Thacher v. International Supply Co.

1936 OK 136, 54 P.2d 376, 176 Okla. 14, 1936 Okla. LEXIS 84
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 4, 1936
DocketNo. 24852.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 1936 OK 136 (Thacher v. International Supply Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thacher v. International Supply Co., 1936 OK 136, 54 P.2d 376, 176 Okla. 14, 1936 Okla. LEXIS 84 (Okla. 1936).

Opinion

PI-IELPS, J.

The plaintiff in error, on? of the defendants in the trial court, was the owner of an oil and gas lease. He will hereinafter be called owner. He entered into a written contract with Iglehart & Smyer, which firm later became Iglehart & Sutton, to drill a well on the lease for oil or gas. Iglehart & Sutton were also defendants in the trial court, and they will hereinafter he called drillers. The drillers were to complete and equip the well at their own expense, free of cost to the owner, and thei contract also provided that they should “keep said well and lease free from all liens and claims of any kind and character.” Thei consideration to be received by them was an undivided % interest in the entire lease. The contract was not recorded.

The owner (plaintiff in error) then executed an assignment of an undivided % interest in the lease to the drillers, and placed it in escrow in a bank, along with the contract, for delivery to the drillers upon their compliance with the terms of the contract The well was drilled to a depth satisfactory to the owner and then plugged back and became and still was at the time of the trial a paying gas well. During the drilling th® drillers purchased certain material from the defendants in error, International Supply Company and Producers Dumber Company, plaintiffs in the trial court, and those companies were two of the many plaintiffs and interveners in certain actions filed in the district, court for the foreclosure of liens of laborers and materialmen. The labor liens were all paid, and all of the actions then pending were consolidated for trial. The trial court, pursuant to the findings, conclusions of law, and recommendations of a referee, decreed that by reason of their failure to pay the laborers’ and materialmen’s hills the drillers had forfeited their rights against the owners, and that therefore they were not entitled to the % undivided interest in the lease, and left ownership of the entire lease in the plaintiff in error, Thacher. The drillers did not appeal, and that part of the judgment has become final. The trial court further adjudged that the defendants in error, the supply company and the lumber company, liava judgment against the drillers for the amounts of material furnished, and a lien for the satisfaction thereof 'against the entire leasehold estate of the owner.

In appealing, the principal contention of the owner is that the Hen rights of the supply company and lumber company, who are subcontractors, are measured by and can be no greater than the rights of the drillers, and that, since the drillers breached the contract in failing to pay the lien claims, and since said drillers thereby forfeited all claims against the estate, the subcontractors under them are not entitled to liens against the estate.

We are seldom presented with a more forceful or logical argument than that contained in tin briefs of the plaintiff in error but in spite of the persuasiveness thereof, we detect a clear distinction, hereinafter dis *16 cussed, between tbe fact situation in tbe authorities cited by him and tbe fact situation in tbe instant case. Uppermost among tbe controlling factors and principles herein, and not to be disregarded except for the most urgent reasons, are tbe facts that tbis is an equity action and that if we reverse tbe judgment of tbe trial court in its entirety, the plaintiff in error will be entire owner of a producing lease and well, absolutely free of cost to him and' largely at tbe cost of tbe defendants in error. In tbe very beginning, it is manifest that if such a result -may legally and consistently be avoided, such avoidance is tbe duty of a court of equity.

Tbe cases cited by plaintiff in error do, in general terms, announce the rule that where there is no primary liability existing from the lease owner to the original contractor, there can be no lien in favor of a subcontractor under said original contractor. Christy v. Union Oil & Gas Co., 28 Okla. 324, 114 P. 740; Cameron Refining Co. v. Jerman, 110 Okla. 272, 238 P. 437; Brenner Oil Co. v. Dickason-Goodman Lumber Co., 108 Okla. 257, 230 P. 44; Carson v. Waller, 127 Okla. 186, 260 P. 72; Josey Oil Co. v. Ledden, 162 Okla. 262, 20 P. (2d) 582; Murray Tool & Supply Co. v. Bridgeport Machine Co., 164 Okla. 136, 23 P. (2d) 165. But in each and all of such cases the drilled abandoned operations and the owner received no benefit from the venture or from the contract. The principal purpose of the contract in those cases, was never accomplished. In the instant case the drillers did not abandon performance of the principal purpose of the contract; the well was and, so far as we know, still is a producing, paying well. When this action ¡was tried there were thousands of dollars in the hands of the receiver therefor. The owner has received that for which he contracted, except that some of the expenses for its procurement have not been met. It is very clear that the well itself may meet those expenses, so that the burden thereof will not be thrown upon the owner, without any compensating income, such as would have been the case if the well had not been completed, as in the cases cited above. The owner testified that he was satisfied with the manner of performance of the contract in all particulars except that of the obligation to pay the remaining claims. As stated above, the drillers did not abandon the main project, and 'apparently they did not seek in the trial court any adjudication that would have obtained their % interest in the lease after full settlement oí the lien claims from their % share of the oil runs. We express-no opinion of whether they would have been entitled to such conditional relief. Nevertheless, it is illustrative of the point here being stressed, — that is, that from the viewpoint of the owner, and the interest and benefits derivable by him, the contract is completed in the phase thereof in which he was most interested, the production of oil or gas. The result of this decision will place him in exactly that situation for which he contracted.

The plaintiff in error argues that if thei Judgment of the trial court is affirmed, the result will be the complete impairment of his contract with Iglehart. The plaintiff in error says;

“Tbe original contract contains three essential pro-visions — the ‘non-lien provision’, tbe provision, ‘to pay in property’, and tbe condition ‘precedent to the vesting- of title’. If tbis tribunal bolds that each of tbe above provisions are nullities, then what remains of tbe contract? If property owners cannot make such contracts, what sort of contracts can they make and have enforced? The mechanics’ liens statutes are .made, when claims come clearly within them, for (lie purpose of enabling strangers to the title of property to subject it to sale for the debts of others. If each of the provisions of the contract be unenforceable, then the right to contract is reduced to a delusion and a snare.”

The answer to this contention is that there will be no interference with the enforcement of the contract, as between the parties thereto. We do not hold that the three quoted provisions of the contract are nullities and unenforceable. In fact, tbe trial court has considered those provisions and has adjudged that Iglehart, by reason of his failure to- observe the nonli-en provision, has forfeited all right to enforcement of the contract to convey him title to % of the lease. That part of the judgment has become final.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1936 OK 136, 54 P.2d 376, 176 Okla. 14, 1936 Okla. LEXIS 84, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thacher-v-international-supply-co-okla-1936.