Wagoner Oil & Gas Co. v. Marlow

1929 OK 150, 278 P. 294, 137 Okla. 116, 1929 Okla. LEXIS 410
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 26, 1929
Docket18898
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 1929 OK 150 (Wagoner Oil & Gas Co. v. Marlow) 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
Wagoner Oil & Gas Co. v. Marlow, 1929 OK 150, 278 P. 294, 137 Okla. 116, 1929 Okla. LEXIS 410 (Okla. 1929).

Opinion

ANDREWS, J.

J. P. and Ellen Marlow, husband and wife, defendants in error, hereinafter referred to as plaintiffs, instituted this suit in the district court of Wlagoner county against Wagoner Oil & Gas Company, plaintiff in error, hereinafter referred to as "the trust,” by filing therein their petition on the 11th day of February, 1922, in which they alleged that they were the owners of certain lands therein described.

It was further alleged therein that John H. Scriba and other persons, on or prior to February 17, 1929, formed a trust under th'e firm name and .style of the Wagoned Oil & Gas Company, and under such name entered into the business of prospecting for' oil and gas, and appointed the said John H. Scriba as manager and active representative of the trust and delegated to him authority to contract for and buy and sell oil and gas leases, and prospect for oil and gas upon leases so taken and held in the name of said trust, and further agreed among thems’elves that said John H. Scriba could institute and prosecute or defend'any and all actions brought by or against them in their business so conducted as the business of said trust, and' that summons issued against the Wagon'er Oil & Gas Company in any action might be served upon *118 the said Jolm PI. Scriba and tina Llie samj would be due notice to them and each of them, and that any judgment rendered against the trust after summons upon John H. Scriba would be a binding judgment, conclusive against all of said parties.

Petitioners further alleged that in 1918 they executed and delivered to one Volpel a producer’s 88 oil and gas lease on a part of the land; that Volpel sold and assigned this lease to the Missouri Pippin Oil & Gas Company, and that in 1920 that company sold and assigned this lease to the trust; that in 1920 they leased the remainder of the land to one Kingham under a producer’s 88 form, which in 1920 was sold and assigned by him to the trust.

The petitioners alleged that the trust enured on said lands and drilled wells under the provisions of these leases and had production therefrom to the amount of 125 bafirels of oil per day; that hy the terms of said leases the trust agreed to deliver to them, free of cost, in the pipe line to which said wells might be connected, the equal one-eighth part of all oil produced and saved from the leased premises; that the wells were drilled according to the terms and tenor of said leases; that by the terms of said leases it was agreed that the trust would bury all pipe lines below plow depth and pay all damages caused by its operation to grfowing crops on said land, and would commit no unnecessary waste thereon; that the trust had breached the covenants of said leases by failing, refusing, and neglecting to pay to plaintiffs or deliver over to plaintiffs free of cost in the pipe line to which said weds were connected, the. undivided one-eighth part of all oil produced and saved from the leased premises and had converted to its own use the one-eighth partt of said oil so produced and th'e proceeds thereof, and had failed, refused, and neglected to account to plaintiff^ for same; that the trust had caused numerous strings of pipe line to b'e laid upon said premises and had failed, refused, and neglected to bury the samé below plow depth, although requested by plaintiffs so to do: that the trust had further breached the covenant of said leases in that it had damaged the growing crops of plaintiffs and had wantonly and uselessly permitted a refuse from the weds to be scattered over approximately 49 acres of said land, thereby destroying the same for agricultural purposes, and bv reason thereof had been guilty of waste to the damage of plaintiffs in the sum of $1.000.

There was the further allegation that plainlius had been damag'ed $1,000 by the refusal of the trust to turn over to them their royalties, and $1,000 for injury to said real estate, and that by reason of said acts of the trust and its negligence and carelessness it had forfeited all rights to further operation of said leases and the same should be canceled.

The leases were attached to the petition.

The prayer was for cancellation of said leases and resto|r|ation to' plaintiffs of the complete possession of said premises and enjoining the trust and all persons interested therein from setting up any right, title, claim, or interest in and to said real estate by virtue of said leases, together with judgment for costs and all other proper relief.

Attention is called to the fact that the petition nowherje alleged insolvency of the trust, or want of an adequate remedy at law, and 'Contained no offer to do equity.

Summons was issued for the trust and contained a direction to serve same on John H. Scriba, manager, and service thereof was so made.

Six days after the filing of said petition and on the 17th day of February, 1922, there was filed by W. O. Rittenhouse, who is one of the defendants in error, as attorney for the trust, an answer admitting ownership of the land by plaintiffs; ownership of the leases and operation thereof by the trust; possession by the trust under the leases; that the trust had drilled wells under the terms of the leases and that plaintiffs wer'e entitled to one-eighth of the. oil as alleged by plaintiffs; and denying all other allegations, specifically denying conversion of any part of the oil by the trust, and that it had failed and refused to account to plaintiffs therefor; specifically denying any waste or any damage to plaintiffs and denying breach of any of the provisions of the leases, and that plaintiffs were entitled to cancellation and forfeiture thereof. The prayer was that plaintiffs take nothing and that the trust have judgment for its costs.

Thereafter, by proper order, the Wagoner Refining Company was made a party defendant, and plaintiffs filed their amendment to the petition. This amendment alleged all of the matters and things alleged in the petition, and in addition thereto that the trust had delivered all of the products from the leasehold to the refining company, as the Wagoner Refining Company will hereinafter be referred to, without the consent of plaintiffs and under an agreement and with the intent to cheat and defraud plaintiffs out *119 of th'e oil and gas products; that an accounting had never been had, and that plaintiffs were entitled to an accounting and for the value of the oil against each of the defendants, and that defendants had converted said oil. Prayer was for judgment against each defendant for the value of said oil products, together with all matters prayed for in the original petition.

The refining company answered toy general denial. On the 18th day of November, 1922, plaintiffs filed their Verified petition for a receiver, alleging:

“That said oil properties are now producing an average of 60 barrels of oil per day and have been since the third day of Jan-uaiiv, 1922. That during all of this time the defendants herein have failed, refused and neglected to pay thej plaintiffs their one-eighth royalty from said wells. That said Wagoner Oil & Gas Company has during all of said time squandered and dissipated the proceeds of said wells, and during the five months last past has, with the Wagoner Refining Company, converted all of the proceeds of said wells to their own use.

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Bluebook (online)
1929 OK 150, 278 P. 294, 137 Okla. 116, 1929 Okla. LEXIS 410, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wagoner-oil-gas-co-v-marlow-okla-1929.