Ralston Oil and Gas Co. v. July Corp.

719 P.2d 334, 90 Oil & Gas Rep. 213, 1985 Colo. App. LEXIS 1418
CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 12, 1985
Docket83CA0720
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 719 P.2d 334 (Ralston Oil and Gas Co. v. July Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Colorado Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ralston Oil and Gas Co. v. July Corp., 719 P.2d 334, 90 Oil & Gas Rep. 213, 1985 Colo. App. LEXIS 1418 (Colo. Ct. App. 1985).

Opinion

SMITH, Judge.

Several defendants, including July Corporation (July), appeal a judgment of the trial court quieting title to a certain oil and gas lease in Ralston Oil and Gas Company, (plaintiff) and declaring defendants’ asserted assignment interests relative thereto void and unenforceable.

July argues that: (1) The evidence was insufficient to support the trial court’s findings both of a confidential relationship and of abuse of that relationship; (2) the statute of frauds barred the court’s finding of an oral trust or contract because the lease concerns an interest in land; (3) inadmissible parol evidence was utilized to contradict or modify a written contract; (4) the evidence supported finding that July was entitled to the equitable defenses of estoppel and laches; and (5) rescission was an improper remedy because money damages would adequately remedy plaintiff’s claim for breach of contract. We reject each of these arguments and affirm the judgment.

Plaintiff acquired record title, as lessee, to an oil and gas lease in Gunnison County known as the McLaughlin Lease. Plaintiff also entered into three farm-out agreements whereby it agreed to drill eight wells capable of commercial production in an area surrounding the McLaughlin lease. By drilling the wells, plaintiff was to acquire certain assignments of proportional interests in the additional surrounding acreage.

Plaintiff contracted with one Zoller to obtain the funds it needed to drill the eight wells. Plaintiff however encountered financial trouble when the first well it drilled collapsed and costs exceeded budget. Available funds eventually ran out when plaintiff had drilled only five of the eight wells.

Jack Ralston (Ralston), plaintiff’s president, negotiated with his former business associate and close personal friend, John M. King III (King), to raise additional funds in order to complete drilling of the eight farm-out wells. The trial court found that Ralston, individually and in his capacity as president of plaintiff, reposed special confidence in King and relied on King’s expertise and close friendship to assist him in resolving plaintiff’s financial difficulties. The court further found that King ultimately formed several corporations in order to raise the funds needed by plaintiff from investors interested in speculating in oil and gas properties. The trial court, by implication, found that these corporations were wholly owned and controlled by King.

Plaintiff conveyed overriding interests in its McLaughlin lease to other King corporations as security for loans which were never made. When plaintiff was finally unable to meet its creditors’ demands, it actually obtained a loan of $70,000 from another of King’s corporations (Wednesday Corporation), and sold that corporation an overriding royalty in the McLaughlin lease for $5,000.

*337 King and Ralston eventually reached an oral agreement by which Ralston was to convey all of his personal assets and plaintiff was to convey all of its assets, including the McLaughlin lease and its interest in the farm-outs, to defendant July Corporation and to other King corporations. In exchange, King agreed to raise funds through his corporations sufficient to meet the demands of plaintiff’s unpaid creditors and to pay expenses necessary to complete its drilling commitments under the farm-out agreements.

The parties further orally agreed that the King corporations were simply to hold the interests transferred to them, including the McLaughlin lease, for subsequent return to the plaintiff and that they would acquire no ownership interest in those assets.

King directed his attorney and his agents to audit plaintiffs books, meet with its creditors, and prepare written contracts. King’s attorney arranged for three separate King corporations to handle plaintiff’s and Ralston’s affairs, and contracts were prepared. Under the terms of the contracts, plaintiff and Ralston were to transfer their interest in the farm-outs and the McLaughlin lease to July. July would accordingly obtain releases of plaintiff’s indebtedness from King’s Wednesday Corporation, the other King corporations, and plaintiff’s other creditors.

Ralston later executed the contracts on behalf of himself, individually, and on behalf of plaintiff in his representative capacity. He signed the documents without reading them and without seeking the advice of independent counsel after King assured him that the documents reflected the oral agreements they had reached earlier. The writings however failed to provide for the subsequent return of the assets to plaintiff and to Ralston.

The court found that the omission was not based upon any purposeful intent on King’s part to defraud plaintiff or to modify the original oral agreements that had been reached. Rather, the agreement to reconvey was not reduced to writing, nor was the list of creditors attached, primarily because of the nature of the confidential relationship that existed between King, acting for his July and other corporations, and Ralston. Ralston was apparently confident that he could rely upon the oral understanding he had reached with King.

Although the document assigning the McLaughlin lease to July was executed by plaintiff, July did not execute it. July nonetheless recorded the assignment in Gunnison County.

The document of assignment also required July to file it, signed both by itself and plaintiff, with the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) within 90 days in order to comply with BLM regulations. July failed to comply with this filing provision. Instead, it filed the assignment with the BLM three and one-half years later — five months after plaintiff filed this quiet title action. The trial court found that July’s delay in filing the assignment with the BLM was unreasonable. Indeed, it concluded that the delay manifested the intent of the parties that plaintiff would retain record title of the McLaughlin lease and that July would subsequently return the lease to plaintiff.

The trial court further found that most of the funds generated by King’s corporations were not used to fulfill King’s obligation under the contracts to pay plaintiff’s creditors. Plaintiff’s creditors eventually sued to enforce their claims against plaintiff and were awarded judgment in excess of one million dollars.

Because of King’s alleged misrepresentations and because of breaches by King’s corporations, plaintiff attempted to rescind the contracts within a year. King however assured plaintiff that he would remedy the problems, and plaintiff accordingly withdrew its attempt to rescind. While King’s corporations returned title for some assets to plaintiff and to Ralston according to the original oral agreement, July refused to reconvey the McLaughlin lease. The trial court found that plaintiff, without success, reasonably attempted to resolve this prob *338 lem with July and, therefore, timely filed this action for rescission and to quiet title.

I.

July argues that the trial court erred in setting aside the assignment of the McLaughlin lease and in imposing a constructive trust based upon the alleged confidential relationship between King and Ralston on behalf of their respective corporations. July contends that the evidence was insufficient to support the court’s findings that a confidential relationship existed and that it was abused by King.

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Bluebook (online)
719 P.2d 334, 90 Oil & Gas Rep. 213, 1985 Colo. App. LEXIS 1418, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ralston-oil-and-gas-co-v-july-corp-coloctapp-1985.