Rees v. Egan

1917 OK 379, 166 P. 1038, 66 Okla. 20, 1917 Okla. LEXIS 106
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJuly 24, 1917
Docket7868
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 1917 OK 379 (Rees v. Egan) 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
Rees v. Egan, 1917 OK 379, 166 P. 1038, 66 Okla. 20, 1917 Okla. LEXIS 106 (Okla. 1917).

Opinion

Opinion by

STEWART, O.

The parties will be referred to hereinafter as plaintiff and defendant as they were in the court below. The defendant, W. O. Rees, as plaintiff in error appeals to this court from a judgment of the district court; of Okmulgee county rendered in favor of.W. E. Egan as plaintiff and against the defendant, declaring a trust in favor of the plaintiff as to 75 shares of capital stock of the La Virge Oil & Gas Company of Okmulgee, Okla., appearing on the books of such corporation in the name of the defendant, and as to dividends received by defendant on said stock.

The defendant in his brief asks for reversal on two assignments of error, to wit:

“First. The evidence is insufficient to support the judgment; second, the findings made by the court are wholly insufficient to support the judgment.”

As to the second assignment, we think that it is immaterial as to whether or not the findings of fact as made by the trial court are sufficient to support the judgment, provided the judgment is not clearly against the weight of the evidence.. The action is one in equity brought to enforce a constructive trust. If it should appear to us upon an examination of the whole testimony in the case that the judgment of the trial court is not clearly against the weight of the evidence, the judgment will be sustained. In Mendenhall v. Walters, 53 Okla. 598, 157 Pac. 732, it is said:

“In a case of purely equitable cognizance, it is the duty of the Supremie Court, when the sufficiency of the evidence to support the findings of the trial court is challenged, to consider the whole record and to weigh all the evidence, and, when the judgment of the trial court is clearly against the weight of the evidence, render or cause to be ren.dered such judgment as should have been rendered in the trial court.”

In the case of Dandridge v. Dandridge, 59 Okla. 146, 158 Pac. 445, it is said:

“The judgment of the trial court in an equitable action, where the evidence is' conflicting, should be given weight, and, unless the appellate court is satisfied that the conclusions reached by him are wrong, should be affirmed.”

See, also, Johnson v. Perry, 54 Okla. 23, 153 Pac. 289; Hawkins v. Boynton Land, Mining & Inv. Co., 59 Okla. 30, 157 Pac. 753; Clayton v. Oberlander, 59 Okla. 35, 157 Pac. 929; Gillam v. Richart, 50 Okla. 144, 150 Pac. 1037.

In the instant ease, therefore, this court will consider -all the evidence irrespective of the findings of fact; and, if it appears that the judgment is not dllearly against the weight‘of the evidence, the same will be affirmed.

The evidence in this case shows that in the section of the state where defendant resided Walter Steph and D. B. Smith had an oil and gas lease on SO acres of land, that the indications were good for oil and gas on such land, and that the owners of the lease proposed to sell certain undivided interests in the same to different persons in order to procure money to drill a well; that after selling various interests in the lease, there was left • unsold of the amount they originally offered one-sixteenth interest in the entire lease which they offered to sell to the defendant and others whom he might interest in the proposition; that the defendant was anxious to have the property developed for oil and! ■ gas, and on September 6, 19114, wrote a letter to a former friend and business associate, Dr. F. E. Enoch, of Florence, Colo., informing him that one-sixteenth interest in the lease in question could be obtained, and advising that, if Dr. Enoch or any one else would like to invest and would send a draft for whatever amount was wanted, he would get the papers made out and recorded, and would send: them to Dr. Enoch; that he himself would take one-fourth of the one-sixteenth, or one sixty-fourth interest in the entire lease; that each *22 one-fourth of the one-sixteenth interest would cost $75. After the exchange of other letters explanatory of the proposition, and in September, 1914, Dr. Enoch wrote a letter to the defendant inclosing the sum of $225, and informing him that the same was in payment for interests in the lease in question as follows: One sixty-fourth interest to W. E. Stout; one sixty-fourth interest to W. E. Egan and one sixty-fourth interest to Dr. Enoch. The letter was received by the defendant; he answered, acknowledging receipt of the draft for $225, stating that as soon as drilling was commenced he would have the assignments made out and forwarded. The draft was immediately cashed by the defendant and proceeds placed in his local 'bank. It appears that about the 15th day of October, 1915, the defendant purchased from the owners of the lease the entire one-sixteenth interest, taking the title thereto in his own name’. On October 10th, prior to taking over of the title, the defendant wrote to Dr. Enoch, stating, among other things, that he had not paid over the money-but would do so. The evidence shows that at the -beginning of these negotiations there , was no oil well upon the land, but that a company was being organized for the purpose of drilling; that, however, before the actual purchase by the defendant of the one-sixteenth interest, drilling had begun, and there were some indications of oil and gas. Before the one-sixteenth interest in the lease was assigned to the defendant, it was suggested to the defendant that a corporation should be organized, in which event the interests in the lease would be transferred to the corporation, and! that in case of nonresident owners, there mjght be difficulty in procuring proper assignments of interest held by them. One of the original owners of the lease said that he knew nothing about defendant’s friends, and did not care to have their names unless it could be made a binding affair. The defendant then suggested he would take the one-sixteenth interest in his name and sign up for it. It was understood, however, that defendant was purchasing for himself and others, and that he was to have for himself one sixty-fourth interest, -as appears from the following testimony of Mr. Steph:

“Well, I haven’t the best recollection in the world of the conversation, but in my opinion, when we left he (meaning the defendant) was to write his frinds, and he didn’t know how much he and his friends would take, but he 'had already agreed to take one sixty-forarth.”

It does not appear that any objection was made to the -defendant 'buying in his own name the one-sixteenth interest, with the understanding that his friends, after the formation of the corporation, were to share in same. The defendant paid $300 for the one-sixteenth interest purchased by check on the -bank in which the money realized from the $225 draft had be)en deposited. Oil was struck October 20, 11914, and on October 25th a 200-barrel well was “brought in”. Just after the “bringing in” of the -well, and on October 27th, the defendant sent a draft for $75 to Dr. Enoch, to be delivered to the plaintiff, saying that he had purchased a '-one sixty-fourth interest each for Dr. Enoch and W. E. 'Stout, but that he was unable to procure the additional interest desired by the plaintiff, W. E. Egan. Dr. Enoch wrote a letter to the defendant, expressing his surprise, and saying that Egan would not accept the return of the draft, but insisted on his purchase. From the letter, Dr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1917 OK 379, 166 P. 1038, 66 Okla. 20, 1917 Okla. LEXIS 106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rees-v-egan-okla-1917.