Worley v. Carroll

1925 OK 187, 237 P. 120, 110 Okla. 199, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 812
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 3, 1925
Docket15072
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 1925 OK 187 (Worley v. Carroll) 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
Worley v. Carroll, 1925 OK 187, 237 P. 120, 110 Okla. 199, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 812 (Okla. 1925).

Opinion

Opinion by

LYONS, C.

Parties will ue referred to as in the court below. Defendant was the owner of an oil and gas mining lease on the allotment, of a Kaw Indian, said lease being on departmental form. Defendant desired to secure a drilling contract on the lands covered by said lease and employed the plainiliff as a broker to find a responsible party to drill a well on the premises covered by said lease.

The contract contains the following material provisions:

First. The owner does hereby agree with the said agent it hat for the period of 60 days from the date hereof he shall have the sole and exclusive right to negotiate for a drilling contract with some responsible party to drill a well on. said premises covered by said lease ánd that she will enter iuito and execute any such contract that such agent may agree upon; provided, only that said owner is to receive in any such contract not less than an undivided one-sixteenth overriding royalty from such well and such premises covered by such lease in all oil and gas produced thereon, over and above the on ^-eighth royalty to be paid to ¡the lessor.

Second. That in ihe event the broker is unable to make a drilling contract on a royalty basis, then the owner agrees to execute any such contract which the agent may arrange with a responsible party on a. working interest basis; provided, that the owner is to have and retain mot less than a threte-sixteenth working interest.

Third. Itf the broker shall produce a responsible party ready, able, and willing to enter into such contract, either on a royalty basis or a working interest basis, the owner agrees to give the broker on^-fourth of the royalty or one-fourth of such working interest which is given to or retained by the owner under the terms of the contingent drilling contract.

Fourth. That if the broker or the party with whom he may arrange a drilling contract can procure donations toward the expense of drilling, either as offset money, dry hole money, or in any other manner, the owner is not to participate therein, but the broker may have the same in addition to his one-fourth interest.

This contract requires construction, and it seems to us to be very plain upon its face that it is a brokerage contract -giving an exclusive agency for -a period of 66 days, and that the broker must produce a responsible party ready, able, and willing to contract within said period of 60 days.

*200 Tlio evidonee in tlio case discloses that on the 28tli day of June, 1922, which appears to ’be the 60th day, the broker had thla proposition pending with two parties, one, the Slcelly Oil Company, and the othei, tlio ICnid Drilling Company. A Mr. Lee, who was acting on behalf of the ICnid Company, and mho designated himself as an authorized agent, had agreed on behalf of said company to take, the proposition if Shelly did not. Skelly’s decision on the matter was announced on the morning of -June 29th, and he decided not to take said proposition. Lee thereupon entered into a drilling wntraot on 'behalf of the Enid Drilling Company, and this contract mqt the requirements of the brokerage contract. On June 29th, when the written! contract. o£ the Enid Drilling Company was exhibited to the defendant for execution, she refused to proceed further with the matter and declined to execute said contract.

There is testimony in the record disclosing that Lee, on June 28, received his authorization from Thatcher, president of l he Enid Drilling Company, to consummate a contract on bqhalf of said Enid Drilling Company, and thereafter, within a day or two, the Enid Drilling Company executed a formal written authorization by its president and secretary, in the authorized mode in which a contract is executed by a corporation. This ratification appears on page 362 of thq case-made and is as follows:

“Whereas, a certain contract was entered into on the 28th, day of June, 1922, between the Enid Drilling Company and Evelyn Carroll, concerning the drilling of a well on the south half of the southwest quarter of section 16, township. 27 north, range five east, in Kay county, Oklahoma, and, whereas said contract being signed Enid Drilling Company, by H. W. Lee, authorized agent:
“Now, therefore, we, the said Enid Drilling Company, hereby ratify the said contract and acceipt the same in the manner and to fhc same effect as if said contract had been signed by the president and secretary of the Enid Drilling Company, and in all things confirm and ratify the said contract and accept the obligations therein contained and defined on the part of the Enid Drilling Company, and agree to carry out said contract according to its tenor and effect,
"Dated this 2Sth day of June, 1922.
“Enid Drilling Company,
“W. L. Thatcher, President.
“Ait test:
"E. D. Thatcher, Secretary'.”

On June 28, 1922, the; date of the Osage sale, the following conversation took place between the plaintiff and the defendant, on the train going back to Pawhuska:

“Q. You may answer the question? A. On June 28, 1922.
“Q. Where mas that, Mr. Worley? A. Pawhuska, Okla.
“Q. Wh^n did you notify Mrs. Carroll of that fact? A. On the train -going back to Pawhuska, Okla., on the day of June 28, 1922.
“Q. What did you state to her about it? A. I told her I had entered into an agreement with the Enid Drilling Company with which to drill a well on this lease, on terms in accordance with my contract giving her a 1-64 overriding royalty — 1-16 overriding royalty, as per my contract with her.
“Q. What did she say at that time? (Objected to as incompetent, irrelevant, and immaterial. Objection overruled. Exception.) A. She said that was all right, she would accept it. The Court: When was that? A. On June 28th, going back on the train from Pawhuska.
“Q. Why are you positive that was the date, Mr. Wiorley? A. Because of the day that the Osage sale was held at Pawhuska. The Court: June 28th? A. Yes, sir.”

The trial court sustained a demurrer to the evidence, and the defendant contends that the judgment of the trial court was correct for two reasons:

(1) That tbe evidence fails to disclose performance of ■ the contract by the plaintiff.

(2) That the contract is void and against public potlicy.

We ¡think it clearly appears from 'the evidence set forth and referred to that the contract was performed if this testimony is to be taken as true. The contract merely required the plaintiff to produce a responsible! party witjhin the 60 day period, able, ready, and willing to drill on the terms specified. Such a party mas produced and the fact thereof was communicated to the defendant. We are unable to conclude that because the acceptance of the .proposition by the Enid Drilling Company was contingent upon Skelly’s rejection thereof that such 'Situation is material, in view of the fact that Skelly rejected said proposition and that the Enid Drilling Company forthwith.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1925 OK 187, 237 P. 120, 110 Okla. 199, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 812, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/worley-v-carroll-okla-1925.