Taylor v. Taylor

334 P.2d 201, 167 Cal. App. 2d 120, 10 Oil & Gas Rep. 261, 1959 Cal. App. LEXIS 2306
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 14, 1959
DocketCiv. No. 22541
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 334 P.2d 201 (Taylor v. Taylor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Taylor v. Taylor, 334 P.2d 201, 167 Cal. App. 2d 120, 10 Oil & Gas Rep. 261, 1959 Cal. App. LEXIS 2306 (Cal. Ct. App. 1959).

Opinion

WHITE, P. J.

Appellant is the executrix of the estate of Charles W. Fourl, deceased, and a defendant and cross-defendant in the action. The appeal is from a portion of the interlocutory judgment that “the limited partnership of Massey and Associates was dissolved”; that receivers appointed by the court are in possession of all of its business and are managing and operating the same; that the respective interests of the members of the dissolved partnership and their successors and assigns are in accordance with the list therein, which includes Margot M. Mayo 27.5/855ths, L. A. Wagner 11.25/855ths, and appellant herein 11.25/855ths that two accounts of the receivers are correct; that the receivers hold in trust (and not as partnership property) the following items: for Margot M. Mayo $1,430; for L. A. Wagner [122]*122$5,821.87; and for appellant $5,821.88, each as of March 8, 1956; that the receivers shall sell all partnership assets at public auction and distribute the proceeds of operation and sale of the partnership property in accordance with the said list showing the respective interests of the partners and their successors and assigns.

The appeal must be considered in two parts: (1) appellant’s claim that her interest is not 11.25/855ths or any other portion of the limited partnership, but instead is an “overriding interest” in certain oil wells drilled by the partnership on the Taylor land; and (2) appellant’s claim that the court erred in its division of such “overriding interest” so as to award appellant only 11.25/855ths instead of 17.25/855ths of the proceeds from said oil wells.

Attorneys Brooks, Asher and Bullís represent 28 respondents who were members of the dissolved limited partnership and answer only the appellant’s first point; while Attorney Kupfer represents respondent Wagner, who was a coowner of the claimed “overriding interest” (with appellant’s decedent and defendant Mayo who has not appeared in the instant appeal) and answers only the second point.

The two portions of the appeal will be separately considered. The following is a summary of the evidence pertinent to appellant’s claim that the court erred in deciding that Fourl’s interest in the two oil wells drilled by Massey and Associates is to be computed in the same manner as though it- were the interest of a limited partner in Massey and Associates.

May 13, 1927, W. W. Taylor and Lottie L. Taylor, his wife, as owners and lessors, and Fourl (appellant’s decedent) entered into an oil lease, under which four wells were drilled. As to those wells and their continued production there is no controversy.

Lessors, the Taylors, wanted more wells drilled. A disagreement arose as to the rights of Fourl and his assignees (Wagner and Mayo) under the Fourl lease in such proposed additional wells, or in the land upon which the owners proposed to drill them.

In 1937, an action to quiet title against the 1927 Fourl Lease was commenced by the owners.

January 28, 1938, Attorney Cree, representing Lottie L. Taylor, Lees W. Taylor, and Jessie Taylor Reedy, the widow, son and daughter of W. W. Taylor, and the then owners of said land, wrote Fourl that, in return for “quitclaim deeds [123]*123sufficient to clear the said premises of the oil and gas lease, ’ ’ Fourl and his assignees (Mayo and Wagner) would become the owners of “five percent (5%) of the proceeds, less the pro rata share of the operating costs, hereafter realized from the sale of all oil and gas produced and saved from the first two (2) wells drilled by the undersigned and associates on the undrilled portion of the said ten acres.”

The witness Luther Mayo, assignor of Margot Mayo, testified that before he, Fourl and Wagner executed the quitclaims, Lees Taylor (deceased at the time of the trial), acting for himself and the other owners of the land, promised that Fourl and his assignees would receive as consideration for their quitclaim deeds 5 per cent of production subject to operating costs only.

Respondents, in their brief, state that “no evidence whatever was presented by the appellant to negative the effect of defendants’ Exhibit ‘O’ or the testimony of Wagner that Fourl had received this offer before the execution of the quitclaim deed.”

Defendants’ Exhibit “0” was offered and introduced in evidence by appellant. It is the letter from Attorney Cree’s files in which Fourl was offered 5 per cent of the proceeds, less the pro rata share of the operating costs. It mentions no partnership. At that time, Massey and Associates had not been formed. The land was then subject to no oil lease other than Fourl’s lease because of which the land owners were seeking quitclaim deeds. Respondents concede that the only consideration offered for the execution of the quitclaim deeds was the 5 per cent interest in the production of the next two wells to be drilled on the land as stated in said letter, and that on February 7, 1938, the quitclaim deeds were executed by Fourl, Wagner and Mayo.

June 16, 1938, the three owners of the land became partners in Massey and Associates, Lees W. Taylor a general partner and the others limited partners. In all there were about 30 partners, two general and the remainder limited.

September 1, 1938, Massey and Associates entered into an oil lease with the owners, by which the partnership agreed to drill two wells, from the production of which the owners would receive 12.5 per cent, their attorney Brooks 1 per cent, and their geologist or engineer 1 per cent “off the top,” leaving 85.5 per cent of the selling price of such production to be paid by the respective purchasers to Massey and Associates.

[124]*124October 28,1938, and December 29,1939, the wells “spurted in.” In May, 1940, the first distribution of income was made to the partners.

September 23, 1940, is the date of an Amendment to the Certificate of Partnership of Massey and Associates. It recites that “it is desired to admit” Mayo, Wagner and Fourl as “additional” limited partners. Margot Mayo, assignee of Luther Mayo whose interest was the consideration for his quitclaim to the owners, signed the Certificate. Fourl and Wagner did not. There is no evidence that they even knew of its existence. From May, 1941, to the beginning of the receivership, Margot Mayo was paid the same as the limited partners of Massey and Associates. Fourl and Wagner received no payment.

August 10, 1950, Fourl died.

April 17, 1951, and June 26, 1953, Taylor and Massey, the general partners, died. Massey and Associates, according to its certificate of limited partnership, was dissolved by the death of the last general partner on June 26, 1953. Irma L. Taylor, one of the limited partners and the widow of Lees W. Taylor, one of the general partners, seeks by the instant action to have the partnership assets sold and distributed in accordance with the partnership agreement.

January 22, 1954, receivers were appointed to operate and sell the partnership business and distribute its income and assets.

The portion of the judgment which gives rise to appellant’s first claim of error on the part of the trial court is that “by whatever name they may be called,” the interests of Fourl, Wagner and Mayo are to be sold by the receivers along with the partnership assets and the interests of Fourl, Wagner and Mayo in the proceeds of the sale “are to be computed in the same way as the interests of the Limited partners.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
334 P.2d 201, 167 Cal. App. 2d 120, 10 Oil & Gas Rep. 261, 1959 Cal. App. LEXIS 2306, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-taylor-calctapp-1959.