Tenneco Oil Company, a Corporation v. Jim Joiner, D/B/A Joiner Oil Co.

696 F.2d 768, 75 Oil & Gas Rep. 348, 1982 U.S. App. LEXIS 22966
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedDecember 30, 1982
Docket81-1198
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 696 F.2d 768 (Tenneco Oil Company, a Corporation v. Jim Joiner, D/B/A Joiner Oil Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tenneco Oil Company, a Corporation v. Jim Joiner, D/B/A Joiner Oil Co., 696 F.2d 768, 75 Oil & Gas Rep. 348, 1982 U.S. App. LEXIS 22966 (10th Cir. 1982).

Opinions

WILLIAM E. DOYLE, Circuit Judge.

The adversaries in the above case are Tenneco Oil Company, Plaintiff, and a land man employed by Tenneco, Jim Joiner. The dispute has arisen over alleged mishandling by Joiner of leases and bonus money. The relief sought by Tenneco is first, for damages based upon common law fraud with respect to the handling of the leases, and a judgment for constructive trusts based upon leases which, following his termination, Joiner obtained for his own use and benefit. The allegation as to this latter is that based on the prior employment, and the confidential material, there was a fiduciary relationship between Tenneco and Joiner and that he had no right to utilize the information growing out of his employment for his own benefit.

At the end of Tenneco’s case the trial court granted the defendant’s motion for a directed verdict as to the Tenneco claim in which it had sought damages for fraud or tortious breach of contract. As to the first claim the trial court granted a judgment in favor of defendant denying constructive trusts. The trial court did not make findings of fact and conclusions of law as required by Rule 52 of the Rules of Civil Procedure in a trial to the court.

The jurisdiction is based upon diversity, Tenneco being a Delaware corporation and having its principal place of business in Houston, Texas; Joiner, on the other hand, is a resident and citizen of Oklahoma.

[770]*770I.

Discussion of the Basic Facts and Issues

Joiner was employed to secure leases on behalf of Tenneco and to purchase those leases in his name until the lease block or buy outline was substantially acquired. This, according to Thompson, an expert presented by Tenneco, is a standard practice in the gas and oil industry and used by many independent oil operators, and most, if not all, of the major companies. The purpose is protection of the secrecy of the information on which the leasing effort is based.

In the first part of October, 1978, Tenneco entered into an employment agreement with Joiner under which the latter would acquire on Tenneco’s behalf all of the oil and gas leases available within the area outlined on Tenneco’s map or buy outline. This material was delivered to Joiner by one Steve Hord, a landman with Tenneco. It was the end product of lengthy research and study. Tenneco had told Joiner that its geologists considered the area to be profitable for oil and gas production. The allegedly confidential information furnished to Joiner, created, according to Tenneco, a fiduciary relationship which precluded Joiner from taking personal advantage of the confidential information gained from the employment. Joiner did not cease activities after termination of his employment with Tenneco. Instead, he used the map plus the information gained while he was in the employ of Tenneco to obtain thirty leases for himself. These actions constitute the factual outline for the constructive trust claim.

As indicated, there is a second principal claim in the case, that of common law fraud. Tenneco refers to it as tortious breach of contract. This arises from $137,-265.97 which Joiner obtained from Tenneco in the four months of his employment over and above the $125.00 per day plus expenses. Tenneco claims that this money was charged to Tenneco by Joiner’s representation to Tenneco that it was reimbursement of sums paid by Joiner to lessors as bonuses for leases. Tenneco’s position is that Joiner was fully compensated by payment for day work and expenses incurred in leasing; a total of $38,756.97 was paid from the first part of October through January. Eleven Thousand, Two Hundred Sixteen and 60/100 was said to have been paid based on day work and expense statements of Joiner. This was in addition to the $137,265.97, which he allegedly billed as bonus costs paid to the lessors.

Joiner does not seriously dispute the basic facts. He has acknowledged that he had received from Tenneco the $137,265.97 over and above the amount paid to the individual lessors of the leases taken in the name of Joiner Oil Company and assigned to Tenneco. He has also acknowledged that Tenneco Oil Company paid Joiner $125.00 per day salary plus expenses incurred in leasing, a total amount of $38,756.97 from and including October, 1978 through January, 1979. Of this amount, $11,216.60 represented the day work and expense statements of Jim Joiner. Also admitted by Joiner was that after the termination of his agreement with Tenneco Oil Company, he secured oil and gas leases within the area outlined by Tenneco Oil Company which was the subject of the agreement between the plaintiff and the defendant, and such leases subsequently acquired in this area are set forth in one of the exhibits. As mentioned, there was a total of thirty such oil and gas leases which Joiner retained for himself. Thus, Joiner has agreed that after his contract with Tenneco was terminated (it ended after a short life of four months) he nevertheless proceeded to use the Tenneco map and the information contained therein to obtain the mentioned thirty leases for himself.

It is the contention of Tenneco that the obtaining of the $137,000.00 plus dollars and the post employment obtaining of the leases was wholly unauthorized and resulted from deceitful actions by Joiner. Tenneco alleges that Joiner misrepresented that he had paid this sum to the lessors and that he was entitled to reimbursement but he had not.

The defendant has not been required to offer any evidence as yet so we are not entirely sure as to the position he takes; [771]*771however, we gain some inkling of it from the brief filed on his behalf. Emphasis there is placed on the fact that the letter employing him was a very brief writing. But the trial judge remarked that a writing should not be necessary in the oil and gas leasing business because a man’s word should be sufficient in this area.

While no issue is taken as to the contention made by plaintiff regarding the $137,-265.97, defendant offers sort of a confession and avoidance. He maintains that he was told by Mr. Hord of Tenneco that there was a $400,000.00 allotment for the project, and that if the money was not spent before the end of the year, it would have been returned to Houston’s office. Seemingly this fact would permit him to obtain a part of it. He also says that he was authorized to get some people to help him, which he did. But the evidence shows that Tenneco paid the compensation which was paid to these employees. He also described prior employment; this employment had a duration of six weeks during the previous summer. Joiner also complains that he was asked to submit drafts. He refused to do so, and after that they allowed him to file bills. Apparently this is in answer to the obtaining of the $137,000.00 on the representation that he was required to pay that sum out in order to obtain the leases. .

We describe briefly the facts submitted to us by Joiner but with the realization that the facts related have not been given under oath and are not a part of the record. Thus, it could not enter into this decision. We refer to it because it is the only factual commitment which Joiner has offered.

A number of witnesses testified on behalf of Tenneco. Included were Steven Andrew Hord, a professional landman who was employed by Tenneco; Frank Thompson, a geologist who was employed by Tenneco, and who testified regarding the program leading to the leasing. Bertha Hager, who also was employed by Tenneco as a land technician; her responsibility was to pay the brokers, to reimburse them for bonus money; Edward L.

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Bluebook (online)
696 F.2d 768, 75 Oil & Gas Rep. 348, 1982 U.S. App. LEXIS 22966, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tenneco-oil-company-a-corporation-v-jim-joiner-dba-joiner-oil-co-ca10-1982.