Scott v. Price

1924 OK 878, 229 P. 618, 103 Okla. 150, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 270
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 7, 1924
Docket14619
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 1924 OK 878 (Scott v. Price) 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
Scott v. Price, 1924 OK 878, 229 P. 618, 103 Okla. 150, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 270 (Okla. 1924).

Opinion

Opinion by

FOSTER, C.

This appeal is prosecuted by Wm. j. 'Scott, plaintiff in error, defendant below, against Ellis Price and Nina Price, defendants in error, plaintiffs below, to reverse a judgment of the district court of Murray county, Okla., refusing to vacate an order entered on the 16th day of August, 1923, appointing a receiver.

The parties will be hereinafter referred to as they appeared in the trial court.

The record discloses that a petition was filed by the plaintiffs on the 2nd day of November, 1922, in the district court of Murray county, to cancel an oil and gas mining lease executed in 1916 by the plaintiffs to the defendant covering 509 acres of land in Murray county.

It appears that soon after the filing of this petition the court below appointed a referee to hear testimony and report to the court the amount and market value of certain quantities of liquid asphalt which it was claimed had been produced from a certain well drilled by the defendant upon the leased, premises during the subsistence of the lease.

*151 Whether the appointment of the referee was made by the court on its own motion or upon application and notice by one of the parties does not appear from the record before us.

It further appears that on the 16th day of November, 1922, a verified application for a receiver was filed by the plaintiffs to take charge of and operate the leased premises including the well thereon, market the production therefrom, collect thé proceeds from such production, and hold same pending the final determination of the action then pending in said court. . '

No relief by way of receivership, however, was asked for in the original petition.

On the 10th day of March, 1923, the matter coming on for hearing upon the report of the referee and upon the application of plaintiffs for a receiver, the court entered an order reserving the question of appointment of a receive!1 until May 7, 1923, and requiring the defendant in the meantime to pay the plaintiffs the sum of $500 found to be due them as the value of their royalties in the production from said well, and requiring him to execute a bond in the sum of $2,000 to guarantee to the plaintiffs the payment of future royalties on liquid asphalt produced by the defendant from said well. The record discloses that at the time this order was made, no . answer had been filed by the defendant, and that the cause was then pending upon a demurrer filed Dy defendant to plaintiff’s petition-.

On the 7th day of May, 1923, an order was made by the trial court postponing the hearing on the motion for the appointment of a receiver until the 24th day of May, 1923. On the 24th day o£ May, 1923, after both parties had announced ready for trial the plaintiffs were granted permission by the court to withdraw their announcement of ready, and 20 days were granted them within which to determine whether they vould amend their petition.

Thereafter, and on the 4th day of June, 1923, an unverified amended petition was filed by the plaintiffs seeking a cancellation of the lease on certain grounds, but no relief by way of receivership was asked for in the petition.

On the 9th day of August, 1923, an unverified application for the appointment of a receiver was filed by the plaintiffs, and on the 11th day of August, thereafter, a receiver was appointed to. take charge of the leased premises and the production therefrom, and hold the .same, pending final determination of the action.

The record fails to disclose any notice to the defendant of the application of plaintiffs for the appointment of a receiver on the 11th day of August.

The receiver immediately qualified and took charge of the premises as authorized and directed in said order. On the 16th day of August, 1923, the trial court overruled the motion of defendant to vacate and set aside the order appointing such receiver, to which action the defendant duly excepted, and brings the cause regularly on appeal to this court.

The first proposition relied upon by the defendant for a reversal is that the action of plaintiffs is an action for the breach, of a covenant to pay royalties, and that, in such a case cancellation- is not the proper remedy.

An examination of the amended petition convinces us otherwise. As we Interpret the petition, plaintiffs seek a’ cancellation of the lease upon the ground that the defendant, after discovering liquid asphalt in paying quantities, had not diligently and faithfully operated the leased premises, and by reason of a breach of the implied covenant in the lease to so operate had incurred a forfeiture of the lease.

It was held at an early day in this state that a court of equity would decree the forfeiture of an oil and gas lease on account of a breach of an implied covenant to diligently operate the property when such forfeiture will effectuate justice. See Indiana Oil & Gas Development Co. v. McCrory, 42 Okla. 137, 140 Pac. 610, quoting with approval the case of Brewster v. Lauyon Zinc Co., 140 Fed. 801, 77 C. C. A. 213.

As to whether or not the plaintiffs in their petition have’ alleged sufficient facts to bring them within the rule announced in the above cases is a matter which for the purpose of this case we ar.e not called upon to decide. The record discloses very clearly, we think, that vhen the original lease was executed by the plaintiffs to- the defendant in the year 1916 neither of the parties thereto contemplated the discovery and production under said 'lease of liquid asphalt — a heavy, tenacious substance unlike oil or natural gas, incapable of being transported through pipe lines, and for which there was no ready market until the substance had been refined or chemically treated in some manner.

The record discloses, also, that there was little or no market for this production in its crude state as it came from the well, and there could, therefore, be little foundation *152 for the fear that the defendant could or would fraudulently market and dispose of the mineral during the pendency of the action and convert the proceeds to his own use; nor could there be in the nature of things any great danger of the mineral in place in the earth being exhausted by drainage through operation on adjoining lands during the short time that would elapse until there could be a trial and determination of the issues presented by the petition on the merits.

In .these circumstances we do not think the court justified in resorting to the extraordinary remedy of a receivership. Whatever may be the ultimate rights of the parties in view of the extraordinary and unusual situation presented under the facts in the case, no good purpose can be sub-served by the appointment of a receiver.

The rule applicable to cases of this hind is announced very clearly, we think, in Folk v. U. S., 233 Fed. 177. where it is said in the opinion by Mr. Justice Sanborn :

“A court of equity is not without jurisdiction to appoint a receiver of real .estate and of its proceeds in the possession of a defendant holding under a title regular on its face.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1924 OK 878, 229 P. 618, 103 Okla. 150, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 270, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scott-v-price-okla-1924.