Renegar v. Fleming

1949 OK 209, 211 P.2d 272, 202 Okla. 197, 1949 Okla. LEXIS 436
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 4, 1949
DocketNo. 33314
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 1949 OK 209 (Renegar v. Fleming) 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
Renegar v. Fleming, 1949 OK 209, 211 P.2d 272, 202 Okla. 197, 1949 Okla. LEXIS 436 (Okla. 1949).

Opinion

LUTTRELL, J.

This action was brought by Laura A. Fleming against Owen F. Renegar, to cancel a conveyance of an undivided one-half interest in the minerals Under an 80-acre tract of land in Oklahoma county, in the Edmond oil field. After the petition was filed other parties were brought into the action and various extraneous issues between them and the plaintiff affecting or connected with claims by them to oil and gas leases or mineral interests on her property were litigated. The trial court impaneled a jury to assist him in an advisory capacity, the case being one of equitable cognizance, and submitted to it certain interrogatories. The trial court adopted as its findings of fact the answers made by the jury to the interrogatories submitted to it, except in one instance which did not affect the defendant Renegar, denied the request of defendant Renegar for additional findings; found or concluded that plaintiff was entitled to judgment against the defendant Renegar, and rendered judgment canceling the mineral conveyance, a ratification of the conveyance, a subsequent contract entered into between plaintiff and Renegar, and the previous dismissal with prejudice of an action commenced by her against Renegar to cancel said mineral conveyance. The trial court required Renegar to pay interest on money due on oil runs impounded by the company producing oil from said premises because of this action, and rendered judgment against some of the other defendants. From this judgment, Rene-gar alone appeals.

The facts, about which there is very-little dispute, are involved, and will be set out as concisely as possible. On November 12, 1943, plaintiff, a resident of Detroit, Mich., was the owner by inheritance of the west half of the southeast quarter of section 15, township 14 north, range 4 west, in Oklahoma county. On that date she orally agreed with one Kelly to sell him an oil and gas lease on said land, which agreement she claimed required him to pay the prevailing market price for such lease. On November 30, 1943, she and her husband executed a lease to Kelly and sent it with a draft attached for $2,400 to an Oklahoma City bank. Kelly refused to pay the draft, but filed an affidavit in the office of the county clerk of Oklahoma county, stating that he had purchased the lease for $1,200, and advising the public that he had a valid lease upon said property. On February 12,- 1944, plaintiff came to Oklahoma City and entered into a written agreement to sell a lease on the property to F. D. and C. V. Stapp for $8,000 with an oral agreement that the Stapps were to bring an [199]*199action in her name and at their expense to cancel the Kelly affidavit. They employed Fred L. Hoyt, an attorney in Oklahoma City, and brought such an action in the name of plaintiff, but were unsuccessful in the lower court, which court rendered judgment in favor of Kelly, requiring plaintiff to specifically perform her contract with Kelly and make the lease upon payment of $1,200. This judgment was rendered on April 28, 1944, and on May 22, 1944, Kelly assigned the oil and gas lease to O. A. Cargill. Plaintiff appealed from the judgment, the petition in error being filed in this court on October 16, 1944.

During the period of time after her arrival in Oklahoma City and prior to the time she made the contract with the Stapps, plaintiff had consulted with another Oklahoma City attorney, Charles H. Garnett. Garnett, upon being informed of plaintiffs contract with the Stapps, took no steps on her behalf other than to make an amendment to the contract, and advised her to permit the Stapps to go ahead.

After she lost the case in the district court, plaintiff became dissatisfied with the manner in which the Stapps were conducting the case, and particularly with the delay in filing the appeal, and on July 17, 1944, at the suggestion of a client or former client of Renegar, went to Renegar’s office and consulted with him about the case. On the following day she went back to his office, at which time she signed a power of attorney and conveyance whereby she made Renegar her attorney in law and in fact, with full power to handle, control and manage her property and sell or dispose of the same, and to take such steps or engage in such litigation in her behalf as seemed to him best, and conveyed to him a one-half interest in the minerals. Thereafter, she communicated with her husband in Detroit, and apparently acting upon his advice had Hoyt file an action to cancel the power of attorney and conveyance, which Renegar had theretofore placed of record. She also executed a revocation of the power of attorney.

On May 2, 1944, at Kelly’s suggestion, she went to the office of O. A. Cargill, Kelly’s assignee, who submitted to her a settlement proposition to end the suit she had brought to cancel the lease. At that time she refused to make settlement. Subsequently, after the appeal had been lodged in the Supreme Court, she went back to Renegar’s office and entered into a contract with Renegar and an associate of his named Southard to give them an oil and gas lease on the property, to be held in escrow until the Kelly lease and the Stapp lease had been canceled, in which contract Renegar agreed that if she succeeded in canceling the other leases so that her title was clear he would release three-fourths of the mineral interest conveyed to him. At the same time she executed an oil and gas lease on the property to Southard and Renegar, in which lease she warranted the title and agreed to defend it; a dismissal with prejudice of the action brought by her against Renegar to cancel the conveyance, and a ratification of the conveyance.

Thereafter she consulted Mr. Garnett and advised him of what she had done, and at his suggestion entered into an agreement with O. A. Cargill to dismiss her appeal to the Supreme Court and thus validate the Kelly lease for a consideration of $4,000. This dismissal was filed in the Supreme Court on October 24, 1944, and on the same date the dismissal of her action against Rene-gar for the cancellation of the conveyance was filed in the district court.

Both Renegar and Hoyt filed motions in this court to set aside the dismissal, and Garnett filed therein a statement of fact calling attention to the complications into which plaintiff had gotten her property, and the motions to set aside the dismissal were by this court denied. Thereafter, on June 23, 1945, plaintiff and her husband and Renegar filed suit against O. A. Cargill, Hoyt, and the Stapps, seeking damages against [200]*200Cargill in the sum of $350,000 and seeking to quiet her title against the Stapps and Hoyt. The basis for this action for damages against Cargill, was that he had failed to commence operations on the lease given him by plaintiff within 30 days from the date of the filing of the dismissal of the action in the Supreme Court in accordance with a letter mailed plaintiff by Cargill as a part of the consideration for the dismissal of her appeal. After this action was filed she consulted another attorney, Herbert K. Hyde, and acting upon his advice dismissed the action against Cargill and the Stapps. At about the same time, on September 13, 1945, this action was filed.

Defendant in his brief, under fourteen different propositions, contends that the trial court erred in overruling motions and demurrers filed by him against the petition and reply filed by plaintiff and against the cross-petitions filed in the actions by Hoyt and the Stapps. To deal with each of these fourteen propositions separately would unduly lengthen this opinion.

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Related

Myers v. Myers
420 P.3d 1 (Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma, 2017)
Renegar v. Staples
1963 OK 207 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1963)
A. J. Simler v. Leslie L. Conner
282 F.2d 382 (Tenth Circuit, 1960)
Jones v. Novotny
1960 OK 109 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1960)

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Bluebook (online)
1949 OK 209, 211 P.2d 272, 202 Okla. 197, 1949 Okla. LEXIS 436, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/renegar-v-fleming-okla-1949.