Watchorn v. Roxana Petroleum Corporation

5 F.2d 636, 1925 U.S. App. LEXIS 2738
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedMarch 7, 1925
Docket6471
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 5 F.2d 636 (Watchorn v. Roxana Petroleum Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Watchorn v. Roxana Petroleum Corporation, 5 F.2d 636, 1925 U.S. App. LEXIS 2738 (8th Cir. 1925).

Opinion

KENYON, Circuit Judge

(after stating the facts as above). Plaintiff claims the contract was an agreement upon the part of defendant to reimburse plaintiff’s assignor in the amount of $250,000 out of a fund to be created by due and proper development for gas of the various tracts of land covered by said eontraet, in case plaintiff did not complete the purchase of the oil rights as provided therein; that defendant failed to make such development, and consequently is liable for the full amount of the $250,000 paid to him under the terms of the eontraet.

Defendant claims that the contract created no debt as to him; that the $250,000 was in fact paid for an option to secure the oil rights in the premises, and not advanced for *639 the purpose of developing gas; that the production of gas is the contingency upon which any obligation of defendant to pay rests; that is not an agreement to develop or repay as an alternative; that defendant’s agreement is to duly and properly develop the lands for gas, and that if he has failed so to do plaintiff’s action should be one for damages based on breach of contract and not to recover the $250,000; that the $250,000 could be recovered only if plaintiff shows that, had defendant made proper development of the premises for gas, funds would have been derived therefrom, out of the first 50 per cent, of which, less rents and royalties, plaintiff could have paid said amount to defendant. There was no effort made in the ease so to do.

The court held that the contract was an obligation to develop the premises for gas as a means of repaying the plaintiff money paid to defendant; that nothing less than actual drilling on each parcel of land covered by the contract would constitute a compliance therewith. It refused to permit the defendant to introduce evidence of experts as to what in their judgment would be due and proper development of the lands for gas,' and held that it was not necessary for plaintiff to prove damages; that-the evidence failed to show due and proper development; and that the whole sum of $250,000 paid to defendant by plaintiff’s assignor under the terms of the contract, by virtue of defendant’s failure to make such development, became a debt due and owing to plaintiff from defendant. The court’s view of the construction of the contract is clearly shown in a discussion between the court and counsel as follows:

“By the Court: I think that is clear now, and that testimony is refused. In other .words, this contract requires development, and it seems to me that without actual development you didn’t perform the contract.
“By Mr. Johnson: In view of that statement, what should we have developed?
“By the Court: All of this land.
“Mr. Johnson: We should have drilled a hole on each of the tracts of land?
“By the Court: Certainly. No one could know whether gas was on any tract of land without development. You can’t take the plaintiff’s money and keep it and say that it wouldn’t have been of any value to develop this land and rested at that. You are required to develop the land. I think your offer is complete.” (Record, p. 225.)

Some controversy is suggested in argument as to the theory on which recovery is sought. During the progress of the trial, question arising as to this, counsel for plaintiff' stated :

“Mr. Young: Your honor, during Mr. Embry’s argument it occurred to me there was some confusion regarding this matter. We are not suing here for 'an accounting. We are not suing for what that contract entitled us to if we conceived that Mr. Wateh-om complied with his contract. We are suing for failure to comply, and therefore we say there is an absolute obligation to pay the full amount now.”

In discussing the nature of defendant’s liability, counsel for plaintiff, on page 115 of their brief, state: “Where one has received money upon the faith of a contract which he thereafter fails to perform, the party who has advanced the money has the right to rescind the contract and sue for the money so paid. The law in such ease creates an implied contract or obligation to return the money.” And again, on page 117 of the brief: “Cases, therefore, which deal with the subject of the defendant’s right in ease of a breach of contract, to recover the .consideration paid on rescission of the contract, or to sue for damages on affirmance thereof, have no bearing upon the specific question presented here.” A number of times it is claimed in plaintiff’s brief that this is a suit for money had and received. Possibly plaintiff’s theory is best expressed by the statement, on page 119 of its brief, as follows: “The defendant having received the money and having failed to perform the contract, the law will create the implied obligation to return it, and a suit in the nature of a common-law action in assumpsit may be maintained. The plaintiff in such a case does not have to rely upon any specific provision in the contract making the defendant personally liable for the debt; the law creates the liability on account of defendant’s failure to perform his part of the contract. This would be true even if the $250,000 obligation had not arisen out of an actual advancement of that sum.” Again, page 120: “That being so, it is certainly clear that this implied obligation will arise upon defendant’s breach of contract where he has actually received the money sued for and has agreed that said money shall be returned out of a fund to be created by him.”

The nature of the action is important as bearing on the legal principles to be applied. This suit cannot succeed as an action upon a rescission of the contract to recover the original consideration as money had and received, for a number of reasons, viz.i

*640 (a) Plaintiff’s assignor received, and defendant parted with, valuable rights under the contract. Por six months plaintiff or its assignor had the privilege of experimenting on, and testing, the lands to see whether oil could be developed. Defendant was excluded from making any arrangements with regard to said property as to oil or gas rights from June 30, 1916, to January 1, 1917. The $250,000 would have been a part of the purchase price for the oil rights if the option to take them had been exercised by the payment of $750,000 additional. Whatever the rights secured by this payment may be designated, they were in the nature of an option or a payment for the privilege of securing an option, and were of possible great value. The letter, Exhibit A in the record, from Mr. Gracht, representing and authorized to speak for the Roxana Petroleum Company, to Mr. Watchom, throws light, not only upon the supposed value of the gas rights, but also upon the nature of the contract it was intending to make. In it appears this:

“On a payment of $250,000.00 cash made within one week after the acceptance of this agreement, Roxana Petroleum Company shall receive an option to purchase the oil rights on the leaseholds above referred to, with the exception of the E. % of N. W. % of 4 — 22—3 E. (which 80 acres is wholly excluded from this deal), for an additional payment in cash of $750,000, to be exercised within six months from the date of acceptance of said option.” (Record, p. 41.)

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Bluebook (online)
5 F.2d 636, 1925 U.S. App. LEXIS 2738, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/watchorn-v-roxana-petroleum-corporation-ca8-1925.