United States v. Pan-American Petroleum Co.

45 F.2d 821, 1930 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1548
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. California
DecidedNovember 10, 1930
DocketNo. B 115 M
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 45 F.2d 821 (United States v. Pan-American Petroleum Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Pan-American Petroleum Co., 45 F.2d 821, 1930 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1548 (S.D. Cal. 1930).

Opinion

NORCROSS, District Judge.

This is a suit in equity to cancel three certain leases of land within United States Naval Reserve No. 1 in Kern county, Cal., and for an accounting of the oil and gas produced therefrom. A fourth lease is involved by reason of being a consolidation of the other three. Two of the three original leases were granted directly to defendant, the other.to W. R. Ramsey, and by him conveyed to defendant.

The leases cover a portion of sections 1 and 2, township 31 south, range 24 east, and have a combined total acreage slightly in excess of that of a section of land. The leases were referred to upon the trial and are so designated in the briefs as the E, G, and I leases, and will be so referred to in this opinion. The two leases in section 1 are of date December 14,1921. The G lease in section 2 is of date February' 8,1922. The consolidated lease is of date July 28,1922.

For a more general description of the leases in question it may be said that the G lease covers substantially the south half of the north half of section 2; the I, lease the south half of the northwest quarter of section 1 and the E lease the south half and a portion of the south half of the north half of section 1. The leases are immediately south of three offset leases owned by defendant designated as the F, H, and D leases, covering a strip nine hundred feet wide along the north line of sections 1 and 2 and bordering on sections 35 and 36 in township 30, which latter sections are without the Reserve and are the property of the Standard Oil Company of California. The F and D leases were granted originally to defendant. The H lease was granted to the United Midway Oil Company, and by it conveyed to W. R. Ramsey, who conveyed it to defendant at the time of his conveyance of the I lease. The F, H, and D leases are not and have not been questioned in this or any other suit.

Plaintiff bases its right of recovery on grounds both of fraud and illegality. It is the contention of the government that the said leases are tainted with the same fraud considered and determined by this court in the case of United States v. Pan-American Petroleum Co., 6 F.(2d) 43, as affirmed on appeal in (C. C. A.) 9 F.(2d) 761, and 273 U. S. 456, 47 S. Ct. 416, 71 L. Ed. 734. The case last cited upon the trial and in the briefs has been referred to as the first Pan-American Case, and will be so referred to in this opinion.

In the ease of the I lease it is further contended that it -was also the result of a subsidiary conspiracy between W. R. Ramsey and defendant; and in the case of the G lease of a similar subsidiary conspiracy between R. J. White and H. T. Coffin and defendant.

With respect to illegality, it is plaintiff’s contention that neither the Secretary of the Interior nor the Secretary of the Navy had authority to make any such leases for the purposes for which the leases in question were made, and in the way they were made.

The defenses relied upon may be summarized as three:

(1) That the leases in question were not given as a result of or in any way influenced by fraud or conspiracy to procure them.

(2) That the leases have been ratified by Congress.

[823]*823(3) That the judgment in the first Pan-American Case was upon the same cause of action alleged in this suit, and a bar to recovery by plaintiff in this action.

The issues in respect to fraud, actual or constructive, growing out of the transactions between Albert B. Pall, as Secretary of the Interior, and Edward Doheney, then president of the defendant company, as determined in the first Pan-American Case, in so far as they may have application, are recognized by the parlies to this suit as res adjudicata. It will he unnecessaiy therefore to make other than a brief reference to that ease, as the facts presented and law controlling are fully set out in the findings and opinion of the trial court and in the opinions of the appellate courts cited supra. Suffice it now to say that, the said first Pan American Case was instituted in this court by hill of complaint filed March 17, 1924, by special counsel appointed by the President and confirmed by the Senate, in pursuance of Public Resolution No. 4 of the Sixty-Eighth Congress, approved by the President February 8, 1924 (43 Stat. 5). That action was brought to set aside two contracts and two leases, which leases were dated respectively June 5 and December 11, 1922, and covered the major portions of Naval Petroleum Reserves Nos. 1 and 2, and embraced a total of approximately 32,000 acres. That case was tried in October, 1924, and reached final decision by the Supreme Court of the United States on February 28, 1927.

The present suit was commenced on September 3, 1924, by direction of the Attorney General following a letter of the then Secretary of the Navy Curtis D. Wilbur to the then Secretary of the Interior Hubert Work, and by the latter referred to the Attorney General. The original bill of complaint filed sought to cancel the three biases upon the ground that they had been executed by the Department of the Interior instead of the Navy Department, and had not been granted as a result of competitive bidding. To the original bill defendant filed an answer which, in addition to controverting certain allegations, set np as an affirmative defense thát the leases had been ratified and approved by Congress. Subsequent to the final decision by the Supreme Court of the United States in the first Pan-American Case and the final termination of the ease of United States v. Belridge Oil Co. (C. C. A.) 13 F.(2d) 562, by denial of certiorari by the Supreme Court November 29, 1926, 273 U. S. 733, 47 S. Ct. 242, 71 L. Ed. 864, the plaintiff, on July 28, 1927, filed an amended bill of eomplaint, wherein for the first time it was charged that the three leases here in question wore given as a part of and subject to the same fraud found in the first Pan-American Case. Defendant filed its answer to the amended bill on September 26, 1927, denying the existence of fraud in the making of the leases, and as affirmative defenses setting up ratification by Congress and that plaintiff had split its cause of action.

It was staled at the trial, and restated in the briefs for defendant, that subsequent to filing- the answer to the amended bill there was a change of stock ownership of defendant company, the Doheney interests being purchased by the Richfield Oil Company of California. This stock transfer was followed by a change in attorneys representing defendant. It is not, however, contended that the change in stock ownership affects the issues in any way.

By stipulation of counsel the evidence and proceedings in the first Pan-American Case are to he considered in this case; also that the evidence taken before, the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia upon the trial of Fall and Doheney for conspiracy, and evidence taken on hearings before the Senate Committee on Public Lands investigating the matter of the Naval Petroleum Reserves, in so far as pertinent to the issues in this case and offered by either party, is to be considered in determining the issues involved in this ease.

For a proper understanding of the questions presented, it is important to consider the history of the F, H, and D leases as well a.s those now involved, together with a brief reference to the1 establishment of the Naval Petroleum .Reserve No. 1, and certain acts of Congress and official action taken by department heads concerning its administration.

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Related

McDuffie v. United States
19 F. Supp. 239 (Court of Claims, 1937)
United States v. Pan-American Petroleum Co.
55 F.2d 753 (Ninth Circuit, 1932)

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45 F.2d 821, 1930 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1548, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-pan-american-petroleum-co-casd-1930.