Porter v. Cooke

58 F.2d 1033, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2059
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Louisiana
DecidedAugust 21, 1931
DocketNo. 443
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 58 F.2d 1033 (Porter v. Cooke) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Porter v. Cooke, 58 F.2d 1033, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2059 (W.D. La. 1931).

Opinion

DAWKINS, District Judge.

Complainants, some sixteen in number, claiming to be citizens of Ohio, Pennsylvania, and Illinois, allege that they “own an interest in the property hereinafter described and located in the state of Louisiana, and within the Shreveport Division of the Western District of Louisiana, and now in the possession and under the control of the respondents, Walter E. Cooke, R. L. Gay1 and L. M. Em-let” ; that Cooke is a resident of the city of Paterson, N. J., Gay of Zwolle, Sabine parish, La., Emlet of the city of St. Louis, Mo., and that respondent Emlet & Co., Inc., “was incorporated under the laws of the state of Delaware, on or about the 10th day of January, 1924, and thereafter failed to function as a corporation or comply with the laws of the state of Delaware relative to and covering corporations, or to comply with the laws of Louisiana, or any other state,” whose charter had “lapsed and been revoked”; that respondent the Zwolle Oil & Gas Company is a corporation under the laws of Louisiana, and a resident of said state; that respondent Loring Oil Company is also a corporation under the laws of Delaware, whose agent in this state for the service of process is R. A. Fraser of Many, La.; that respondent the Standard Oil Company of Louisiana is a corporation under the laws of Louisiana, and “a resident of said state.”

The petition further alleges as follows:

“3. That respondents' Walter E. Cooke, R. L. Gay and L. M. Emlet since the year 1924 have been, and now are, co-partners, and co-partners with claimants and others with the same rights and in the same class as claimants, as hereinafter set out and alleged; that the legal status of said partnership is such as is known and designated in law as a 'mining partnership’ and sometimes as an 'ordinary partnership.’ ”
[1034]*1034“4. This is a suit of a civil nature and in equity and between citizens of different states of the United States of America with a diversity of citizenship, and brought for the purpose of conserving the assets of the claimants and others having a like interest with claimants hereinafter referred to and described and distributing said assets among those entitled thereto or having claipis therein or thereon. That the partnership and community property hereinafter described is located within the Shreveport Division of the Western District of Louisiana.”

The petition then sets forth in detail various sums of money advanced to the enterprise by petitioners and for whieh they claim an interest in the alleged partnership; that there are approximately seven hundred other investors who with complainants and respondents “own an undivided interest in the joint and community property and partnership business hereinafter described”; that the said seven hundred individuals are “in the same class and have the same rights” proportionately, and this suit is brought on behalf of all who may wish to- join herein.

Further, that prior to July, 1924, petitioners, the said seven hundred other persons, and respondents, were stockholders in the Keystone-Ranger Development Company and the Consolidated Texas Production Company, both of whieh were “oil promotion companies, and which failed with a total loss to the investors therein”; that at about that time, “in an attempt to save or recover their previous investment,” all of said parties undertook to drill for oil and gas in Sabine parish, “and entered into and continued thereunder and are continuing to operate under a mining or ordinary partnership agreement for the operation and development thereof”; that for said purpose the name of “Emlet & Company, Inc.,” was used “by said partnership from time to time in connection with other names hereinafter mentioned,” including that of “L. Emlet”; that under an agreement between respondents, Walter E. Cooke, R. L. Gay, and L. M. Em-let, together with these claimants and others' in the same class, oil and gas leases were from time to time acquired in Sabine parish, La., and the parties engaged in exploring for oil and gas “during all of the times hereinafter mentioned and they are now so engaged”; that the said Emlet & Gay, for the account of all concerned, drilled a large number of test wells upon the leases later described, whieh for various reasons were not successful; that, after the completion of each unsuccessful well, the complainants and others were solicited by the said respondents, until “about $150,000 in cash had been contributed”; that during the same time Walter E. Cooke, so complainants are informed and believe, contributed about $300,000; Emlet also claims to have contributed large sums thereto, but, according to information and belief, Gay contributed nothing; that the said respondents, in soliciting the funds from complainants and others, represented to and agreed with them that, upon the discovery of 011 or gas in paying quantities, the latter should first have returned to them their investment with 100 per cent, profit, and that thereafter one half of the profits would be divided pro rata among all of said investors, including Gay and Emlet, and the remaining half of the profits would go to respondent Walter E. Cooke, “whieh contract and agreement said respondents have violated and entirely ignored”; that, in order to raise funds and to induce complainants and others to contribute thereto, “and in furtherance of the conspiracy hereinafter alleged, said respondents used many fraudulent devices and employed divers and sundry fictitious artifices, including names and phrases, indicating companies and corporations of financial importance, strength and prominence, were operating the properties herein described,” including some seven specific names in addition to that of Zwolle Oil & Gas Company, whieh is a legal corporation; that at times leases covering small tracts were offered as a bonus or special inducement to furnish more money to the common fun4, but none of said leases were executed or delivered to claimants, or even recorded, and such offers were fraudulently made for the purpose of inducing claimants to increase their respective investments, and said leases are now held by the individual respondents; and that all of the money “so raised was used and disbursed by said individual respondents in developing and exploring for oil and gas on said partnership oil leases hereinafter referred to and specifically described, etc.” Articles 11 and 12 of the petition are as follows:

“11. Claimants, for themselves and for the other said investors of the same class who may join herein, allege that said partnership property herein referred to and described is the joint and common property of all of said investors and that each of the claimants and each of said other investors is entitled to share therein in an amount from the entire property equal to the percentage that his investment bears, to the total investment in said property and enterprise.”
“12. That from the sums so contributed [1035]*1035by said investors, including the individual respondents, oil and gas leases and other property were acquired by said partnership and schedules describing said properties, as far as known by claimants, are attached hereto and hereinafter, by appropriate marks, identified. That through the expenditure of money furnished by these claimants and the others of the same class said leases became of great value and are now worth approximately $4,500,000.00.”

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Related

McNulty v. Heine
137 F. Supp. 508 (D. Maryland, 1956)
Porter v. Cooke
127 F.2d 853 (Fifth Circuit, 1942)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
58 F.2d 1033, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2059, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/porter-v-cooke-lawd-1931.