Potlatch Oil & Refining Co. v. Ohio Oil Co.

199 F.2d 766
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedDecember 3, 1952
Docket13010
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 199 F.2d 766 (Potlatch Oil & Refining Co. v. Ohio Oil Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Potlatch Oil & Refining Co. v. Ohio Oil Co., 199 F.2d 766 (9th Cir. 1952).

Opinion

POPE, Circuit Judge.

Appellants, plaintiffs below, brought this action to procure an accounting of amounts alleged to be due them from the appelleedefendant under the terms of a so-called “Operating Agreement”. This agreement was executed June 15, 1922 by the trustees of a “common law trust” known as TroySweetgrass Oil Syndicate, and the defendant Ohio Oil Company. On the same date the Syndicate assigned to Ohio Oil Company, here called Ohio, a 55 percent interest in certain oil and gas leases covering lands in Toole County, Montana. By the Operating Agreement Ohio undertook to develop the leased lands for oil and gas purposes. Ohio was to market all oil and gas produced and account to Syndicate for the latter’s 45 percent of the proceeds remaining after deduction of royalty oil and gas.

The agreement contained the following provision, the meaning of which was the primary question raised by the complaint: “[Ohio] will pay all costs and expenses of developing and operating said lands for oil and gas purposes, as herein provided, and shall charge the said party of the first part Forty-five (45%) percent thereof.” Included in the “costs”, a share of which were charged by Ohio under the quoted clause,, were the following disputed items: the expense of a water plant, an overhead charge of ten percent, automobile expense, and the cost of constructing a camp.

In January, 1923, th*e Syndicate assigned half of its then interest in the leases and the Operating Agreement to another “common law trust” — Inland Empire Oil and^ Gas Syndicate — here called Inland. Again, on August 18, 1923, Syndicate assigned its remaining half interest to Potlatch Oil and Refining Company, a corporation, here called Potlatch.

*768 By the early part of August, 1925 controversy had developed between Inland and Potlatch, on the one hand, and Ohio on the other, with respect to the manner in which Ohio was charging its costs of operation and accounting for the oil produced. In an effort to adjust and settle the dispute the parties had a conference at Shelby, Montana, on August 7, 1925 as a result of which it was agreed that the attorneys for Inland and Potlatch would reduce to writing and send to Ohio a statement of the items giving rise to the difference of opinion between the parties, and stating the objections of Inland and Potlatch to the accounts theretofore rendered.

Pursuant to that understanding .the attorneys did under date of August 8, 1925 write such a letter to Ohio. The position taken in the letter was that the only charges authorized by the Operating Agreement “were simply the charges and expenses incurred within the four corners of the lease”. It was asserted that the conversations between the parties prior to the signing of the agreement were to the effect that “there should be no charge * * * save and except the actual expense incurred on the 'lease itself”. Particular objection was made to the items of cost above mentioned, and it was also asserted that Inland and Potlatch should have been credited with an additional 10(é per barrel on the oil sold. Complaint was also made that drilling and other related costs had been excessive. The letter recited that the attorneys believed that it covered all points of dispute. In general it set forth the same matters which form the basis for the complaint in the action now before us.

On September 12, 1925 Ohio replied to this letter, item by item, explaining in considerable detail the views of Ohio with respect to each of them. The reply took the position that the charges as made were correct, that the oil had 'been properly accounted for and that the drilling costs were not excessive. In general the letter rejected all of the claims made. Thereafter Ohio continued to make the same kind of charges for the same items and to account for the oil in the same manner in which it had previously done until about January 31, 1943 when Ohio sold its interest in the leases to the Texas Company.. On March 18, 1947 Potlatch and the Trustees of Inland filed their complaint in this action in the District Court of Toole County,.Montana. The action was removed to the court below on the ground of the diversity of citizenship of the parties.

In its answer Ohio urged, among other defenses asserted, that the action was barred by laches and by the Montana statute of limitations. Ohio had judgment, the trial court sustaining several of its defenses including those of laches and the bar of the statute of limitations.

The complaint sets out the Operating Agreement by annexing it as an exhibit. It alleges that before the Operating Agreement was reduced to writing, there was an oral understanding that the agreement should provide that the costs to be charged against the share of Troy Sweetgrass Oil Syndicate, assignor of the plaintiffs, would be restricted and limited exclusively to the cost of the actual drilling of the wells at their locations on the lands plus the actual cost of the equipment located upon the lands and the actual cost of its installation, repairs and replacement; and that all other costs would be the sole expense of and chargeable to Ohio. It alleges that Ohio promised to reduce the terms of such oral agreement to writing; that it represented that a certain clause of the written agreement had accomplished the limitation of costs which had been agreed upon orally, and that plaintiffs’ assignor, the Syndicate, executed the agreement in reliance thereon and believing that the costs had been limited and restricted in accordance with the oral understanding. The complaint further alleges that Ohio, contrary to the agreement of the parties and to the provisions of the Operating Agreement, had improperly charged the plaintiffs’ shares with items of cost and expense aside and apart from the actual cost of drilling 'and installing equipment upon the land itself, and that it had failed to make proper accounting of the oil sold. It alleges that defendant’s attention had been called to the erroneous charges and credits mentioned; that defendant expressly promised that these would be *769 rectified upon a correct and full final accounting to be made later; and that a true and correct accounting would disclose that a sum in excess of $175,000 was due to each of plaintiffs. The prayer was that defendant be required to render a full and true accounting under the Operating Agreement and upon such accounting it be ordered to pay the plaintiffs the sums shown to be due thereon.

Appellants speak of their action as one “to obtain a judgment requiring the appellee to account to appellants for alleged moneys received and improperly withheld from appellants in connection with certain oil and gas agreements theretofore entered into between appellants and appellee and to pay the appellants the amount determined * * * on such accounting.” It is not altogether clear whether appellants consider their action to be one upon a written contract to be construed in the light of the alleged prior oral negotiations, or whether it is an action upon a written agreement modified or supplemented by an oral agreement, or whether it is an action to reform the written contract and to recover upon the same as reformed. The opinioñ, D.C., 96 F.Supp. 685, of the trial judge refers to it as an action brought to reform the written agreement.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
199 F.2d 766, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/potlatch-oil-refining-co-v-ohio-oil-co-ca9-1952.