Sellery v. Ward

131 P.2d 550, 21 Cal. 2d 300, 1942 Cal. LEXIS 451
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 2, 1942
DocketL. A. 18378
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 131 P.2d 550 (Sellery v. Ward) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sellery v. Ward, 131 P.2d 550, 21 Cal. 2d 300, 1942 Cal. LEXIS 451 (Cal. 1942).

Opinion

CARTER, J.

— The controversy between the parties arises out of an arrangement between them and one Yosper in which each, being the owners of adjacent parcels of property, agreed to and did join in a community oil and gas lease of their respective parcels of properties to the Allied Petroleum Corporation.

On October 2, 1936, plaintiffs, defendants and Yosper (a defendant who was dismissed from the action) were the owners of groups of adjoining lots in Long Beach, California, the percentage of the area owned by each of the total area of all, being as follows, plaintiffs 44.2 per cent, defendants 44.2 per cent, and Yosper 11.6 per cent. Desiring to consolidate their property for oil and gas development purposes the parties *302 entered into what might be called a pooling agreement on that date. It provided that they will unite their properties in a community oil lease carrying a one-sixth royalty for a term of eighteen months and thereafter as long as oil is produced in paying quantities; that any such lease shall contain such terms “as may be agreed upon in writing by the majority in number and in area of ownership of the herein described premises, of the parties hereto, based upon the actual area of said property . . . each party hereto . . . having but one vote in such matter, or three votes in the aggregate”; that none of the parties would separately contract or lease his property for oil exploitation and that damages for the breach of that covenant would be $10,000; that any lease of the property, was to contain terms to the effect that a majority of the parties would control in anything the lessors may desire to do or not do under the lease; that the agreement was to be in force until October 1, 1938, and thereafter renewed from year to year unless cancelled under certain circumstances; that until the termination of the agreement “none of the parties hereto shall put any improvements upon their said respective properties which will interfere with the making and operation of said oil and gas lease. It was further understood that some of said property was then improved, and it was agreed that said lease shall contain provision for the payment of the value of any improvements taken or destroyed, and also.for the fair and proper rental for any drill site used in operating-under said lease”; that a bonus received by any party for procuring a lease was to be divided, “it being the intention hereof that the parties shall share in the emoluments and results of such lease, in proportion to their said ownership”; that any lease shall provide that none of the parties would be responsible for the performance of any covenant except such as affects his property; that the royalty shall be divided between the parties in the proportion the area of their property bears to the entire property, the percentages being as heretofore mentioned.

On May 15, 1937, the parties entered into a lease as lessors with the Allied Petroleum Corporation as lessee for the development of all the property. That lease made no provision for the payment by the lessors of any rental for the parcels of the property upon which the wells would be located. The lessee agreed to pay a rental of $200 per month to all the lessors for all the property until a producing well was com *303 pleted, and reasonable rental to the owner-lessor of any building or structure used by the lessee in its operations. In any matters in connection with the lease a majority of the lessors were to control.

Two producing wells were drilled by the lessee which together with the equipment of the lessee occupied all of plaintiffs ’ property but none of defendants’ or Vosper, and royalties were accordingly paid. Plaintiffs and Vosper signed agreements for the payment of a rental of $100 per month by all of the parties to plaintiffs, for the use of their property for the wells and equipment, but upon being sent to defendants they were all ignored except the last one which they refused to sign.

Plaintiff’s complaint contains six purported causes of action. The first is on a common count for the reasonable value of the use of plaintiff’s premises stated at $800 for the oil development for the period commencing with the production of the wells to the trial of the action; the second was based on a claimed express contract in writing for the payment of a reasonable rental in the sum of $486.20; the third claiming $10,000 damages, was based upon the pooling agreement asserting that thereunder defendants had agreed to pay a reasonable rental for the use of whatever property was used by a lessee for oil development and further that the amount was fixed by plaintiffs and Vosper, but defendants refused to abide by the majority control; the fourth is substantially the same as the third but no damages are claimed; the fifth was for $486.20, claiming plaintiffs would not have made the lease with the Allied Petroleum Corporation if they had not relied upon representation by defendants that they would pay a reasonable rental; the sixth alleges that the pooling agreement created a partnership between the parties and a majority of the partners agreed to a rental of $100 per month. The prayer was for specific performance of the pooling agreement or $10,608 damages for its breach, for the reasonable rental value of plaintiffs' property, and that defendants be estopped from denying the validity of the agreement, and such other relief as might be proper.

The court awarded judgment in the sum of $1,016.60 on the first cause of action apparently being of the view that fairness demanded that plaintiffs receive a reasonable rental from the defendants and Vosper for the use of their land by the *304 lessee for oil development. It also found that the parties by the pooling agreement were engaged in a joint venture, and the majority in number controlled. At an early stage in the trial, and during the opening statement of counsel, the court expressed the view that plaintiffs were entitled to a fair rental under the first cause of action, and thereafter the trial proceeded on that theory. Later plaintiffs’ counsel stated that they were abandoning the other causes of action in view of the foregoing comment of the court and that he thought they should dismiss the other causes without prejudice. Although no formal dismissal by plaintiffs appears in the record, the judgment recited that all the causes except the first had been dismissed without prejudice. It is suggested that inasmuch as the demand on the first cause of action and the judgment based thereon was for less than $2,000, the Municipal Court in the city of Los Angeles had jurisdiction and therefore the superior court in which the action was tried lacked jurisdiction ; that the abandonment of the other causes of action during the trial deprived the court of jurisdiction. Some of the other causes of action in plaintiffs’ complaint are concededly within the jurisdiction of the superior court and not the municipal court.

The superior court clearly had jurisdiction.

Where the action is brought in good faith and the cause of action stated is within the jurisdiction of the court in which it is commenced, the mere fact that the judgment is for less than the jurisdictional amount of that court does not establish that it was without jurisdiction. (Jackson v. Whartenby, 5 Cal. 94; Solomon v. Reese, 34 Cal. 28; Derby v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
131 P.2d 550, 21 Cal. 2d 300, 1942 Cal. LEXIS 451, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sellery-v-ward-cal-1942.