Ray-Featherstone Oil Co. v. Phœnix Oil Co.

268 S.W. 1032
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 20, 1924
DocketNo. 11285. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 268 S.W. 1032 (Ray-Featherstone Oil Co. v. Phœnix Oil Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ray-Featherstone Oil Co. v. Phœnix Oil Co., 268 S.W. 1032 (Tex. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

DUNKLIN, j.

The Phœnix Oil Company instituted this suit in the district court of Tarrant county to recover a debt alleged to be due it on a contract executed by the Interstate Refineries, Inc., of Delaware, hereinafter called the Delaware Company, and Leon H. Schwald, as guarantor, in favor of plaintiff, upon which there is an alleged balance due of $3,000. The debt claimed was not secured by any character of lien. The maker and guarantor of the written instrument and numerous other parties were made defendants to the suit, including Fred Dickey as receiver of the Delaware Company and also as receiver of the Interstate Refineries, Inc., of Virginia, hereinafter called Virginia Company, also J. C. Haynes, R. S. Hansford, Hansford Salvage Company, and James M. Johnson, trustee, Prairie Pipe Line Company, Prairie Oil & Gas Company, the Ray-Feath-erstone Oil Company, A. P. Nichols, M. .L. Massingill, receiver, the Clayton Oil & Refining Company, and the Hagaman Refining Corporation.

Plaintiff’s original petition was filed on October 7, 1924. That petition was unverified and not signed by any one for the plaintiff. Thereafter, on October 23d, a separate application for the appointment of a receiver, referring in general terms to the original petition, but which was also unverified, was presented to the trial judge, who granted it upon an ex parte hearing without notice to any of the defendants, and appointed F. B. Potter receiver.

On November 7th, plaintiff filed its first amended original petition, which was duly verified; and on November 15th its second amended original petition, which was also duly verified. In the first amended original petition the Texas Pipe Line Company was made defendant for the first time, and in the second amended original petition the Ray-Featherstone Oil Company, A. P. Nichols, and M. L. Massingill, receiver, the Clayton Oil & Refining Company, and Hagaman Refining Corporation were made defendants for the first time.

On November 15, 1924, the date of the filing of the second amended original petition, the court, on an ex parte hearing without notice to any of the defendants, made another- order confirming its former order appointing the receiver. On November 21, 1924, the court directed the clerk to issue notices to be served on all parties of record to appear in court on November 26th at 12:30 p. m. to show cause why the order appointing the receiver should not be continued in full force and effect. Notices, issued in compliance with that order, were served on Fred Dickey, receiver of the Delaware Company and the Virginia Company, and A. P. Nichols, on November 24th at 2 :45 p. m. at Kansas City, Mo.; on the Clayton Oil & Refining Company on November 26th in Dallas, Dallas county; and on the Ray-Featherstone Oil Company in Wichita Falls, Wichita county, on November 24th.

On the day set for that hearing, the Ray-Featherstone Oil Company and ' the Texas Pipe Line Company appeared. The Texas Pipe Line Company pleaded that it was a common carrier and was engaged in transporting oil for any one offering the same, and was not in any manner connected with the controversy between the plaintiff and the Delaware Company, and challenged the jurisdiction of the court to make any order which would interfere with its rights in such matters. The Ray-Featherstone Company filed its plea of privilege to be sued in Wichita county, where its- legal domicile was fixed, on any demand asserted against it by either the plaintiff or the receiver appointed by the court. The defendant Nichols did not appear.

Upon that hearing the court again confirmed the order appointing the receiver, but as to the Texas Pipe Line Company modified it. to the extent that that company would have the right'to retain out of the oil transported by it as a common carrier its legal charges for such services.

In plaintiff’s pleadings as finally amended, it was alleged that prior to the incorporation of the Virginia Company, the Delaware Company was the owner of the following described property: An oil refinery located at Ranger, Eastland county, Tex., of the capacity of 2,000⅝ barrels a day; a six-inch pipe line, about *40,000 feet in length, for transporting oil; several 55,000-barrel oil tanks; water lines; tenement houses; three-eighths interest in a producing oil lease on 127 acres of land in Archer county, Tex., known as the A. P. Nichols tract; and an additional three-sixteenths working interest in the lease and the oil produced therefrom until the production amounted to $15,000 in value, besides various and sundry oil leases in other counties in the state of Texas; also, a large oil refinery in Kansas City, Mo.; filling stations, tank ears, and oil leases in the state of Oklahoma and Kansas.

It was further alleged that by a duly recorded deed of conveyance the Delaware Company had transferred to the Virginia Company all of its assets free of -liens or claims of any kind without making any provision for the payment of its debts, amounting to something over $100,000; that said *1034 conveyance was made for the purpose of defrauding the creditors of the Delaware Company; and that the other defendants in the cause were asserting title to all of those assets under claims of conveyances. from the Delaware Company, but which claims were fraudulent and fictitious. In other words, according to the allegations of the petition, the Delaware Company is still the legal owner of all the assets so conveyed to the Virginia 'Company.

Upon the hearing before the court referred to above, on November 26th, evidence was introduced which established beyond controversy the following facts which were alleged in the motions of the Texas Pipe Line Company and the Ray-Featherstone Oil Company to vacate the receivership, which motions were presented upon that hearing: The lease on the 127 acres of land in Archer county was executed by the defendant A. P. Nichols, the fee-simple owner, to the Delaware Com-' pany and G. E. Sullivan, Nichols reserving a one-eighth royalty interest in the oil produced from the land. The lessees assigned to the Ray-Featherstone Oil Company an undivided one-half interest in their seven-eighths interest in the oil in consideration of the contract by the Ray-Featherstone Oil Company to develop the lease for oil, and to defray all expenses of drilling thé first four wells. The contract further stipulates that the expenses of drilling any additional wells would be borne one half by the Ray-Featherstone Oil Company and the other half by the Delaware Company and Sullivan. Uh-der and by virtue of that contract, the Ray-Featherstone Oil Company drilled eight wells, seven of which are producing oil now at the rate of 350 barrels a day, and the lease is worth $250,000. The Delaware.Company and Sullivan failed to pay their pro rata part of the expenses of drilling the four additional wells and are now due the Ray-Featherstone Oil Company the sum of $16,000 _ as their part of such expenses. The Ray-Feather-stone Oil Company has filed a mechanic’s lien on the interest of the Delaware Company and Sullivan to secure the payment of that sum, and the lien is still in full force and effect. Prior to the institution of the present suit, A. P. Nichols had instituted a suit in the district court of Archer county, Tex., against the Delaware Company and Sullivan to cancel the oil lease, on the ground of fraud practiced by the lessees to procure its execution. That suit is still pending and un-disposed of.

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268 S.W. 1032, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ray-featherstone-oil-co-v-phnix-oil-co-texapp-1924.