Yeager v. Graham

94 P.2d 317, 150 Kan. 411, 1939 Kan. LEXIS 301
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedOctober 7, 1939
DocketNo. 34,366
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 94 P.2d 317 (Yeager v. Graham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Yeager v. Graham, 94 P.2d 317, 150 Kan. 411, 1939 Kan. LEXIS 301 (kan 1939).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Thiele, J.:

The sole question presented by this appeal is whether the evidence at the trial warranted a finding that the Texokana Oil Company, hereafter referred to as the appellant, was a member of a mining partnership and as such liable to judgment.

[412]*412The plaintiff filed his petition alleging that he entered into a contract with certain named defendants, not including the appellant, under which he was to perform as a driller in exploring for oil or gas on the north half of the northwest quarter of section 4, township 33, range 2 west, in Sumner county, Kansas, this being the land on which drilling operations were to be performed, and being a part of a large block of acreage. There being no controversy with respect thereto, we omit reference to allegations as to work done. The prayer was for judgment against the defendants other than the appellant for the amount claimed due, and for the establishment and foreclosure of his mechanic’s lien. A receiver was appointed who took charge of the lease and equipment thereon. The appellant company filed its answer, alleging that it was the owner of certain drilling equipment used on the lease which it had rented to defendant L. M. Graham, that the equipment was not subject to a lien under the statutes of Kansas, and it prayed for an order that the equipment belonging to it be returned and delivered to it. To this answer the plaintiff replied that other defendants had entered into a joint adventure or copartnership with the appellant company by which appellant had agreed to and did furnish money and supplies, and that the same were furnished not as a rental matter but as a part of carrying on the operations in the search for oil and gas on the Dawson lease, being on the real estate above specifically described; that all of said defendants were to contribute in the joint venture to the end that a test would be made on the property and all of said parties be interested -in the development of the lease, in the costs and profits, if any, and to this end the appellant company furnished the goods, wares, equipment, etc., set forth in its answer, and thereby became liable to plaintiff and to intervenors who had filed claims for similar services. On the same day the answer was filed, on leave obtained, the plaintiff amended his petition to charge that the appellant company and other defendants had entered into a joint adventure and partnership for the purpose above mentioned and the appellant had agreed to furnish cash in the sum of $2,500, as plaintiff was informed, and various materials to be used in said development, and by reason of the copartnership and joint adventure had become bound to pay laborers and materialmen the respective amounts due to them for work, labor and supplies on the Dawson lease. Thereafter the appellant filed its anwser to the amendment to the petition denying that it had any interest in the [413]*413Dawson lease or that it was in any way ,a partner or copartner or interested in any way as a joint adventurer with other named defendants in the described Dawson lease.

At the trial evidence was introduced to which reference is hereafter made, and the trial court concluded that the equipment on the leasehold estate was placed there with intention of removal; that the development work was done and performed by a partnership composed of the appellant company and certain named defendants, and that the partnership and each member thereof, upon whom service of summons had been had, was liable for such labor and materials as were furnished and used upon the lease. The trial court further found that the title to the equipment described in the inventory of the receiver was vested in the partnership found to exist, the partnership being in the nature of a mining partnership or co-partnership for the purpose of development of the leasehold described and other leases in the surrounding vicinity and as described in the pleadings. The trial court further found that the leasehold estate was subject to cancellation for failure to further develop. On these findings the court denied a mechanic’s or labor lien, but awarded to the plaintiff and other claimants judgments for.specific amounts against the partnership composed of the appellant and certain named defendants. Other parts of the judgment need not be here noted.

Thereafter appellant moved for a new trial, the principal ground being that the finding it was a mining partner with other defendants was contrary to the evidence. This motion was denied. Thereafter it filed a petition for a rehearing of its motion for a new trial, alleging that certain witnesses, although subpoenaed, were unavoidably absent and their testimony was not available at the hearing of the motion for new trial, and that affidavits would be presented on the hearing. These affidavits were produced at the hearing of the petition and thereafter the prayer thereof was denied. Appeal to this court followed.

Under proper assignments of error appellant presents for our consideration three propositions, which we summarize: (1) That the appellees did not discharge the burden of establishing a mining partnership so far as attaching liability as a mining partner on the appellant is concerned; (2) the activities of the appellant in connection with drilling on the Dawson lease were insufficient to serve as the basis of the finding that it is chargeable as a mining partner, [414]*414and (3) the appellant, as a matter of law, cannot be held as a mining partner by reason of the nonexistence of the fundamental prerequisites of a mining partnership.

Discussion of these propositions requires a review of the evidence, but in that connection it may be remarked that limits of space preclude reference to the many citations of authority in the briefs or to a detailed recital of the evidence as disclosed in the abstracts. Insofar as the evidence is concerned, we need only recite it sufficiently to tell the story of the trial and to ascertain whether the facts disclosed are sufficient to support the findings of the trial court. We are not concerned with testimony from which the trial court might have reached a different conclusion.

One Westfall owned an oil and gas lease on the real estate specially described above and referred to as the Dawson lease, and he and one Fine owned other leases on lands in the vicinity. In September, 1936, they made a contract with L. M. Graham, one of the defendants, whereby they conveyed to Graham a one-half interest in the Dawson lease and agreed to convey to him certain other leases on over 400 acres on near-by lands and to deliver to him good and sufficient purchase agreements (so-called bottom-hole orders) of five oil companies, totaling $15,000, upon his complying with his agreement to drill a well at his own expense on the Dawson lease. L. M. Graham sold three of the leases covering 160 acres to the appellant for $3,000, to be paid when the Dawson well was completed. In carrying out his agreement, L. M. Graham had associated with him his brother, Frank Graham, who was the president of the appellant company, and his nephews, Dolisi Graham and Eugene Graham. The machinery with which to drill the well was obtained by L. M. Graham from the appellant. In his testimony he stated that he borrowed it and he also stated that he had purchased it and expected to pay for it with the proceeds of the bottom-hole orders upon completion of the well.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
94 P.2d 317, 150 Kan. 411, 1939 Kan. LEXIS 301, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yeager-v-graham-kan-1939.