Robinson v. Logan

1923 OK 1131, 221 P. 437, 94 Okla. 157, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 492
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 11, 1923
Docket11842
StatusPublished

This text of 1923 OK 1131 (Robinson v. Logan) 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
Robinson v. Logan, 1923 OK 1131, 221 P. 437, 94 Okla. 157, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 492 (Okla. 1923).

Opinion

Opinion by

THREADGILL, C.

On October 12, 1920, J. E. Pottorff and W. M. Smith filed suit in the district court of Ottawa county against W. H. Logan, George A. McConnell, Henrietta Dixon, and Miami State Bank, asking that they be adjudged to be the owners of an undivided one-half interest in a lead and zinc mining lease on W. y2 of S. E. Yi of N. E. % Of section 18, township 29 north, range'24. east, in Ottawa county, Okla., and to determine the amount due them from the defendants as cotenants for their expenses in developing the mine on said property, and that the. same be decreed as a prior lien on said leasehold property; and that the said leasehold property be sold and the proceeds divided under the order, of the court. .This case was numbered 4381.

On the same date, October 16, 1920, W. H. Logan filed suit in the same court against the sáid J. E. Pottorff and Wesley M. Smith', as defendants,- 'setting up his claim to an undivided one-half interest in said leasehold property, ánd stating' that the defendants are now in possession of said property and deny him any title or interest in the same, and threaten to blow up the said mine in’ order to deprive him of his interest; that the. defendants áre appropriating to their own usé the proceeds derived from the sale of ores from said' mine, that the said mine is not susceptible of a parti *158 tion in kind, and the same should be sold and . the proceeds divided, and that pending the suit a receiver should be appointed to ■protect the property and the. plaintiff’s interest, for all of which he prays. This suit was numbered 4382. The death” of J. E. Pottorff having occurred after the suits were filed, the cause was revived in the name of J. S. Robinson, as executor of the estate of J. E. Pottorff, deceased.

On October 20, 1920, the two cases were consolidated under case No. 4382, in which W. H. Logan was plaintiff and J. E. Pottorff and Wesley M. Smith were defendants. In this opinion W. H. Logan will be designated as plaintiff and J S. Robinson, executor, and W. M. Smith as defendants.-

On October 20, 1920, the plaintiff gave notice of his application for a receiver to be appointed to take charge of the leasehold property, • and on the same' day, the defendants filed their answer and objections to plaintiff’s application for the appointment, in which they admit that they are in possession of said mining property, and have beén in possession by and with the' consent of the plaintiff’s assignor and with the' Understanding that they should remain in possession until they should be reimbursed for the money expended by them in developing said property, and they deny that they committed waste, and deny that they have disputed the plaintiff’s title, and they say that plaintiff had knowledge of their agreement with his assignor, McConnell, at the time he bought his interest in the property, and they further state that they were solvent and financially able to respond in damages to any violation of any rights to the plaintiff, and that they are willing to let all of &aid property be sold on judgment of partition and permit the question of their equit-áble' rights to be determined and adjudged in the distribution of the proceeds of said sale. ' The plaintiff filed a reply to the answer and objections of the defendants which was in the nature of a general denial.

The facts were substantially as follows': George A. McConnell was the owner of a lead and zinc mining lease on said land, and had expended about $14,000 in developing a lead and zinc mine, and exhausted his funds, and for the purpose of continuing the work he sold the defendants an undivided oné-half interest in the lease and made a contract with them that they were to have possession and continue the work of developing the mine, and expend for their interest in the lease the same amount he had expended, and if they sold the lease before they had expended that amount, he was -to have the difference in his favor in division of the proceeds.

They took possession unde? this contract, and continued the work, and at the time the suits were brought they claimed they had spent about $27,000, being $14,000 more than the sum agreed on as the consideration for their interest, and, besides, they' had placed on and used certain personal property in the' work apart from the equipment belonging to the leasehold property.

After McConnell had assigned a half interest to the defendants as above stated he assigned the other half to the plaintiff, and plaintiff mortgaged his half interest to the Miami State Bank, one of the defendants in the suit brought by Pottorff and Smith.

On the same day, being the 20th day of October, 1920, the court appointed a receiver' in said cause, announcing from the bench the appointment. Whereupon, the defendants announced that they withdrew their offer to allow the property to be sold, and thereafter the journal entry was prepared and signed by the trial judge, the following statement being a part of the order:

“Whereupon, said application for receiver was submitted to the court upon the pleadings in said consolidated cause and upon statements of counsel for the respective parties, plaintiff and defendants, and after being fully advised in the premises the court grants said petition for a receiver as prayed for by the plaintiff, W. H. Logan.”

On October 23, 1920, the defendants filed a motion to set aside and vacate the order allowing and appointing the receiver which motion was as follows:

“1. Because the said order appointing a receiver was improvidently made in this, that the said J. E. Pottorff and W. M. Smith, by their written answer and response to the application of the said W. H. Logan for a receiver herein admitted that the said W. H. Logan was a tenant in common with the plaintiff in the property which the said Logan by his suit sought to partition, and offered to permit the said Logan, plaintiff, to take judgment in partition, as prayed in his petition, and to immediately turn the possession of all the property described in said Logan’s petition over to the sheriff to be partitioned according to the practice of this court; and consented to the order consolidating the said case No. 4381, with the case begun by the said Logan, thus bringing all the necessary parties before the court in said Logan’s suit for partition, and again in open court, offered to have a decree for partition entered against these defendants, J. E. Pottorff and W. M. Smith, and *159 the said Bogan, plaintiff, refused to take such decree, and insisted on the appointment of a receiver.
“2. Because a receiver should be appointed at the suit of a cotenant out of possession seeking a partition of the common property, only when there is shown to be damages, that pending hisi suit for partition, his interest may be lost or wrongfully damaged, on account of mismanagement, or insolvency of the tenant in possession; and, it is admitted in open court by the plaintiff that the defendants are solvent and able to respond in damages, or otherwise, for any injury to the plaintiff’s rights as a tenant in common with the defendants; and because the defendants offer the plaintiff judgment bringing the property and all the plaintiff’s interest under the immediate protection of the court.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1923 OK 1131, 221 P. 437, 94 Okla. 157, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 492, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robinson-v-logan-okla-1923.