the purpose for which the Trust Estate was created, and the Trust Estate is in no wise carrying on or continuing the business of the Corporation.

The Trial Court decided this case in favor of the Indemnity Company upon the equitable principle that where one of two innocent persons must suffer from the fraud of another, the loss must fall on him whose negligence or imprudence has made possible the perpetration of the fraud.

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Bluebook (online)
106 F.2d 440, 124 A.L.R. 1403, 1939 U.S. App. LEXIS 4714, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/petroleum-royalties-co-of-oklahoma-v-hartford-accident-indemnity-co-ca10-1939.