Wortley v. Wood-Callahan Oil Co., Ltd.

112 P.2d 226, 17 Cal. 2d 762, 1941 Cal. LEXIS 311
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 21, 1941
DocketL. A. 17039
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 112 P.2d 226 (Wortley v. Wood-Callahan Oil Co., Ltd.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wortley v. Wood-Callahan Oil Co., Ltd., 112 P.2d 226, 17 Cal. 2d 762, 1941 Cal. LEXIS 311 (Cal. 1941).

Opinion

CURTIS, J.

Plaintiff and cross-defendant prosecutes this appeal from a judgment of the trial court decreeing that she, as administratrix of the Estate of S. S. Wortley, has no *763 right, title or interest in the proceeds from the oil production of a certain oil lease and that the holders of royalty interests under the lease are entitled to receive their proportionate shares of the proceeds derived from the sale of oil and gas produced.

The facts, as stipulated to, are as follows: On December 22, 1930, S. S. Wortley, now deceased, was the owner and holder of a leasehold estate in certain oil land. On that date Wortley obtained a permit from the Corporation Commissioner authorizing him to issue a total of forty-eight (48) one per cent participating oil interests or royalties; eight (8) one per cent interests to be issued in consideration for the rental of equipment and the remaining forty (40) one per cent interests for cash to the general public.

Thereafter, and prior to July 4, 1932, Wortley assigned to various persons a total of eighty (80) one per cent participating oil interests, ten (10) of which were assigned to the Petrol Corporation as collateral to secure the repayment of a loan. All such assignments over forty-eight (48) one per cent interests were in violation of the Corporation Commissioner’s permit. As a result of these assignments and the twenty (20) one per cent royalty interests retained by the land owner, Wortley divested himself of all of the proceeds from the production of oil and gas and held only the bare leasehold estate, the equipment on the property and a possibility of reverter in the ten (10) one per cent interests issued to the Petrol Corporation. On July 4, 1932, Wortley, by written assignment, assigned all of his interest in the lease to Wood-Callahan Oil Company. The assignment expressly reserved the rights of the royalty holders and provided that on repayment of the moneys due the Petrol Corporation, the ten (10) one per cent interests held by it as collateral security would revert to the Wood-Callahan Oil Company.

After the assignment of the lease and up to the time of Wortley’s death, the Wood-Callahan Oil Company distributed the proceeds (other than the land owners' royalties and certain other small per cent interests which were distributed directly) derived from the production of the oil well to Wortley, who, apparently acting as trustee or agent, distributed the proportionate sums to the various royalty holders. By this time the Petrol Corporation loan had been paid off *764 and the Wood-Callahan Oil Company was retaining that ten (10) per cent interest for itself.

After Wortley’s death appellant, as administratrix of his estate, demanded that Wood-Callahan Oil Company pay all of the proceeds from the production of the well to her. This demand was refused and the instant action was then instituted to determine the rights of all the parties concerned. Since the commencement of the action- the Wood-Callahan Oil Company has been paying the proceeds to a receiver, who is holding all sums received until final disposition of the cause.

The determinative question here is whether an administratrix of the estate of an original lessee of an oil and gas lease, claiming as a representative of the general creditors of the deceased lessee, has any right to or interest in the proceeds from the production of oil (oil royalties) under the lease when the lease itself, prior to the death of the original lessee, was assigned to another without reservation of any interest in the lessee. The ruling of the trial court that the administratrix had no interest in the proceeds from production is obviously correct.

The cross-defendants, other than the administratrix of Wortley’s estate, are claiming proportionate shares of the proceeds as assignees of royalty interests assigned to them by S. S. Wortley prior to the assignment of the lease. The Wood-Callahan Oil Company, as defendant and cross-complainant, is claiming a reversionary right to ten (10) one per cent interests, the loan to Petrol Corporation having been repaid. The Wood-Callahan Oil Company is further claiming the right, as assignee of the leasehold interest from Wortley, to distribute the proportionate shares of the proceeds of the oil and gas produced directly to the royalty holders. The plaintiff, as administratrix of Wortley’s estate, is claiming the proceeds from the royalties as a representative of the general creditors of the original leaseholder.

The assignment of the leasehold by Wortley to Wood-Callahan Oil Company was complete and without reservation of any kind as to Wortley. His estate, therefore, could have no possible interest in or claim to any property related to the leasehold. Yet appellant, as administratrix of this same estate, is claiming proceeds derived from the oil and gas lease. We are unable to conceive of any right or interest *765 that appellant could have that the deceased did not have. Appellant contends that she is not making a claim on the assumption that Wortley had any interest in the leasehold at the time of his death, but that she is claiming as a representative of the general creditors of deceased and in some way has greater rights in that capacity. It is true that an administratrix represents the creditors and that there is a fiduciary duty to collect all sums due the estate so that creditors’ claims against the estate may be satisfied. (Estate of Wood, 143 Cal. 522 [77 Pac. 481]; In re Heydenfeldt, 117 Cal. 551 [49 Pac. 713].) However, the administratrix can have no greater rights than the deceased had prior to his death. All of Wortley’s interests in the lease and royalties having been conveyed during his lifetime, no part of such interests could be reached by his heirs, personal representative or creditors. (Lahaney v. Lahaney, 208 Cal. 323 [281 Pac. 67]; Hibernia etc. Soc. v. London etc. Ins. Co., 138 Cal. 257 [71 Pac. 334].) The exception of conveyance by decedent in fraud of creditors is not involved in the instant case, for no such fraud is alleged.

Appellant points to the reservation in the lease reserving the rights of the royalty holders and somehow concludes that that reservation makes the assignment to Wood-Callahan Oil Company immaterial. The reservation protects the royalty holders as against the assignee, but there is no dispute here between the assignee, Wood-Callahan Oil Company, and the royalty holders. In fact, the Wood-Callahan Oil Company is attempting to and did succeed in getting an order from the lower court permitting payment of the proceeds to the royalty holders. Such reservation can give no greater rights to the administratrix of Wortley’s estate than he himself had, and he had none.

That the appellant does not recognize the significance or effect of the assignment of the lease is illustrated by her first contention, viz., that “purchasers of participating oil royalties or interests from a lessee of oil land, who is the issuer of such interests, are junior in right to the general creditors of such issuer’’. In support of this proposition the appellant cites the case of In re Lathrap, 61 Fed. (2d) 37, and Bank of America National Trust & Savings Association v. Fisher, 61 Fed. (2d) 53.

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Bluebook (online)
112 P.2d 226, 17 Cal. 2d 762, 1941 Cal. LEXIS 311, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wortley-v-wood-callahan-oil-co-ltd-cal-1941.