Pritchard Petroleum Co. v. Farmers Co-Op. Oil & Supply Co.

161 P.2d 526, 117 Mont. 467, 1945 Mont. LEXIS 83
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJune 2, 1945
Docket8448
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 161 P.2d 526 (Pritchard Petroleum Co. v. Farmers Co-Op. Oil & Supply Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pritchard Petroleum Co. v. Farmers Co-Op. Oil & Supply Co., 161 P.2d 526, 117 Mont. 467, 1945 Mont. LEXIS 83 (Mo. 1945).

Opinion

HONORABLE WILLIAM R. TAYLOR, District Judge

(sitting in place of Justice Angstman, disqualified), delivered the opinion of the court.

By permission of this Court appeals were consolidated from judgments made and entered in favor of plaintiff in two separate and distinct cases tried at the same time before the district court sitting without a jury. Both actions were brought to quiet title to cylindrical storage tanks. Pritchard Petroleum Company, a corporation, is the plaintiff in each of the cases. In the action involving the title to two 12000 gallon capacity tanks, referred to as vertical tanks, the Farmers Co-operative Oil and Supply Company of Conrad, Montana, a corporation, and Farmers Union Elevator Company of Ledger, Montana, a corporation, are parties defendant, and in the action involving the title to two 15000 gallon capacity tanks, referred to as horizontal tanks, only the Farmers Co-operative Oil and Supply Company of Conrad, Montana, a corporation, is party defendant.

D. M. Pritchard, wife of Griff Pritchard, from March, 1928, until April 17, 1931, was the owner of tract of land in Conrad, Montana, upon which she and her husband from March, 1929, until April 17, 1931, conducted a wholesale business of distributing gasoline, distillate, lubricating oils and greases, and on the latter date, April 17, 1931, the said tract of land was conveyed by D. M. Pritchard and Griff Pritchard to the Pritchard Petroleum Company, a corporation, organized in *469 the State of Montana in April, 1931, by Griff Pritcliard, and said corporation continued to operate said business and to retail the sale of said products under the management of Griff Pritchard until sometime in 1932' and thereafter for short periods during the years 1933 and 1934.

On May 3rd, 1929, D. M. Pritchard entered into a conditional sales contract with the Brown Sheet Iron and Steel Works of St. Paul, Minnesota, for the purchase of two cylindrical storage tanks each having a capacity of 15000 gallons together with steel supports upon which the tanks were to be placed and necessary piping and valves required for their use in such business. By the terms of said contract the legal title and right of possession of said tanks and equipment used in the operation of said tanks and the supports upon which said tanks were set remained in the vendor, Brown Sheet Iron and Steel Company, until fully paid for. In addition said agreement provided that in the event that D. M. Pritchard failed to pay any of the payments when the same became due that the balance remaining unpaid should then become due immediately and that the Brown Sheet Iron and Steel Company could then enter upon the premises and search for said equipment and take possession of said equipment with or without any legal process and that for its acts in doing so the said Brown Sheet Iron and Steel Company should be subject to no proceedings civil or criminal. The last payment as provided by the agreement was to be made on January 1, 1930. The tanks were delivered as agreed and were placed upon the tract of land owned by D. M. Pritchard and used in connection with the business conducted by D. M. Pritchard. The tanks were set in a horizontal position on steel frame supports described as cradles or trestles which in turn were set upon cement piers imbedded in the ground and pipes were connected to said tanks and to pumps located on said tract in order to operate the business conducted by D. M. Pritchard.

Griff Pritchard testified that at the time of the creation of the Pritchard Petroleum Company, a bill of sale was executed *470 by D. M. Pritchard whereby her title to the tanks was transferred to the company. The bill of sale was not produced.At the time of trial, however, Griff Pritchard produced the notes that had been given to the Brown Sheet Iron and Steel Company by him as agent for his wife, D. M. Pritchard, at the time the conditional sales contract was entered into and he explained that the notes had been returned in October, 1933, as part of the consideration passing from the Brown Sheet Iron and Steel Company to the Pritchard Petroleum Company in compromising the account owned by the Pritchard Petroleum Company and at which time property of the Pritchard Petroleum Company at Fairfield, Montana, was transferred to the Brown Sheet Iron and Steel Company. Previous to the trial Griff Pritchard’s deposition was taken and no mention made by him at that time that he possessed the notes. Neither did he mention having possession of the notes in December, 1934, when the tanks were repossessed by a representative of the Brown Sheet Iron and Steel Company. The ledger records of the Brown Sheet Iron and Steel Company introduced in evidence established that on December 31, 1933, $1,850 was credited to the notes receivable account of D. M. Pritchard and that on said date said account had been closed out through charge-offs through loss account. The credit manager and auditor for the Brown Sheet Iron and Steel Company at the time of said transaction testified from personal knowledge and the records kept by him as bookkeeper of said company that the account owed by Pritchard Petroleum Company and the notes in question given to the company by D. M. Pritchard were never paid.

In addition to the two horizontal tanks purchased from the Brown Sheet Iron and Steel Company, D. M. Pritchard owned two 12000 gallon capacity tanks which were located on the same tract of land. That said tanks being set in an upright position upon a gravel basé which was five or six inches in depth. All of the tanks in question were connected by pipes *471 to pumps and were used in conducting the wholesale and retail selling of gasoline and distillate.

Each of the horizontal tanks was 11 feet in diameter by 21 feet in length, was constructed with 3/16 inch steel and weighed 8312 pounds. In addition the steel supports or cradles upon which the horizontal tanks were placed weighed 2300 pounds. The vertical 12000 gallon capacity tanks were constructed of similar steel, were 11 feet in diameter by 17 feet in length and weighed approximately four tons.

In December, 1934, E. H. Volreath, a representative of the Brown Sheet Iron and Steel Company informed Griff Pritchard that he intended to repossess the two tanks sold by his employer to D. M. Pritchard for the reason that the contract had not been performed by the purchaser, and he consulted the county attorney of Pondera County concerning his right to do so. Volreath was advised by the county attorney that taxes due upon the tanks and property of Pritchard Petroleum Company would have to be paid before the tanks could be removed. The taxes were subsequently paid by check mailed from St. Paul by the Brown Sheet Iron and Steel Company. Thereafter and during the latter part of December, 1934, Volreath moved the two horizontal tanks from the tract of land owned by Pritchard Petroleum Company and on to an adjoining tract of land leased by Farmers Co-operative Oil and Supply Company, and on the 2nd day of January, 1935, contracted to sell said tanks to the Farmers Co-operative Oil and Supply Company. A check in payment of the tanks was given by the Farmers Co-operative Oil and Supply Company on January 17, 1935.

The real estate owned by the Pritchard Petroleum Company and upon which said tanks had been affixed was struck off to Pondera County for delinquent taxes and on January 26, 1935, N. C.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
161 P.2d 526, 117 Mont. 467, 1945 Mont. LEXIS 83, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pritchard-petroleum-co-v-farmers-co-op-oil-supply-co-mont-1945.