Virnig v. Smith

90 N.W.2d 241, 252 Minn. 363, 9 Oil & Gas Rep. 190, 1958 Minn. LEXIS 619
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedMay 9, 1958
Docket37,372
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 90 N.W.2d 241 (Virnig v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Virnig v. Smith, 90 N.W.2d 241, 252 Minn. 363, 9 Oil & Gas Rep. 190, 1958 Minn. LEXIS 619 (Mich. 1958).

Opinion

Matson, Justice.

Appeal from a judgment rescinding a contract for the sale of an interest in an oil well to be drilled and awarding plaintiff a recovery of the purchase money. 1

Although the action was in part based on fraud, we are not concerned with that issue since the trial court directed a verdict for the plaintiff on the sole ground that defendants, who admittedly were not licensed under Blue Sky Law, had, as a matter of law, sold unregistered leasehold interests in violation of M. S. A. 80.30, which provides:

“No person shall sell to any person in this state any oil or gas lands, or any lands represented to contain or to be a prospect for oil or gas, or any interest therein or thereunder or royalties therefrom, unless and until these lands, interests, or royalties shall have been first registered for sale by the division.” 2

Defendants, asserting that the trial court erred in so directing a verdict, allege that they were not required to register the sale of the oil lease interests, or to be licensed as dealers or salesmen under the Blue *365 Sky Act, for two reasons; first, because the written agreement between the seller, defendant Smith, and the various purchasers of a leasehold interest created between the parties the relationship of joint adventurers, and second, because each sale transaction, under § 80.35, constituted an “isolated sale” not made or occurring in the course of repeated or successive sales.

If the evidence, when viewed in the light most favorable to the defendants, will not sustain a finding that plaintiff purchased the oil lease interests as a party to a joint adventure, or a finding that the sale transaction constituted nothing more than an isolated sale as distinguished from one constituting a part of repeated or successive sales, the trial court’s order directing a verdict was proper.

We turn to the facts. Defendant Crawford E. Smith, a resident of Minot, North Dakota, in April 1954, entered into a contract with the California Standard Company whereby the latter assigned to him its entire petroleum and natural gas interests in a certain tract of land in Saskatchewan, Canada. In consideration for the assignment to him, Smith agreed to drill a test well thereon at his own cost. If he failed to strike oil California Standard agreed to pay Smith $15,000 as dry-hole money in return for certain data obtained in the course of drilling the well.

In the latter part of July 1954, defendant Frank Krause, solely of his own volition, visited Smith at Minot. The men had never met before. After explaining that he needed $30,000 to finance the expense of drilling the test well, Smith entered into an agreement with Krause whereby the latter agreed to raise said sum by selling a 1-percent interest in the well for $600 to prospective purchasers. Under this arrangement the $30,000 would be raised by selling a 50-percent interest in the well to other parties. The remaining 50 percent was to be divided whereby Smith retained 40 percent for himself and Krause would receive 10 percent for his services. Smith provided Krause with a number of individual contracts — already signed by him as the designated seller —which the latter could fill out when he sold a percentage interest to his acquaintances and friends.

Krause, who had been in the jewelry business at Blue Earth, *366 Minnesota, returned to that area to sell the 1-percent interests to his business acquaintances and friends. He sold a 1-percent interest to Virnig on August 4, 1954, for $600 and filled out one of the contracts at that time. About the same time he sold similar 1-percent interests to at least 11 other persons in the Blue Earth area. The purchasers— and they were designated as such in the contracts — were approached by Krause individually. Clearly, each purchaser was induced to enter into the contract without knowing who the other purchasers were. The evidence supports only one conclusion; namely, that there was no concert of action, association of effort, or any understanding whatever by and among the individual purchasers as to the acquirement of an interest in Smith’s oil lease.

The sales contract, giving each purchaser a 1-percent interest in the oil lease for $600 (subject to the conditions of Smith’s agreement with the California Standard Company), provided that the seller, Smith, should drill the test well to a specified depth without further cost to the purchaser, except that in the event it became necessary to set pipe in the well the purchaser should pay his proportionate share of the completion, operation, and production of such well plus, also, his proportionate share of additional wells subsequently drilled. If the test well proved to be a dry hole, the seller was to pay the cost of its plugging and abandonment.

The evidence compels a finding that none of the purchasers were told of the conditions in the contract between Smith and California Standard, and further that no disclosure whatever was made to any of them that Smith was entitled to $15,000 dry-hole money; that he had reserved for himself a 40-percent interest in the lease; of that Krause was to be paid 10-percent interest for obtaining purchasers of a 1-percent interest.

After the test well turned out to be a dry hole, 12 of the individual purchasers brought separate actions against Krause and Smith for a rescission of the contracts and a refund of their purchase payments. After the trial court directed a verdict for the plaintiff, judgment was entered and this appeal followed.

In the light of the foregoing facts, we turn to the first alleged defense; namely, that the evidence would sustain a finding of a joint *367 adventure so as to bring the transaction outside the Blue Sky Law. It is, of course, true that, if parties of their own independent volition associate themselves together as joint adventurers for the purpose of acquiring oil properties, or any interest therein, and pursuant to their joint effort they do purchase for themselves oil properties or interests, the transaction of purchase and sale so initiated and consummated by their mutual efforts and design falls outside the prohibitions and the registration and licensing provisions of the Blue Sky Law. 3 The mere fact, however, that a sale of oil properties was made to joint adventurers does not of itself avoid the Blue Sky Law since the controlling question is whether the joint adventurers of their own accord associated themselves together for the purpose of acquiring such oil properties or interests. Did any one, or all, of the identical purchase contracts involved herein establish the status of joint adventurers by the purchasers, or by them in association with the defendants? The answer to that question lies in ascertaining whether the purchase contract by its terms, in the light of the circumstances under which the parties were induced to enter into the same, reveals the essential elements of a‘joint adventure for the purpose of purchasing oil lease interests.

This court, in Rehnberg v. Minnesota Homes, Inc. 236 Minn. 230, 52 N. W. (2d) 454, 4

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Bluebook (online)
90 N.W.2d 241, 252 Minn. 363, 9 Oil & Gas Rep. 190, 1958 Minn. LEXIS 619, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/virnig-v-smith-minn-1958.