Roxoline Petroleum Co. v. Wilson

1926 OK 101, 253 P. 59, 123 Okla. 241, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 541
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 2, 1926
Docket15879
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 1926 OK 101 (Roxoline Petroleum Co. v. Wilson) 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
Roxoline Petroleum Co. v. Wilson, 1926 OK 101, 253 P. 59, 123 Okla. 241, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 541 (Okla. 1926).

Opinion

Opinion by

RAX, O.

This suit was commenced by judgment creditors of the J. 0. & O. Drilling & Leasing Company, a corporation, against E. Talbert and Lester B. Gum, to subject an undivided one-half interest in and to 17% acres of land in Okmulgee county, and one-half of the oil produced therefrom, to the satisfaction of plaintiffs’ judgment against the J. G. & O. Drilling & Leasing Company, upon the ground that the judgment debtor was insolvent and had assigned an undivided one-half interest to the defendant E. Talbert for the purpose of defrauding its creditors. No question, is argued here as to the sufficiency of the petition. The defendant E. Talbert answered by general and specific denial. It 'being made to appear that the defendant Lester B. Gum held the legal title to the land for the Roxoline Petroleum Company, a corporation, of which he was’ president, the Rox-oline Petroleum Company was permitted to intervene in the action, and the case was dismissed as to the defendant Lester B. Gum. The intervener, Roxoline Petroleum Co-’ pany, answered the petition by general and specific denial, and especially pleaded that it owned the equitable title to the land, and denied that the J. G. & O. Drilling & Leasing Company had ever acquired or held any right, title or interest therein.

The trial court found that the J. G. & O. Drilling & Leasing Company had an interest in the land in question held in the name of the defendant E. Talbert, .who was merely trustee for the J. G. & O. Drilling & Leasing Company, and adjudged that its interest be sold and applied to the satisfaction of the plaintiffs’ judgment in 'the sum of $3,175 and interest; that the J. G. & O. Drilling & Leasing Company acquired its interest in the land and the oil produced therefrom, by drilling a producing oil well on the land under a drilling contract, and further found that the Roxoline Petroleum Company advanced certain moneys for payment of the expenses of drilling the well, but that the amount of such advancement was not disclosed by the evidence, and that) the J. G. & O. Drilling & Leasing Company’s undivided one-half interest was subject to a lien for such advancements as were made by the Roxoline Petroleum Company for the drilling of the well. The amount of. such advancements not being disclosed by the evidence, it was adjudged .that the one-half interest of the drilling company and E. Tal-bert he sold subject to the lien of the Rox-oline Petroleum Company to the extent of the money advanced, the amount of which *242 was undisclosed. The Roxoline Petroleum Company has appealed, and the judgment creditors have filed their cross-petition in error.

The evidence shows that on the 11th day of September, 1922, a written contract was entered into between Lester B. Gum for the Roxoline Petroleum Company and the J. G. & O. Drilling & Leasing Company, a corporation, by its president, James H. Topp, wherein it was agreed that the J. G. & O. Drilling & Leasing Company was to sink an oil well on the land to a depth of 2,250 feet unless oil or gas was found in paying quantities at a lesser depth, and that if a paying and producing well was saved and shut in the Roxoline Petroleum Company would convey to the J. G. & O. Drilling & Leasing Company, in payment for the drilling of such well, a good title to a one:half interest in the land with no outstanding claims of any kind against the land or lease. The Roxoline Petroleum Company was to erect the derrick and furnish certain secondhand casings and pay one-half the cost of shooting the well. The J. G. & O. Drilling & Leasing Company was to pay any and all expenses of drilling other than above stated, the well to be commenced within 30 days from the execution of the contract.

At the time the contract was entered into, it was orally agreed that if the stockholders of the J. G. & 0. Drilling & Leasing Company should refuse to advance the money for drilling the well, J. H. Topp, its president, or E. Talbert, daughter of James PI. Topp. and assistant secretary and treasurer of the drilling company, would undertake to .carry out the contract. Sometime later Mr. Topp notified Mr. Gum that the stockholders refused to advance the money necessary to drill the well, and that E. Tal-bert would undertake to carry out the contract. It-was then agreed by Mr. Gum and E. Talbert that she would carry out the contract, and Mr. Gum entered a notation on his copy of the contract to that effect. Pursuant to that agreement E. Talbert moved the drilling outfit and tools of the J. G. & O. Drilling & Leasing Company on the lease and sunk the well, under the direction and management of J. H. Topp, president of the J. G. & O. Drilling & Leasing Company, to a depth of a few hundred feet, when she notified Mr. Gum that the money she had expected to receive had not been received, and she was unable to pay for the labor and other expenses on the well, and asked that he or the Roxoline Petroleum Company advance to her the money, which was agreed to. Thereupon the Roxoline Petroleum Company paid all the outstanding claims for labor and material furnished in drilling the well to that depth, and placed its superintendent in control of the drilling, and paid all of the expenses o~ drilling the well, which was a producing well. Neither E. Talbert nor the J. G. & O. Drilling & Leasing Company ever repaid to the Roxoline Company the amount so advanced for drilling the well, or any part of it. The Roxoline Petroleum Company drilled two other wells, one of whic-h was a producing well and the other a dry hole.

The judgment has become final as to E. Talbert, she not having appealed. By reason of the finding of the trial court the parties here assume that whatever interest the defendant E. Talbert may have had in the premises was the property of the J. G. & O. Drilling & Leasing Company.

The parties will be referred to as the Roxoline Company, the judgment creditors, and the drilling company. No other interests are involved in this appeal.

The parties are agreed that the judgment creditors have no greater right against the Roxoline Company than the drilling company had at the time the judgment was entered, and that a judgment creditor’s claim to the assets can be sustained only where the judgment debtor has an actionable demand. This being conceded, the first question for answer is, Did the drilling company (who. under the finding of the trial court, owned whatever interest E. Talbert had) have a cause of action against the Roxoline Company?

It may here be observed that the contract which provided that the obligations assumed by E. Talbert under the contract, with the consent of the Roxoline Company, was to-drill one well only, and whatever interest, i any, she or the drilling company acquired' was fixed by the completion of the initial well, and such interest cannot be affected' by the Roxoline Company drilling two other wells in the absence of some agreement between them.

The Roxoline Company contends that the-drilling company never acquired either a legal or an equitable interest in the land which it could, at any time from the day of the contract to the time of the trial, have recovered, for the' following reasons: (a) The contract having been executed and delivered conditionally, was not a binding-obligation on either party until approved' by the stockholders and directors of fhe-drilling company, (b) James H.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1926 OK 101, 253 P. 59, 123 Okla. 241, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 541, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roxoline-petroleum-co-v-wilson-okla-1926.