Probst v. Bearman

1919 OK 188, 183 P. 886, 76 Okla. 71, 1919 Okla. LEXIS 128
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 24, 1919
Docket10456
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 1919 OK 188 (Probst v. Bearman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Probst v. Bearman, 1919 OK 188, 183 P. 886, 76 Okla. 71, 1919 Okla. LEXIS 128 (Okla. 1919).

Opinion

OWEN, C. J.

This action was commenced • by the Dux Oil & Gas Company against Wilson, praying an injunction to restrain interference with its exploring and developing certain oil lands under an oil and gas lease executed by Wilson. Bearman intervened in the action, praying a cancellation of the lease under which the oil company claimed, and for injunction restraining interference with his development of the premises under a subsequent lease executed by Wilson. Prom a judgment in favor of the Oil Company. Bearman appealed to this court, and secured a reversal of the judgment. The cause was remanded, with directions to enter judgment for Bearman for the oil and gas produced on the premises pending litigation, and for an accounting for that purpose. 64 Oklahoma, 166 Pac. 199. Bearman then filed a supplemental petition, bringing the plaintiffs in error into the action, demanding an accounting of the oil and gas taken from the premises, and for judgment for the value of same. Prom a judgment in his favor, plaintiffs in error prosecute this appeal.

To reverse the judgment it is urged the court erred: (1) In denying a trial to a jury; (2) in denying the plea of limitations; (3) in overruling demurrers for misjoinder of causes of action; (4) in rendering judgment for the highest market value of the oil at any time between the taking and the time of trial; (5) in denying plaintiff in error Misener the right to remove improvements made on the premises in the development and operation pending the litigation.

Plaintiffs in error claim as assignees and purchasers from the Dux Oil & Gas Company, and contend, in so far as the action concerns them, it is one for the recovery of money, and they were entitled to a trial by jury under the provisions of section 4993, Rev. Laws 1910.

The purpose of the action was the cancellation of an oil and gas lease and for in junc-tional relief, of purely equitable cognizance. Accounting for the oil and gas produced during the litigation is ancillary to the main cause of action. To succeed it was necessary for Bearman to cancel the lease under which the Dux Oil & Gas Company was developing the premises. When he succeeded in cancelling that lease, his right to the oil and gas produced on the premises during the litigation followed- as a natural sequence. It was not an action for the recovery of money within the meaning of the statute, and the parties required to account for the oil and gas taken from the premises were not entitled to a trial by jury. Hogan et al. v. Leeper, 37 Okla. 655, 133 Pac. 190, 47 L. R. A. (N. S.) 475; Success Realty Co. v. Trowbridge, 50 Okla. 402, 150 Pac. 898; Brush v. Boyer, 104 Kan. 168, 178 Pac. 445.

*73 Wliere a court of equity assumes jurisdiction of a controversy on some ground other than the accounting involved, it will, as a general rule, where an accounting is necessary to a full settlement of the controversy, proceed to decree It, and will settle the whole controvrsy, even to the extent of adjudicating matters of purely legal cognizance. Guaranteed St. Bank v. D’Yarnett, 67 Oklahoma, 169 Pac. 639; 1 C. J. 616; Murray v. Speed, 54 Okla. 31, 153 Pac. 181.

Pending the litigation, the Oosden Companies and the Arrow Gasoline Company purchased oil and gas from the Dux Oil & Gas Company and its assignees, the other plaintiffs in error. When these parties were brought into the action by the supplemental bill, more than two years had elapsed since the oil had been purchased by them. The contention is made that the action was not begun against them until the supplemental petition was filed, and the cause of action was therefore barred by the statute requiring civil actions, other than for the recovery of real property, to be brought within two years. It appears these parties had both actual and constructive notice of the litigation, and that'Bearman claimed under the subsequent lease from Wilson. Having purchased with such notice, they had no greater rights than the Dux Oil & Gas Company, their vendor. The statute of limitation did not begin to run against Bearman until the final determination of his action to cancel the lease under which the oil company was in possession of the premises. His right to an accounting followed the cancellation of that lease. In the case of Walden et al. v. Bodley’s Heirs et al., 9 How. 35, 13 L. Ed. 36, it was said:

“Where a defendant in ejectment aliens the property in dispute whilst the proceedings are pending, a possession by the vendee will not justify a plea of the statute of limitations.”

In the case of City of Ft. Wayne v. Hamilton, 132 Ind. 487, 32 N. E. 324, 32 Am. St. Rep. 263, it was urged the action to recover damages for taking land was barred by the statute of limitations, for the reason that such action was not brought within the statutory period from the time of the taking. There had been condemnation proceedings, and it was held an independent action to recover damages for the taking could not be brought, where an appeal from condemnation proceedings was pending, and for that reason the statute did not run. In the case of Less v. English, 75 Ark. 288, 87 S. W. 447, in a suit to foreclose a trust deed, it was held the intervener's subsequently acquired title could not affect the right of foreclosure under the mortgage, and the statute of limitation could not be pleaded in support of same. In the case of Hovey v. Elliott, 118 N. Y. 124, 23 N. E. 475, it was said i

“Where the purchasers of bonds, pending a suit to establish a lien upon them, sell the same again, the statute of limitations does not begin to run against the lien claimant’s right to compel such purchasers to account for his interest in the bonds until the final determination of the suit establishing his lien.”

It is contended that, as against the plaintiffs in error who were, as they claim, merely purchasers of the oil, and their co-plaintiffs claiming an interest in the premises as assignees of the Dux Oil & Gas Company, Bearman had two entirely separate and distinct causes of action; one being for the conversion of the oil after it was produced, the other for injunction and cancellation of the lease. Bearman’s cause of action against the Dux Oil & Gas Company was for cancellation of the lease and for injunction. When he prevailed in that cause of action, it was necessary to have an accounting of the oil and gas produced on the premises during the litigation in order that he have complete equitable relief. In such circumstances it is not necessary that the claim against each party must affect every other party to the action. It is not separate causes of action, but one cause of action against all parties who participate in the conversion. In the original action the Dux Oil & Gas Company was held to have no interest in the premises and no right to produce or appropriate the oil or gas. Such an appropriation amounted to conversion. Conversion has been held to be any distinct act or dominion wrongfully exerted over another’s personal property in denial of' or inconsistent with his rights therein. McClintock v. Paris, 72 Oklahoma, 180 Pac. 689; Sivils v. Aldridge, 62 Oklahoma, 162 Pac. 198. When the one who converts property sells it to another, who had knowledge of the conversion, the buyer and seller may be sued jointly for the conversion. Ex parte Railroad Co., 95 U. S. 221, 24 L. Ed. 355; United Shoe Machinery Co. v. Holt, 185 Mass. 97, 69 N. E. 1056.

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Bluebook (online)
1919 OK 188, 183 P. 886, 76 Okla. 71, 1919 Okla. LEXIS 128, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/probst-v-bearman-okla-1919.