35 S.W.2d 753 | Tex. App. | 1931
Appellants, V. W. Allen, P. C. Jeffress, and F. B. Robinson, instituted this suit in the district court of Tarrant county against appellees, L. E. Lasseter, H. W. Stoneham, H. A. Lasseter, Z. T. Lasseter, Stella Dewell, J. D. Collett, and C. A. O'Keefe, and for cause of action alleged that on the 21st of January, 1924, appellant V. W. Allen and Mrs. Anna Robinson entered into a written contract with appellee L. E. Lasseter; that said contract recited that said Lasseter owned an oil and gas lease on 5,120 acres of State University lands in Crane county, Tex., more particularly described as sections 25, 26, 35, 36, 37, 38, 47, and 48 in block 30 of said lands; that he desired to subdivide said lease into 20-acre tracts and offer the same for sale to the public; that said Allen and Robinson, for the purpose of enabling him to finance such sale, advanced to him the sum of $250; that in consideration thereof he assigned to said Allen and Robinson one-half of all moneys received from such sales, less actual expenses incurred, that he should turn over to them the first $250 received from such sales, and that he should retain for himself the next $250 so received; that thereafter all proceeds of such sales, less actual expenses, should be divided equally, one half thereof being paid to said Allen and Robinson and the other half retained by him; that if for any reason whatever all said leases should not be sold, he should assign an undivided one-half interest in such unsold remainder to said Alien and Robinson. Appellants further alleged that the said Mrs. Anna Robinson was dead and that appellant F. B. Robinson was her sole heir and had succeeded to all the rights acquired by her under said contract. Appellants further alleged that thereafter, on the 2d day of February, 1924, appellant P. C. Jeffress entered into a written contract with said L. E. Lasseter; that said contract was in all respects identical with the Allen and Robinson contract aforesaid, except that said Jeffress was to furnish only $125 and was to have only a one-fourth interest in the unsold leases
Appellants alleged that they had paid to Lasseter the sums aforesaid and had fully complied with their respective obligations under said contracts; that they thereby became invested with an undivided three-fourths interest in said leases, in all sums received from sales thereof, and in all oil and gas produced therefrom by or for said Lasseter; that said Lasseter took said leases either in his own name or in the name of H. A. Lasseter, Z. T. Lasseter, or Stella Dewell, but that in fact all said leases belonged to him, or to him and H. W. Stoneham jointly. Appellants further alleged that the entire control and disposition of said leases was undertaken by L. E. Lasseter and that he sold a part of the same and received the proceeds; that he made various contracts affecting the same and derived therefrom large profits amounting to more than $500,000; and that he denied that they had any right, title, or interest therein. Appellants *754 further alleged that because the exclusive control and management of said leases were confided to said Lasseter, he became a trustee for them and each of them. Appellants further alleged that said leases had at that time a value of more than $1,000,000; that large quantities of oil and gas were then being produced therefrom; that the oil production alone exceeded 20,000 barrels per day.
Appellants further alleged that theretofore on May 31, 1927, they had filed a suit in the district court against said L. E. Lasseter for an accounting of the profits derived from the transactions aforesaid, and that they were induced by misrepresentation, concealment, and fraud to accept the sum of $15,000 in compromise and full settlement of said suit and all their claims under said contracts. The specific allegations of misrepresentation, concealment, and fraud will be recited in connection with the discussion of the same in the opinion herein.
Appellants prayed for the appointment of an auditor, for examination and report by him of all Lasseter's transactions in connection with said leases, for the appointment of a receiver, and for judgment for such sums of money as they might be found entitled, and for general relief.
Said Stoneham, made a party defendant in the court below, filed no answer and was subsequently dismissed from this suit. Appellees, being all the other parties defendant in the court below, filed a joint answer. They pleaded in bar the compromise and settlement referred to in appellants' petition, and further alleged that the same included an agreed judgment against appellants in their favor, duly entered in said original suit. They further pleaded that said Collett and O'Keefe on March 26, 1925, acquired in good faith for a valuable consideration the entire interest in said oil and gas leases on said lands. They denied that appellants had any right in or to the leases on any of said sections of land, but a recital of their pleadings on this issue is not deemed necessary.
The case was tried to a jury. The parties executed and filed a written agreement which recited: "In order to expedite the trial of this case and to simplify and eliminate the issues to be submitted to the jury, it is agreed that this case be tried and submitted upon the sole issue as to the right of the plaintiffs to set aside and void on grounds of fraud alleged by them, the former settlement and judgment set forth in their petition. "After reciting that all other issues involved in the case were reserved for later determination by the court in event the court should decide in plaintiffs' favor on such issue, said agreement further recited: "In case said jury or court should decide that said former settlement or judgment is binding upon plaintiffs, then judgment shall be immediately entered in favor of the defendants." The court at the conclusion of the evidence instructed the jury to return a verdict for the defendants. Upon, the verdict so returned judgment was duly entered denying appellants any recovery herein.
Appellee Lasseter's contention that appellants had no interest in the leases or permits acquired by Collett and O'Keefe as aforesaid, is based on the fact that the applications on the sections described in said contracts made by him in his own and his brother's name on January 23, 1924, were not renewed but were permitted to lapse. He testified that it was his intention at the time he executed said contracts to embrace therein the same section numbers in block 31, and not in block 30, as he did do. He further testified that in pursuance of said contracts he did attempt to sell interests in the rights he held at the time in said numbered sections in block 31, and not in block 30. He further testified that appellant Jeffress at the time occupied the same office with him, used one side of the same double desk he himself used, and assisted to some extent at least in advertising and selling such rights as were sold. The testimony shows that out of the proceeds of such sales Lasseter returned to Allen and Robinson the said sum of $250 advanced by them and to Jeffress the $125 advanced by him under said contracts. He testified that the remaining proceeds were expended in a futile effort to make additional sales. The testimony further shows that shortly after the filing of appellants' original suit a hearing was had on their application for receiver, and that a receiver was then appointed and remained in charge of the properties involved until the compromise and agreed judgment therein on December 1st thereafter. The testimony further discloses that at the time of such hearing about 10,000 barrels of oil per day were being produced from such properties and that large sums of money had been received and large expenses incurred in connection with such properties. The testimony further shows that thereafter the receipts from the operation of said properties and the sale of rights therein were much greater than contemplated at the time of such compromise.
The trial in the court below was by the express agreement of the parties confined to the determination of the issue of appellants' right to have the compromise agreement and judgment set aside and avoided on their allegations of fraud set forth in their petition and the testimony submitted thereunder. Where an action is based on fraud, the facts constituting the same must be alleged and such allegations present the issues to be determined. Baines v. Mensing Bros. Co.,
The testimony as hereinbefore recited shows without controversy that McLean, who filed the original suit for appellants and negotiated and consummated the compromise settlement, knew that L. E. Lasseter owned an interest in the properties involved at that time and that such interest was valuable. The only material facts unknown to him at that time were the extent of such interest and its actual value. The testimony shows that the extent of the interest of L. E. Lasseter could have been easily ascertained by taking the depositions of his two brothers. They did disclose such interest fully in depositions taken before the compromise but not seen by appellants until shortly after the same was consummated. Such compromise was not effected until about five months after the hearing on the application for receiver and the record fails to disclose any effort whatever to take L. E. Lasseter's deposition during that time or to otherwise ascertain from him the real facts. The control and management of these properties, so far as the interests of appellees were concerned, were vested in Collett and O'Keefe. McLean testified that Collett never refused to give him any information which he possessed. Besides, the receiver appointed at the instance of appellants had at the time of the compromise been in charge of the properties since his appointment shortly after the institution of the suit. Whatever information he had acquired during that time was presumably accessible to all parties. The largest and most profitable sale of mineral rights was not made until May 1, 1928, some five months after the compromise. There is no testimony whatever to indicate that such favorable sale could have been reasonably foreseen at the time of the compromise. The authorities are in accord in holding that to entitle one to avoid a contract or settlement on the ground that he was induced to enter into it on the faith of false representations, it is essential that he should have been ignorant of the falsity of such representations and should have relied on the truth thereof. If, before he acted upon such representations, he discovered that they were false, he cannot claim that he was deceived and thereby avoid such contract or settlement. Dossett v. Franklin Life Insurance Co. (Tex.Com.App.)
The uncontradicted evidence shows conclusively that McLean, at the time he negotiated and consummated the compromise under consideration, had such knowledge of the facts as, under the authorities last above cited, defeated appellants' attempt to avoid and set the same aside. The trial court properly instructed a verdict for appellees, and its judgment is therefore affirmed. *758