Wilson v. Thelen

100 P.2d 923, 110 Mont. 305, 1940 Mont. LEXIS 87
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 18, 1940
DocketNo. 7,997.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 100 P.2d 923 (Wilson v. Thelen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilson v. Thelen, 100 P.2d 923, 110 Mont. 305, 1940 Mont. LEXIS 87 (Mo. 1940).

Opinions

MR. JUSTICE ANGSTMAN

delivered the opinion of the court.

Plaintiff brought this action to recover possession of an undivided one-third interest in certain oil and gas leaseholds *307 covering certain described property in Toole county, and for an accounting of the income therefrom alleged to have been received by defendant. The important allegations of the complaint are to this general effect:

That on or about the 24th of January, 1924, plaintiff, S. C. Ferdig and H. L. Lowe entered into a joint adventure whereby they acquired the lands in controversy here, each to hold an undivided one-third interest in and to the property; that pursuant to the agreement plaintiff advanced to S. C. Ferdig $10,-000 for the purpose of acquiring such lands; that Ferdig acquired the property but took it in the name of the Sylvester Oil Company, a common-law trust in which the three alleged joint owners were each to own one-third of the units; that thereafter S. C. Ferdig organized a corporation known as the Ferdig Oil Company, to which the lands in question were transferred with the understanding that the joint owners would own an equal interest in the corporation.

The complaint alleges that defendant purchased at judicial sale the property of the Ferdig Oil Company with notice and knowledge that plaintiff was the owner of a one-third interest therein. It sets forth that plaintiff instituted an action in the federal district court of Wyoming on the 6th day of August, 1929, against S. G. Ferdig and others, including the Sylvester Oil Company, the Ferdig Oil Company and the defendant Thelen, wherein plaintiff set out the foregoing facts and alleged that after trial he was successful in that action and by the decree of that court was awarded a one-third interest in and to the property in question. The court in the instant action found for defendant, and plaintiff appealed.

The facts of the case, so far as necessary to determine the points of law involved, may be stated by summarizing the findings of the court and by reciting the substance of documentary evidence. It may be said at the outset that the principal objection to the findings is that they are contrary to the decree entered by the federal court in Wyoming, which will hereafter be considered more in detail. There is no contention that the findings in this case are not supported by substantial evidence, *308 if we assume that evidence was admissible in this action which had the effect of impeaching the findings in the Wyoming decree. Before discussing the action in Wyoming we shall briefly summarize the salient facts found by the eonrt in this action as supplemented by record and undisputed evidence. Those facts are as follows:

On January 4, 1924, S. C. Ferdig acquired an interest in an oil and gas lease on part of the lands in controversy here-and, needing funds with which to make payments thereon and with which to acquire other lands and drill for oil thereon, made and acknowledged a declaration of trust on January 24, wherein he declared himself trustee of the trust known as Sylvester Oil Company. It declared that he, being the owner of the above-mentioned interest, offered to sell it to himself as trustee for 10,000 unit certificates. It provided for the issuance of 40,000 units, 10,000 to be issued to S. C. Ferdig for the property mentioned above and 6,000 additional to be held and owned by him for organizing and managing the trust, and the remainder to be sold for $10 per unit. The trustee was vested with authority to make contracts for the development, operation and disposition of the property, and to manage, control and supervise the business, property and affairs of the syndicate. It provided that the money paid to the trust should be expended in developing the property and acquiring new property and for other expenses of the syndicate. The trust provided that no unit-holder should have any legal title to, or equitable estate in the trust property, but that the stockholder’s interest should consist of an interest in the money to arise from the sale or other disposition of the property. The trust authorized the trustee to organize a corporation in place of the syndicate if he deemed it for the best interest of the syndicate; and that in the event he did so each unitholder should receive corporate stock on the same basis as he held certificates in the syndicate. The record discloses that pursuant to this authority S. G. Ferdig caused a corporation to be formed known as the Ferdig Oil Company. To this corporation the above-mentioned property, being part of the property in question here, was transferred on April 8, *309 1926, and the syndicate went out of existence. The other land involved herein never was owned by the Sylvester Oil Company.

Pursuant'to an agreement between H. L. Lowe, then a resident of Wisconsin, and S. C. Ferdig, the former sold and disposed of certificates in the Sylvester Oil Company, the proceeds of which were sent to Ferdig for use in developing the oil land. Plaintiff, at the instigation of Lowe, assisted the latter'with the sale of stock certificates and likewise transmitted the proceeds to Ferdig.

Ferdig caused two other corporations to be created, known as the Cody Petroleum Company and the Yellowstone Petroleum Company. The Cody company was an operating and producing company, and the Yellowstone company was the holding company. Ferdig was the moving spirit in all three corporations. Neither the Cody nor the Yellowstone company owned any lands in Montana. The Yellowstone company owned 82 per cent, of the stock of the Ferdig Oil Company. The Cody company sold its assets in August, 1929, and thereafter owned no property. At that time it owed Thelen about $19,000, which was “switched over” to the Yellowstone Petroleum Company. The latter company later lost all of its property save the stock of the Ferdig Oil Company. In order to protect his rights to the claim against the Yellowstone Petroleum Company, Thelen advanced money to the Ferdig company to pay taxes and settle lawsuits against it.

On August 6, 1929, plaintiff Wilson brought an action in the federal court of Wyoming against S. C. Ferdig, I. E. Fer-dig, Sylvester Oil Company, Sylvester Ferdig, Trustee of Sylvester Oil Company, Ferdig Oil Company, Yellowstone Petroleum Company, H. L. Lowe and J. N. Thelen. Lowe was not served with process and made no appearance in the action. Thelen was dismissed from the action on the merits with his costs. The decree in that action provided that Wilson was entitled to one-third of 16,000 units in the Sylvester Oil Company, and additional units in consideration of the payment of $10,000, and that he was entitled to have delivered to him in exchange therefor shares of stock in the Ferdig Oil Company *310 of like value, and also shares of the Yellowstone Petroleum Company of like value, and also was entitled to. dividends thereon, and that Wilson was also the owner of a one-third interest in and to lands and leases acquired by S. C. Ferdig.

The court in the instant action found that the Wyoming action was local and binding only as to property within the jurisdiction of the court, and that Lowe was a necessary party to the action so far as an adjudication of title to property was concerned.

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Bluebook (online)
100 P.2d 923, 110 Mont. 305, 1940 Mont. LEXIS 87, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-thelen-mont-1940.