Simmons v. Parrent

256 P.2d 101, 71 Wyo. 207, 1953 Wyo. LEXIS 14
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedApril 21, 1953
DocketNo. 2576
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 256 P.2d 101 (Simmons v. Parrent) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Simmons v. Parrent, 256 P.2d 101, 71 Wyo. 207, 1953 Wyo. LEXIS 14 (Wyo. 1953).

Opinion

[212]*212OPINION

Blume, Chief Justice.

The Rock Creek Oil Company, sometimes mentioned as the oil company, was a Montana corporation and never domesticated in this state. It drilled one oil well, and no more, in Weston County, Wyoming, which well proved to be unproductive. The oil company engaged the defendant to swab the well. On or about April 18, 1949, Parrent, the defendant, rendered a statement of account to the oil company in the amount of $2,980.25. This account was paid by the oil company. Thereafter Parrent rendered to the oil company another account in the sum of $4,994.65, claiming this additional amount for swabbing the well of the oil company. This additional amount was not paid, and the indebtedness denied. On April 27, 1951, Parrent brought action against the Rock Creek Oil Company asking judgment for $4,994.65 with interest and cost. He caused a writ of attachment to be issued which was levied on the property here in controversy. The defendant did not appear in this action and the court rendered judgment in rem on June 19, 1951, in conformity with the prayer of the petition in that case. Thereafter an execution was issued to sell the property [213]*213in controversy pursuant to the judgment. Before the property was sold, the plaintiff Simmons notified Par-rent and his attorney that he was the owner of the property and that he had a bill of sale for it dated June 9, 1949. Parrent, however, caused the sheriff to proceed with the sale. A certificate of sale was issued by the sheriff of Weston County, Wyoming, certifying that he had sold the property in controversy on July 10, 1951, to R. G. Parrent for the sum of $5,400. This certificate of sale is dated July 20, 1951. On July 19, 1951, the present action of replevin was brought by the plaintiff Simmons against R. G. Parrent. Plaintiff alleged that on June 9, 1949, he purchased and became owner of the property described as follows: 2-210 bbl. weld storage tanks, complete with runways, steps, all flow lines, valves, Ideco pump jack, all casing, tubing and rods located at the well site of the Newell No. 1 well in the NE%NW%NE% of Sec. 9, Twp. 44 No., Rge. 62 W. 6th P.M.; that said property is of the value of $5,500; that the defendant on July 10, 1951, wrongfully and without the consent of plaintiff came into possession of said personal property and still retains possession, and he claims to be the owner thereof; that plaintiff has demanded possession of the property but defendant refuses to deliver it to the plaintiff and defendant unlawfully withholds and detains it from plaintiff. The prayer was for the possession of the property or if delivery could not be had, judgment for $5,500.

A writ of replevin was thereafter duly issued, and possession of the property was seized thereunder; Par-rent, the defendant, appeared in the action by his attorney. Thereafter and on February 15, 1952, the plaintiff answered admitting that the defendant claimed to be the owner of the property in controversy but denied each and every other allegation in the petition. He also filed what he called an affirmative defense [214]*214which, in substance alleges as follows: Plaintiff Simmons furnished defendant with a copy of the bill of sale executed July 9, 1949. It was issued without authority of the board of directors. At the time of the purported execution of the bill of sale, the Rock Creek Oil Company was insolvent. No fair consideration was given for the sale. The conveyance and transaction of June 9, 1949, was made and consumated by the Rock Creek Oil Company with intent to hinder, delay, and defraud the defendant, as a creditor of the Rock Creek Oil Company, and the transaction was and is fraudulent as to the defendant Parrent. Defendant also filed a cross petition in which he alleged that he became the purchaser of the property by reason of the sheriff’s sale hereinbefore mentioned. Thereafter and on March 1, 1952, the plaintiff Simmons filed a reply denying each and every allegation contained in the affirmative defense and further claimed, by a so-called cross petition, that after the action in this case was commenced, plaintiff by a writ of replevin obtained possession of the property under his claim of title; that defendant took from plaintiff’s possession the Ideco pump jack, approximately 300 feet of 2j4-inch tubing and approximately 300 feet of 4-inch flow line and appropriated the same to his own use; that the property so taken is of the value of $3,800, and judgment was asked for the value thereof.

The trial of this case was had before the court without a jury. Judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff Simmons for the recovery of the property in controversy and for the sum of $250 in lieu of the Ideco pump jack and tubing and line pipe taken from the well site. From that judgment, the defendant Par-rent has appealed to this court.

The plaintiff testified that he bought the property in controversy herein on or about June 9, 1949, for the [215]*215sum of §8,500; that he took possession thereof by going to the occupant of the surface of the land on which the oil well was drilled and getting permission from him to leave the property at that place. The defendant in his testimony contended that he was the owner thereof by reason of the indebtedness claimed by him as already mentioned.

L. W. Carter was a witness for the plaintiff. His testimony is not of great importance except that he testified that the bill of sale given to plaintiff Simmons was executed pursuant to the direction of the board of directors of the Rock Creek Oil Company. The bill of sale was introduced in evidence which shows that it was executed for the Rock Creek Oil Company by L. W. Carter.

A. W. Hartwig also testified in favor of the plaintiff. He was one of the directors of the Rock Creek Oil Company and was in charge of the management of that company in connection with the drilling of the well involved in this case. He testified in substance that there were three directors of the Rock Creek Oil Company and that he was onej of them; that he negotiated the sale of the property in question on behalf of the corporation; that he had two offers for the property, one for §7,500, which was not accepted, and one from the plaintiff Simmons for §8,500; that the latter offer was accepted; that Simmons paid cash in the sum of §6,000 and gave a note for §2,500; that while he had not collected the note, he had asked payment thereof, and that he considered the note to be good; that a bill of sale was delivered to Simmons,, signed for the Rock Creek Oil Company by L. W. Carter and all of the directors of the corporation authorized the execution thereof; that the §6,000 cash paid by Simmons together with §2,300 contributed by himself and Carter was used to pay the debts of the company; that all [216]*216debts were paid, including the debt to Parrent, which was in approximately the sum of $3,000; that this sum was paid for swabbing the well; that the average cost for swabbing a well is $1,200 to $1,400, and that Parrent’s bill of approximately $3,000 was high, that the corporation did not owe Parrent any further sum, and that his additional claim for $4,994.65, above mentioned, was not an account which was owed by the Rock Creek Oil Company but was in fact owed, if owed at all, by someone else. Hartwig’s testimony is of such vital importance in this case that it may be well to set some of it out in detail. He testified on cross-examination: “Q. Are you able to estimate roughly what the company’s total debts were at the time of this sale? A. Yes. Q. How much were they? A. A little over $6,000. Q.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
256 P.2d 101, 71 Wyo. 207, 1953 Wyo. LEXIS 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/simmons-v-parrent-wyo-1953.