Texas Co. v. Sloan

231 P.2d 255, 171 Kan. 182, 1951 Kan. LEXIS 244
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMay 12, 1951
Docket38,281
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 231 P.2d 255 (Texas Co. v. Sloan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Texas Co. v. Sloan, 231 P.2d 255, 171 Kan. 182, 1951 Kan. LEXIS 244 (kan 1951).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Wertz, J.:

This is an action for specific performance of an oral agreement to execute an oil and gas lease brought against the land owner individually and as guardian for his insane wife. The appeal to this court is from the order of the trial court sustaining defendant’s demurrers to plaintiff’s petition.

The petition as amended alleges in substance that the plaintiff, The Texas Company, a corporation, is duly authorized to do business in the state of Kansas; that the defendant Charles Sloan is a resident of Morton County, Kansas, and the duly acting and qualified guard *183 ian of the estate of Lizzie Sloan, his wife, an insane person; that Charles Sloan individually was at all times mentioned the owner in fee of 240 acres of land (describing same) located in Morton County, Kansas; that about November 1, 1949, defendant Charles Sloan entered into an oral agreement with the plaintiff whereby he agreed for a stipulated bonus consideration of $2400 to execute an oil and gas lease to plaintiff to be effective March 27, 1950, upon the conditions contained in the form of lease attached to the original petition; that as part of their oral agreement defendant Charles Sloan agreed to sell to the plaintiff, in his capacity of guardian of the estate of his wife Lizzie Sloan, an oil and gas lease covering the inchoate interest of his wife in said land, and agreed that he would individually and as guardian of Lizzie Sloan execute the instrument evidencing said oil and gas lease. In consideration of the promises of defendant Charles Sloan, plaintiff agreed to pay the attorney fees and court costs incident to approval of said lease by the probate court of Stafford County, Kansas. Pursuant to said oral agreement, Charles Sloan as guardian of the estate of Lizzie Sloan, on December 14, 1949, filed his petition in the probate court of Stafford County to lease the inchoate interest of his wife for oil and gas purposes and, following the procedure required by law, defendant Charles Sloan as guardian on January 9, 1950, sold to plaintiff an oil and gas lease covering the inchoate interest of his ward for a bonus of $240 to be credited, according to the agreement •of November 1, 1949, against the total stipulated bonus of $2400. The guardians sale was on the same date duly confirmed by the probate court. In the verified petition filed by defendant guardian, in connection with the probate court approval of the sale, there appears this reference to the agreement of November 1, 1949, that defendant “as an individual is executing an oil and gas lease upon his interest in said land; that your petitioner further believes it will be to the best interest of said insane person to lease her inchoate interest in said real estate for oil and gas purposes in conjunction with the lease executed by your petitioner as an individual”; that the guardian further states: “That the purchaser of the lease hereby agrees to pay the attorney fees and court costs in connection with this proceeding” and also: “That it would be more advantageous to lease said property at private leasing than public leasing of said property, and that this can also be done more advantageously because of the fact that your petitioner must join in said' lease individually.”

*184 In Ins report of sale, said guardian identifies the purchaser of the lease as this plaintiff. In the form of lease which was submitted to the probate court for approval, the lessors named therein are “Charles Sloan and Charles Sloan, as guardian of the Estate of Lizzie Sloan, an insane person”, and the lessee named is The Texas Company.

In reliance upon its agreement with defendant Sloan, and in confidence that Sloan would perform his obligations thereunder, plaintiff, on January 3, 1950, purchased an oil and gas lease from the owner of the East Half of the Northeast Quarter (EM of NEM) of said section 31, thereby acquiring except for the land owned by defendant Sloan involved in this action, a full oil and gas leasehold estate throughout the entire section.

Charles Sloan, both individually and as guardian, and contrary to his agreement, now refuses to execute an oil and gas lease to this plaintiff and refuses to accept the $2400 bonus consideration provided in said contract, which plaintiff tendered into the district court of Morton County, Kansas, for the benefit and use of defendants according to the terms of the oral agreement; that plaintiff has fully complied on his part with terms of the oral agreement, and has paid the attorney fees and court costs in connection with the probate sale; that in reliance upon said agreement plaintiff company has made irrevocable expenditures and changed its position, and that it is obligated under the guardians lease to perform a valid and subsisting contract. That among obligations so assumed by plaintiff were those arising from the implied covenant of orderly development of lands covered by the lease, including necessity of drilling protection wells, all enforceable by law against said lessee, plaintiff herein. That plaintiff stands ready and has at all times been ready, willing and able to pay defendants the agreed bonus consideration of $2400.

Plaintiff further alleges that by defendant’s fraudulent refusal to execute and deliver either the lease covering his vested fee interest or his wife’s inchoate interest or both, plaintiff has suffered a detriment, and its leases in section 31 have depreciated in value; that plaintiff will not be able to complete its drilling program, all of which will result in a loss to plaintiff that cannot be compensated in damages; and that plaintiff has no other leases in the area to use for development within 640-acre drilling units.

By this action plaintiff seeks to compel defendants to execute and *185 deliver said oil and gas lease covering both the fee and the inchoate interests of Charles Sloan and his insane spouse.

Defendants first contend that the district court of Morton County had no jurisdiction to determine the issues as against the defendant Charles Sloan as guardian of the estate of Lizzie Sloan, an insane person, for the reason that the probate court of Stafford County was exercising jurisdiction over the guardian and the subject matter of the action, and invite our attention to G. S. 1949, 59-801, which provides that probate courts shall be courts of record and within their respective counties shall have original jurisdiction to appoint and remove guardians for minors and incompetent persons, and to make all necessary orders relating to their estates, to direct and control the official acts of such guardians, and to exercise such equitable powers as may be necessary and proper fully to hear and determine any matter properly before such courts.

We cannot agree with defendants’ contention that the district court of Morton County was without jurisdiction over the guardian in this action. G. S. 1949, 59-2207 provides that any fiduciary of an estate may be sued in the district court of the county in which he was appointed or in which he resides. It is disclosed by the record that service of summons was had upon the guardian in his place of residence, Morton County, Kansas. This action is one for specific performance of an oral contract to execute and deliver an oil and gas lease as hereinbefore related.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
231 P.2d 255, 171 Kan. 182, 1951 Kan. LEXIS 244, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-co-v-sloan-kan-1951.