Rockett v. Ford

1958 OK 142, 326 P.2d 787, 9 Oil & Gas Rep. 733, 1958 Okla. LEXIS 419
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 10, 1958
Docket37569
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 1958 OK 142 (Rockett v. Ford) 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
Rockett v. Ford, 1958 OK 142, 326 P.2d 787, 9 Oil & Gas Rep. 733, 1958 Okla. LEXIS 419 (Okla. 1958).

Opinion

CARLILE, Justice.

This is an appeal by Gordon Rockett et al. from a judgment and decree of the District Court of Pawnee County in favor of Robert *789 L. Ford et al., wherein the court found the issues generally in favor of the plaintiffs, and specifically found that in the early part of January, 1953, W. E. Rockett, now deceased, Jack Kaufman, Gordon Rockett, Harrill Rockett, and other defendants, and Robert L. Ford and other plaintiffs entered into a joint adventure to develop an oil and gas lease on a tract of land in Pawnee County on which two parties named Cox and Duckett, who subsequently became parties to the adventure, had drilled a hole on the land to a depth of 1,300 feet. The lease was acquired on January 19, 1953 by the joint adventure in the name of the Lake-land Production Company, unincorporated, for the benefit of all the co-adventurers; that the company made certain assignments of partial interests in the lease to the co-adventurers, retaining in the name of the company an undivided %4ths working interest which, according to the original agreement of the parties, was to be used to pay expenses of operating the adventure; that the assignments were a partial distribution of the adventure property and the %4ths interest retained in the name of the company was held in trust for the benefit of all co-adventurers; that it was agreed that the xéoth interest of W. E. Rockett in the venture should be free of costs in the tanks on the first well only.

The court further found that a dispute exists between the members of the joint adventure, making it impossible to carry on the work and, therefore, the adventure should be dissolved, its property sold and distribution made to the several parties according to the interests owned by each, and as found and adjudged in the decree.

The court further found in connection with the accounting that the co-adventurers made certain payments to the Lakeland Production Company as operators of the property and in control of the defendants, Gordon Rockett, J. L. LaFevers and Har-rill Rockett, which sums should be credited to the account of each such adventurer and charged to the Lakeland Production account as receipts of the co-adventurers for expenses.

Also further findings were made with respect to the cost of drilling three producing wells on the acreage, designated as Swalley 1-B, 2-B and 3-B, and the distribution of income therefrom, and found that defendants refused to contribute to the cost of drilling the third well, and pursuant to order of the State Corporation Commission accepted a bonus in lieu of their right to participate in the working interest of the well.

It was adjudged and decreed by the trial court that the joint adventure be dissolved and appraisers were appointed to appraise the property of the adventure, and that a sale thereof he had as in partition, the sale to include the producing wells, Swalley 1-B and 2-B.

The court further decreed title and ownership of Well 3-B, including the 10 acres on which located, insofar as it covers the Red Fork formation or sand, be quieted in the plaintiffs, and the defendants barred and enjoined from asserting any right, title or interest therein. The defendants’ motion for a new trial was denied, and they appealed.

The parties will be referred to the same as they were in the trial court.

For a better understanding of the claims and issues we quote in part from the plaintiffs’ petition as follows:

“That on or about January 19, 1953, the defendant, Harrill Rockett, J. O. (Leach) LaFevers, Gordon Rockett and W. E. Rockett, and Lakeland Production Company acting through said defendants and J. A. Kaufman, orally agreed with plaintiffs listed in the assignments set out next herein below that if said plaintiffs would join with J. A. Kaufman and said defendants owning an interest in said leases in financing the drilling of the wells on said leases that Lakeland Production Company would assign certain interest in said leases to the plaintiffs, J. A. Kaufman and the defendant owning an interest in said leases and that all would share in the profits to be realized from *790 said leases. That the proportionate share of the expense and the proportionate share of the profits would be determined by the proportionate share of ownership in the working interest of said leases. That at the same time said defendants and J. A. Kaufman represented and agreed with the plaintiffs as a part of said agreement that %i of 3⅜2 of ⅞ working interest in said leases would be retained in the name of Lakeland Production Company, in trust, for the owners of the working interest of said lease, and that this interest would be used to pay the operating expenses of the • Swalley leases in so far as it would cover such expense, with any surplus thereof being applied to the drilling of subsequent wells or divided among the then owners of the working interest in the proportion in which the ownership of each in the leases bear to the whole.”

Lakeland Production Company filed an answer by Gordon Rockett, ITarrill Rockett, J. L. LaFevers and Lexie Rockett, who therein referred to themselves as co-partners, doing business under the firm name and style of Lakeland Production Company, in which they first demurred and moved the court to strike from plaintiffs’ petition all averments tending to contradict or vary the written assignments in the leasehold involved, and allege that any and all oral agreements referred to in the petition were merged and superseded by the written assignments received by plaintiffs, which assignments were taken subject' only to the verbal agreement that plaintiffs would take the interests assigned them with the drilling of Swalley Well No. 1 — B to the top of the Bartlesville sand without obligation to contribute to the cost of drilling said well, and by their cross-petition allege that they, defendants, own a %4ths interest in the leasehold to which plaintiffs claim some interest, 'title or trust, which claim is without foundation, and pray that defendants’ title thereto be quieted as against the claims of the plaintiffs. The defendants further allege that a partition of the leasehold is necessary and pray the court to appoint commissioners to partition the same.

The record shows that the lease involved was assigned on January 19, 1953 to the Lakeland Production Company by the then owners, named Cox and Duckett, upon the condition and consideration that Cox and Duckett have a total interest and override of 2i4tths of all production from the first well drilled free of cost, and a working interest in the second and any subsequent wells drilled.

The principal question and issue in the appeal relates to the question of ownership of the' %4ths interest in the lease held in the name of Lakeland Production Company. The trial court found and decreed that such interest was held in the name of the company in trust for the benefit of all the co-adventurers, which includes the plaintiffs.

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Bluebook (online)
1958 OK 142, 326 P.2d 787, 9 Oil & Gas Rep. 733, 1958 Okla. LEXIS 419, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rockett-v-ford-okla-1958.