Wynne v. Gibson

1933 OK 667, 27 P.2d 849, 167 Okla. 114, 1933 Okla. LEXIS 41
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 12, 1933
Docket21312
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1933 OK 667 (Wynne v. Gibson) 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
Wynne v. Gibson, 1933 OK 667, 27 P.2d 849, 167 Okla. 114, 1933 Okla. LEXIS 41 (Okla. 1933).

Opinion

WELCH, J.

The plaintiff, H. C. Wynne, prosecutes this appeal from the district court of Okfuskee county, where he brought suit against the defendant, P. E. Gibson, to recover an undivided one-sixteenth interest in the oil and gas rights in certain described lands, and for an accounting for rents and profits collected by defendant on the one-sixteenth interest claimed by plaintiff.

In the district court, following trial to the court, there was judgment for the defendant quieting defendant’s title in and to the said one-sixteenth interest and canceling plaintiff’s grant of a one-sixteenth interest in said oil and gas rights.

We must here note the facts in detail. There was some conflict in the testimony, but the following facts are fairly discernible from all the evidence. W. R. Wilson purchased an undivided one-half interest in the oil and gas rights. It seems that when this one-half interest was purchased by Wilson the purchase was to be shared in by others, including the defendant, Gibson, and Charles Severs and Guy Fisher; that is, the others were to purchase certain portions of the one-half interest from Wilson and pay therefor. The evidence is conflicting as to whether the plaintiff knew of the purchase at the time, and was from the beginning to share in the purchase. At any rate, the conveyance of the one *115 iialf interest was taken in the name of Wilson. The money to pay for the one-half interest was borrowed from a bank of which the defendant, Gibson, was vice president. The note for the loan was signed by Charles Severs and indorsed by Wilson and Guy Fisher, but throughout the various transactions was considered by all the parties as the debt of Wilson. The note was not signed by the plaintiff, H. O. Wynne, nor by the defendant, and the bank had no lieu on the oil and gas rights purchased in the name of Wilson. Very shortly after the purchase, W. It. Wilson conveyed one-sixteenth interest to the defendant, Gibson, and one-sixteenth to the plaintiff. Probably, also, Wilson conveyed interests to Severs and to Fisher, and one to Duvall, but if these conveyances were ever in fact executed, they were never recorded, and were not introduced in evidence, and the evidence as to those conveyances is not wholly clear, and foi; that matter not of great importance, because there is no contention that any one owned any interest at any time, except Wilson and the plaintiff and defendant. For their one-sixteenth interest each, I he plaintiff and defendant paid in cash; the defendant paid his part in cash and it was paid to the bank and credited on the note. The plaintiff purchased his one-sixteenth interest through Fisher, to whom he paid the purchase price in cash. This sum was not paid to the bank on the note. The plaintiff contended he knew nothing of the note the bank had at that time, and this contention is not successfully refuted. The plaintiff’s grant of one-sixteenth interest was not recorded by him. This was either to leave the record title in Wilson for convenience in selling for the joint interest of all, as plaintiff contended, or was, by agreement or understanding, not to be recorded until the debt to the bank was paid, as defendant contended. At any rate, the plaintiff’s grant remained unrecorded, although the defendant at all times knew of the grant of the one-sixteenth interest to plaintiff, and its absence from the record is therefore unimportant in this suit between plaintiff and defendant.

Some eight months later, the debt to the bank remaining unpaid, and the defendant, Gibson, insisting upon its payment, W. H. Wilson, being in financial difficulties and unable to pay the note, executed to Gibson a grant of seven-sixteenths interest in the oil and gas rights. While this grant was not made to the bank, but to the defendant, Gibson, vice president of the bank, yet the trial record is clear that it was given as security or additional security for the debt due the bank. At the time of the execution of this grant, W. H. Wilson only owned six-sixteenths interest and did not own the seven-sixteenths interest which he purported to convey. It is not wholly clear why he referred to his interest then as seven-sixteenths interest, though it is suggested in the record that he had forgotten for the moment that lie had theretofore conveyed one-sixteenth interest to the plaintiff. However, no one contends that this grant conveyed seven-sixteenths interest to Gibson, as will appear from the further statement of facts.

Thereafter, the debt to the bank still remaining unpaid, and Wilson being unable to pay it, the defendant, Gibson, insisted that the oil and gas rights be sold to pay the debt to the bank. Wilson seemed to fully acquiesce in the thought that this should be done. It was defendant’s, Gibson’s, thought that, since the seven-sixteenths interest grant had been, in fact, made to defendant, Gibson, as additional security for the bank debt, Wilson should execute a general quit-claim to Gibson in order to bar any claim or thought that the seven-sixteenths interest grant should be treated as a mortgage or lien and foreclosed. This, also, Wilson was entirely willing to do, and thereupon Wilson executed his quitclaim deed fo the defendant, Gibson. By this quitclaim deed, Wilson, as it is clearly shown, intended to fully surrender his interest in the oil and gas rights in order that same might be held until a sale could be made and then sold to pay or to apply upon the bank debt. It is clear that it made no difference to Wilson to whom he surrendered his interest so long as it was taken and held and sold to apply on the bank debt, and he did not deliver this quitclaim deed to the defendant, Gibson, but delivered it to the plaintiff, Wynne, on Wynne’s request. This seems to have been to give plaintiff, Wynne, an opportunity to take over the remaining interest, in (.he oil and gas rights and pay the bank debt, lint Wynne did not elect to do this, and thereafter, at the request of the defendant, Gibson, the plaintiff, Wynne, delivered the quitclaim deed to -the defendant, Gibson. At the time of this delivery there was a conversation between plaintiff and defendant. There is some conflict in the testimony as to the minute details of this conversation, but. at any rate, the plaintiff, Wynne, delivered the quitclaim deed to the defendant, Gibson, thoroughly understanding that *116 it was executed by Wilson and received by Hibson in order that a sale might be made and the proceeds used to pay the bank debt. At that time it was the thought of the defendant,- Gibson, and he so stated to plaintiff, that it would be necessary to sell the entire one-half interest, or eight-sixteenths of the oil and gas rights, in order to pay the bank debt, and he, Gibson, feeling himself morally bound to pay the debt to the bank of which he was vice president, was willing to sacrifice his individual oue-sixt^enth interest, which he had bought and paid for, in order to pay (lie debt to the bank. He so stated in substance to the plaintiff, and the record clearly shows that the plaintiff, Wynne, consented, or was willing that his one-sixteenth interest, which he had bought and paid for, should likewise be sacrificed in order that the debt to the bank lie paid. However, upon the part of the plaintiff, Wynne, this consent was given clearly upon his understanding based upon the representations of the defendant, Gibson, that it would be necessary to sell the entire eight-sixteenths interest to pay the bank debt. And the quitclaim deed from Wilson to Gibson was then delivered to Gibson.

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Bluebook (online)
1933 OK 667, 27 P.2d 849, 167 Okla. 114, 1933 Okla. LEXIS 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wynne-v-gibson-okla-1933.