Quaker Oil & Gas Co. v. Jane Oil & Gas Co.

1917 OK 192, 164 P. 671, 63 Okla. 234, 1917 Okla. LEXIS 531
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 17, 1917
Docket8235
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 1917 OK 192 (Quaker Oil & Gas Co. v. Jane Oil & Gas Co.) 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
Quaker Oil & Gas Co. v. Jane Oil & Gas Co., 1917 OK 192, 164 P. 671, 63 Okla. 234, 1917 Okla. LEXIS 531 (Okla. 1917).

Opinion

SHARP, C. J.

Both plaintiff in error and defendant in error are domestic corporations, and will be hereinafter referred to as the Quaker Company and the Jane Company. On June 15, 1915, said companies entered into written articles of agreement, the pertinent provisions of which are that the Jane Company agreed to make pipe line connections with the wooden tanks of the Quaker Company on certain lands in section 5, township 18 north, range 7 east, in Creek county, and to run the oil free of charge from said wooden tanks, as the same was produced, into four certain 55,000-barrel steel tanks, numbered 157, 186, 198, and 199 respectively,. owned by the Jane- Company on its tank farm near Cushing, in Payne county. The Jane Company agreed to fill said four tanks and to purchase from the Quaker Company, at the posted market price at the time said oil was run, all the oil run into tanks numbered 157 and 186. The third and fifth paragraphs of the agreement, respecting the oil to be run into tanks 198 and 199, are as follows:

“Third. The first party also agrees to store the oil so as to be run as aforesaid into tanks numbered 198 and 199, for a period of one year from date it is so nun, without any charges for such storage.”
“Fifth. The second party also agrees to grant to said first party the option to purchase the oil to be stored in said two tanks mentioned in third paragraph hereof, at any time said second party may desire to sell the same, and at such price as shall be fixed by said second party.”

The oil in tanks 157 and 186 was delivered into the possession of the Jane Company on or prior to July 30, 1915, and is not directly involved in this suit, though it appears that at the time of the hearing there was a balance of about $12,000 due on account of the sale of said two tanks of oil.

On the part of the Jane Company, it is insisted that the Qnak^ Company, on October 1, 1915, desired to sell the oil stored in tanks 198 and 199, and fixed the price thereof at 80 cents per barrel; that thereupon on, to wit, October 8th, it exercised its option to purchase the same and gave notice of that fact by letter to the Quaker Company. The only evidence offered at the hearing, of a “desire to sell” or,sale, was a written agreement purporting to have been made and entered into between the Quaker Oil & Gas Company and the Carter Oil Company. This agreement included the crude oil stored in tanks 198 and 199 of the Jane Company, located near Cushing, but did not include the tanks or tank sites. The contract was signed: “Quaker Oil & Gas Company, by B. H. Jennings, Pres.” No evidence was introduced or -offered to show the authority of Mr. Jennings to make the contract with the Carter Company. The answer of the Quaker Company, while containing certain admissions in respect to the oil delivered in tanks 157 and 186, and that tanks 198 and 199 were filled with oil from its wooden tanks, and which was at the time contained in said tanks, specifically denied under oath each and every allegation of the petition not expressly and explicitly admitted. The effect of the verified answer of the defendant was to place upon the Jane Company the burden of proving a desire or offer to sell, and the fixing of a price for the oil by the Quaker Company, prior to the exercise of its option to purchase on October 8th.

It is not contended that the Quaker Company offered the oil in tanks 198 and 199 to the Jane Company, or that it fixed a price thereon to said company. On the other hand, it is claimed that as the president of the Quaker Company undertook to sell to the Carter Company 62 tanks of oil, including tanks 198 and 199, that said agreement is sufficient to enable the Jane Company, under its option, to exercise the -right to. purchase at the price made the Carter Company. Assuming that if a sale was in fact made to the Carter Oo-mpany, it would be sufficient to entitle the Jane Company to exercise its op tion to purchase the two tanks of oil, we must look to see what there is in the record to establish such a sale. The only evidence of the sale was the contract made by the •president. Quite naturally the question then turns upon the authority of the president to make the contract, for if he was without authority, and the corporation for which he undertook to act promptly repudiated his attempt to sell, then it cannot be said that his action was binding upon the Quaker Company, or that the Jane Company could acquire any rights thereby. The only evidence of Jennings’ authority is that of Theodore O. Lillystrand. who testified that he was a director of the Quaker Company, and that on or about the 20th day of October, 1915. the board of directors of the Quaker Oil & Gas Company repudiated the contract signed *236 by its president with the Carter Company, and denied Mr. Jennings’ authority to make it. The purported sale of October 1, 1915, covered 62 tanks of 55,000 barrels each, or a total of 3,410,000 barrels, and included 60 55,000-barrel steel tanks, at -the price of 80 cents per barrel, and the sites on which the tanks were located. On January 28, 1916, the Jane Company again notified the Quaker Company of its election to exercise its option to purchase the two tanks of oil at the price named in the contract to the Carter Company, to which the Quaker Company on the following day replied that the oil had never been sold, but that if the Jane Company chose to exercise its option, it could have the oil at $1.80 -per barrel for all merchantable oil in the two tanks. This offer the Jane Company refused to accept, but instead,' on the 4th day of February following, instituted the present suit to compel the delivery of the oil at 80 cents per barrel, or the price fixed by the contract of October 1, 1915, with the Carter Company.

As the case is before us upon an appeal from the order granting a temporary injunction, and as it is yet to be heard upon its merits, it will be unnecessary to determine all of the numerous important questions ably argued in the briefs of counsel. On the record before us the judgment of the lower court must be reversed, upon the ground that it affirmatively appears that Mir. Jennings was unauthorized to make the contract with the Carter Company; and, having been promptly repudiated by the board of direct- or’s of the Quaker Company, and there being no other evidence of a desire to seli or sale by the Quaker Company, said contract fui’nishes no ground for compelling the latter company to sell to the Jane Company the two tanks of oil for 80 cents per barrel. Section 1252, Rev. Laws 1910, provides that the corporate powers, business, and property of all corporations formed under chapter 15, on the subject of Corporations, must be exercised, conducted, and controlled by a board of not less than 3, nor more than 11, directors, to be elected from among the holders of stock. Section 1253 provides for tb¡e election by the board of directors of a president, secretary, and treasurer, and that such officers shall perform the duties enjoined on them by law and the by-laws of the corporation. Section 1246 requires that every corporation shall within one month after filing its articles of incorporation adopt a code of by-laws for its government, not inconsistent with the laws of the United States or of the state. Generally speaking, the president of a corporation has no power to .buy, sell, or contract for a corporation, nor to control its property, funds, or management.

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

Related

Morgan v. OKLAHOMA SECONDARY SCHOOL ACTIVITIES ASS'N
2009 OK 21 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 2009)
Brown Ex Rel. Brown v. Oklahoma Secondary School Activities Ass'n
2005 OK 88 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 2005)
Bd. of Regents, Etc. v. Natl. Collegiate Athletic Ass'n
561 P.2d 499 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1977)
Harrison v. Commander Mills, Inc.
1956 OK 125 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1956)
A. J. McMahan & Co. v. Hibbard
1937 OK 538 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1937)
Gooch v. Natural Gas Supply Co.
1935 OK 1107 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1935)
Oklahoma City General Hospital v. Weathers
1930 OK 577 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1930)
Barnsdall Nat. Bank v. Dykes
1928 OK 464 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1928)
MacThwaite Oil & Gas Co. v. Schulte
1925 OK 1024 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1925)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1917 OK 192, 164 P. 671, 63 Okla. 234, 1917 Okla. LEXIS 531, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/quaker-oil-gas-co-v-jane-oil-gas-co-okla-1917.