Uptegraft v. Dome Petroleum Corp.

1988 OK 129, 764 P.2d 1350, 102 Oil & Gas Rep. 557, 1988 Okla. LEXIS 160, 1988 WL 122530
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 15, 1988
Docket59039, 59045
StatusPublished
Cited by54 cases

This text of 1988 OK 129 (Uptegraft v. Dome Petroleum Corp.) 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
Uptegraft v. Dome Petroleum Corp., 1988 OK 129, 764 P.2d 1350, 102 Oil & Gas Rep. 557, 1988 Okla. LEXIS 160, 1988 WL 122530 (Okla. 1988).

Opinion

HARGRAVE, Vice Chief Justice.

Harold and Barbara Uptegraft brought this action against Dome Petroleum Corporation and Atlas Oil, Inc., in the District Court of Oklahoma County. The petition alleged a single cause of action against each defendant. The cause of action against Atlas alleged plaintiffs were induced to give up their rights in two oil wells while uninformed of certain facts concerning established production they allege Atlas was required to disclose to them. The plaintiffs sought rescission of a farm-out and lease assignments in addition to an accounting of production, referable to those two wells, called the James and Bross wells.

The second cause of action was brought against Dome Petroleum Corporation. It alleged Dome owed them a duty to fully disclose the production information, and that presenting the lease assignments for execution without full disclosure amounted to fraud for which Dome was liable in damages.

In their answers both defendants made a general denial and alleged the plaintiffs executed the assignments and their adoption of the preceding farmout was made in the face of actual or constructive knowledge of the facts. It is alleged this prior knowledge estops them from rescinding the contracts. Atlas Oil, Inc., filed an amended answer in which it alleges that it assigned part of its interest to others in reliance on plaintiffs’ acknowledgement of the farmout and execution of the lease assignment. Atlas alleged those absent parties are necessary parties. As a counter-claim Atlas sought to compel plaintiffs to execute assignments to it of wells drilled after the James and Bross wells.

After a trial to the court the judgment was entered rescinding plaintiffs’ execution of the farmout and lease assignments to the James and Bross wells. Judgment was rendered in favor of Dome Petroleum, exonerating it on the fraud claim. Additionally, the judgment required Atlas to account for all production and permitting plaintiffs to participate in all drilling activi *1352 ty of Atlas in the prospect, including those wells already drilled. Atlas’ counter-claim to compel execution of assignments earned after the James and Bross wells was denied.

The factual basis for this lawsuit began with a grant from Ferguson Oil & Gas to the Uptegrafts of a 2% leasehold interest in lands located in Logan County known as the Southeast Cresent Prospect. This instrument also created interests in other parties. Ferguson Oil & Gas sold the remainder of the leasehold to Dome Petroleum. Atlas approached Dome about development of this prospect, and on February 18, 1981 Dome executed a checkerboard farmout to Atlas. It provided that Dome would assign its interest in 80-acre tracts on which wells were completed by Atlas. This instrument represented without warranty that Dome possessed the entire leasehold. Both Atlas and Dome had actual notice of plaintiffs’ 2% leasehold interest.

The leases applicable to the agreement had assorted expiration dates. The earliest was April 30, 1981. On March 26, 1981 Atlas completed the James 1—3 on one tract expiring on that early date, and the Bross 1—4 was completed on another such tract on April 18, 1981. Both wells were commercially productive and were completed.

After the two wells were completed Dome (plaintiffs’ co-tenant) initiated contact with the Uptegrafts seeking their acquiescence to the farmout. The contact was by letter dated May 18, 1981, and it states:

Dome has recently agreed to a checkerboard Farmout to Atlas Drilling Company. A copy of the Farmout Agreement is enclosed for your review.
Advantages to Dome, and our various partners are, evaluation of production in those units Atlas drills, and protection of leases which would have expired before we could have drilled in this area.
To indicate inclusion of your working interest in the Farmout Agreement please execute two (2) copies of this letter and return them to the undersigned. Prompt attention will be appreciated due to lease expiration.
Please call if there are any questions or if I can be of assistance. Sincerely, DOME PETROLEUM CORP., s/Joe Powell, Joe Powell, Landman.

This communication is immutably misleading by reason of failure to inform of current production, while stating an advantage of the arrangement is evaluation of the leases by drilling. The leases had already been evaluated by drilling. Further the leases were already perpetuated by production prior to the time the farmout had been mailed to plaintiffs.

Earlier, plaintiffs had participated in a marginal producer in the prospect and thus the farmout did not seem attractive to plaintiffs in the absence of knowledge that, at the time, there were currently two producing wells on the property. Plaintiffs contend they would have participated in those wells and future drilling activities had they possessed this knowledge. The plaintiffs talked to a geologist about the checkerboard farmout arrangement and executed it. During mid-June - of that year Dome sent plaintiffs’ lease assignments to Atlas for tracts covered by the James and Bross wells. These were executed and returned by the plaintiffs, and corrected assignments were signed and returned in July. Mr. Uptegraft learned later that the wells had been drilled and contacted Atlas requesting them to recognize his interest. Atlas refused and this action ensued. This action was originally assigned to the Court of Appeals. After an opinion was written, both plaintiffs and Atlas presented a writ of certiorari in this Court. Certiorari has previously been granted and the cause is submitted here on the original briefs.

The appellant Atlas Oil first argues as reversible error the failure to join as defendants all parties having a recorded interest in the property that would be affected by the judgment. Atlas had assigned 75% of its interest acquired under the farmout to five other entities. These assignments were filed two months prior to the filing of this action. This defense was first raised in the amended answer which *1353 was filed July 28,1982; the day the trial to the court began. The trial court ruled from the bench that these parties were not necessary and allowed the trial to proceed. Appellant cites only Stanolind Oil & Gas Co. v. McKinnis, 203 Okl. 587, 224 P.2d 600 (1950), as authority for this proposition of error. That authority deals with mis-joinder of parties (joinder of too many parties) and not a defect of parties, as argued here, which is failure to join a necessary party. Under 12 O.S. § 236 (since repealed, Okla.Sess.Laws 1984 c. 164 § 32, effective November 1, 1984), and the supplanting provision, 12 O.S. 1984 Supp. § 2019, these other interest holders are not indispensable parties. The plaintiffs are here seeking to recover their 2% interest in this leasehold from the defendant Atlas. Inasmuch as the record shows that Atlas is still possessed of an interest sufficient to satisfy any judgment recovered by the plaintiffs, it is beyond dispute that the other interest holders are not indispensable parties.

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1988 OK 129, 764 P.2d 1350, 102 Oil & Gas Rep. 557, 1988 Okla. LEXIS 160, 1988 WL 122530, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/uptegraft-v-dome-petroleum-corp-okla-1988.