Wewoka Petroleum Corporation v. Gilmore

1957 OK 227, 319 P.2d 285, 8 Oil & Gas Rep. 632, 1957 Okla. LEXIS 614
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 1, 1957
Docket37517
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 1957 OK 227 (Wewoka Petroleum Corporation v. Gilmore) 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
Wewoka Petroleum Corporation v. Gilmore, 1957 OK 227, 319 P.2d 285, 8 Oil & Gas Rep. 632, 1957 Okla. LEXIS 614 (Okla. 1957).

Opinions

PER CURIAM.

This action was initially instituted against the individuals who comprised a committee of stockholders as successors to the. assets of the Wewoka Petroleum Corporation, which assets had been transferred to them to effectuate a distribution upon dissolution of the corporation. Henceforth, the parties will be designated according to their status in the trial court: the defendant in error, as plaintiff; the Wewoka Petroleum Corporation, a dissolved Oklahoma corporation, as the corporation; and [287]*287the individual defendants comprising the committee, as defendants. . .

After the action was commenced, there being diversity of citizenship between plaintiff and defendants, defendants caused the case to be removed to the federal court. There the defendants objected to the failure of plaintiff to make the corporation a party defendant. Their motion to dismiss was sustained by the court upon the defendants’ theory that the corporation was an indispensable party. The pertinent portion of the court’s order is as follows:

“ * * * after consideration of the briefs, the Court is of the opinion that the motion is good and should be sustained. In the brief filed herein on behalf of the plaintiff, plaintiff requests that, in the event the motion is sustained, he be allowed to file an amended complaint making the We-woka Petroleum Corporation a party defendant. The court is of the opinion that the plaintiff’s request should be granted, and the effect of the making of the Wewoka Petroleum Corporation a party will be determined after the amended complaint is filed and the Wewoka Petroleum Corporation is a party defendant.
“It is therefore ordered that the defendants’ Motion to Dismiss be and the same is sustained.
“It is further ordered that plaintiff is allowed fifteen days in which to file an amended complaint making the’We-woka Petroleum Corporation a party defendant.”

The corporation was made a party defendant and thereafter, diversity no longer existing, the case was remanded to the state court in which it had originated.

The plaintiff’s amended petition alleges that the corporation has been dissolved voluntarily and all its assets transferred to the defendants to distribute to holders of notes of the corporation and thereafter to the stockholders in liquidation of their capital stock; that defendants, the shareholders’ committee, own an interest in producing oil and gas leases and the proceeds of oil purchased from the operator thereof; that plaintiff was employed by the corporation prior to its dissolution to sell the leases and that pursuant thereto he procured a purchaser to whom the leases were sold; that plaintiff’s fee was not agreed upon but .that 5'%. of the purchase price of $150,000 is a reasonable commission ; that the corporation and the purchaser executed a valid and enforceable contract of sale upon which plaintiff’s fee became due, but that payment has been refused upon demand; that in the process of dissolution of the corporation plaintiff’s debt was not paid and he was not given notice of such dissolution; that he did not learn of the dissolution until approximately four months afterwards. This action was filed shortly after plaintiff alleged he first had knowledge of the dissolution. The defendant’s answer concedes their status as a committee of stockholders and successors to the corporate assets, generally denies the plaintiff’s allegations, asserts that the Federal Court dismissal was final as to them, and that the claim is an unliquidated demand which has not been reduced to judgment against the corporation as a necessary prerequisite to an action against defendants. The corporation pleaded a general ■ denial and admitted its incorporation and dissolution as .alleged, denied a contract with’ plaintiff, admitted the execution of a contract of sale of the leases with the purchaser as alleged, but further alleged that the contract was never consummated because of a defect in its title known to plaintiff. It also pleaded that plaintiff was estopped to claim a fee on the contract by virtue of certain letters sent to the corporation by him, and that his claim is barred because not presented prior to its dissolution.

The evidence sufficiently discloses that, after preliminary negotiations, plaintiff was authorized to. sell ■ the leases for the corporation; that there was no agreement as to the amount of his commission; that he procured a purchaser, a Mr. Rose, with whom the corporation executed a contract [288]*288of sale of the leases for $150,000; that the contract of sale expressly provided that the purchaser would drill two additional wells, that the leases were subject to an override royalty interest in a Mr. Ligón from whom the corporation had purchased the leases, and that the corporation would pay plaintiff’s commission; that Mr. Rose ultimately refused to consummate the contract because of an alleged title defect consisting of some obligation which Ligón was asserting by an instrument filed for record; that the asserted obligation due Ligón required the drilling of one or two wells on the leases; that the corporation acceded to the purchaser’s refusal to comply with the contract and immediately, without notifying plaintiff, sold the leases to its original grantor, Mr. Ligón, for the same price as that contained in the Rose contract; that no commission was paid plaintiff; that shortly afterwards the corporation voluntarily dissolved and transferred its assets to defendants to complete its liquidation. Pending the action the trial court restrained Ligón and the oil-runs purchaser from disposing of the funds held by them to the credit of the defendants. After judgment for plaintiff, the corporation and defendants executed a supersedeas bond; and the court, upon stipulation and request of the parties, thereupon dissolved the restraining order and released the impounded funds to defendants. We will discuss the various assignments of error and any further pertinent facts in the order that the assignments of error are presented by the briefs.

Even though seeming to acknowledge that an order of remand is not reviewable (28 U.S.C.A. § 1447(d)), the defendants assert that the federal court lost jurisdiction over them by its order of dismissal which could not be re-established by the remand. We must, of course, agree that we cannot review the order of remand, and so the argument on the correctness of that order when diversity was destroyed cannot prevail. Furthermore, we do not attach the significance attributed by the defendants to the federal court’s order made on the motion to dismiss for lack of an indispensable party. It seems to be no more than a provisional alternative order with which the plaintiff complied by an amendment of his complaint. Under the federal rules leave to amend pleadings is freely granted; and in that regard as to this problem, it has been noted that where it appears that the objection may be obviated by amendment, the court may dismiss with leave to amend. See Barron & Holtzoff, Federal Practice and Procedure, Ch. 7, Sec. 444. This, we think, is the purport of the order upon which defendants now urge that the action terminated. Contrary to the argument that dismissal was mandatory, in a removed action, remand was the proper order when diversity was destroyed. Donaldson v. Werblow, D.C., 140 F.Supp. 244; Clark v. Safeway Stores, Inc., D.C., 117 F.Supp. 583. This situation is not unlike State ex rel. Merritt Oil Corporation v. District Court of Sixth Judicial District in and for Converse County, 44 Wyo.

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Wewoka Petroleum Corporation v. Gilmore
1957 OK 227 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1957)

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Bluebook (online)
1957 OK 227, 319 P.2d 285, 8 Oil & Gas Rep. 632, 1957 Okla. LEXIS 614, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wewoka-petroleum-corporation-v-gilmore-okla-1957.