26 P.2d 336 | Mont. | 1933
Obviously it was the intention of the legislature in enacting section 8375, Revised Codes 1921, as amended by Chapter 152, Laws of 1923, to impress the interest of the owner of the leasehold with the lien, and that the building and appurtenances, those instrumentalities such as casing and equipment, necessary to be used in drilling the well and entering into and becoming a component and necessary part of any well drilled, should also be impressed with the lien, irrespective of the interest of the owner of the leasehold therein, since it is the use of such instrumentalities that the labor of the driller is mostly expended and without which no well may be drilled. The casing having been placed in the well and remaining there, *301
it is an appurtenance and subject to the lien. An oil-well is a mine. (Mid-Northern Oil Co. v. Walker,
It was urged in the lower court that the title to the casing was at all times in the defendant company and therefore the lien did not attach thereto. Bardwell and Hardie at all times exercised acts of ownership over the casing. The lease was theirs; the well was theirs and certainly from all appearances the casing was theirs. Such are the facts and the presumptions. (Sec. 10605, subd. 3, sec. 10606, subds. 11 and 12, Rev. Codes 1921.)
Under a similar state of facts as is here presented it seems to be quite generally held, and particularly in Texas, Oklahoma and Kansas, that such property so owned and so used is subject to the lien provided for by statute. (Williams v. Otstot OilCo.,
Under the express terms of the agreement the title was to remain in the defendant company until "well is completed." The well was completed. The word "until" in an instrument has been construed by this court. It is a word of limitation used ordinarily to restrict that which precedes to what immediately *302
follows it. Its office is to fix some point of time or some event upon the arrival or occurrence of which what precedes will cease to exist. (State ex rel. Rowe v. Kehoe,
The defendant company below stressed the proposition that the agreement between it and Bardwell and Hardie was a conditional sale contract and that the title at all times remained in the defendant company. Decisions from other jurisdictions construing the rights of vendors in conditional sale contracts and mechanic's lien claimants hold that under circumstances such as exist in the instant case the statutory lien will attach, notwithstanding the reservation of title to the casing and equipment in a third person. Conditional sale contracts are not favored. (24 R.C.L., sec. 744; but see Terminal Drilling Co. v.Jones,
The agreement conferred the right upon the California Company to reobtain title or repurchase such part of the casing as might be salvaged from Bardwell and Hardie upon the two conditions: (1) that the casing be salvaged, and (2) that the company pay $500 upon the cost of salvaging. These two conditions *303 were not complied with. No time is specified in the agreement within which the California Company might repurchase, and in such cases the rule is: "If the contract does not specify the time within which the right to repurchase must be exercised it must be within a reasonable time." (55 C.J. 593.) The casing, not being salvaged, became a part of the leasehold. Briefly, appellant's contention is that, while the lien of laborers and materialmen upon the leasehold, the oil pipe-line, gas pipe-line or lease for oil or gas purposes is effective only as to the right, title and interest of the person designated as "owner," that limitation or qualification does not apply to the word "appurtenances," and that therefore, as to such appurtenances, the lien is fully effective regardless of ownership.
If we were to accept the construction placed upon this statute by counsel for appellant and read the law as provided for the establishment of a lien "upon * * * the building and the appurtenances," then clearly the only appurtenances which could be considered would be those appertaining to the building. There is no building involved in this case and therefore there could be no appurtenances thereto, and the attempt of counsel to fasten the lien upon the casing which is here involved by classifying it as an appurtenance would necessarily fail. However, as the court said in the case of Gotham Can Co. v. United States,
Counsel proceed in their argument with the proposition that under the decision of this court in the case of Mid-Northern OilCo. v. Walker,
"It is a well-settled rule that casings in wells, derricks, engines, and other machinery and appliances placed upon the land by the lessee for testing, developing and operating the land for oil and gas purposes are trade fixtures. They may, therefore, be removed at any time during the existence of the lease, or within a reasonable time after its termination." (Summers on Gas and Oil, p. 644; see, also, Moore v. Carey Bros. Oil Co., (Tex.Com.App.)
The very designation of an article of personal property as a "trade fixture" absolutely bars it from being included within the scope of the word "fixture." (26 C.J. 662.)
If an article of personal property is so annexed to the land as to become a fixture, it becomes a part of the real estate and passes with it; therefore, if casing placed in an oil-well becomes a fixture it has become a part of the land itself and passes with it. But the distinguishing feature of a "trade fixture" is that it does not become a part of the land and may be removed at any time, subject to contract qualifications, and thus it does not become a part of the real estate or a true fixture. (Moore v. Carey Bros. Oil Co., supra; Longhart Supply Co.
v. Keystone Pipe Supply Co., (Tex.Civ.App.)
The agreement between the California Company and Bardwell and Hardie, under which the company furnished the casing, did not evidence a conditional sale but, on the contrary, did evidence a bailment. (People v. Baker,
Here the agreement establishes the existence of the bailment. That bailment was never terminated, either by the completion of a producing oil or gas well or by the return of the casing involved. The plaintiff in this case is not an innocent purchaser for value but simply stands in the shoes of Hardie and Bardwell and therefore will not be permitted to question *306
respondent's ownership. The burden was on the appellant to plead and prove the fact of ownership of the casing involved by Bardwell and Hardie. (40 C.J. 422, 457; Sanitary Plumbing Co.
v. Simpson,
Counsel state "the record shows without contradiction that the California Company clothed Bardwell and Hardie with every indicia of ownership." We respectfully contend that the record shows no such thing. On the contrary, it shows only that Bardwell and Hardie were put in possession of the casing. The rights of plaintiff and of his predecessors in interest, Hayes and Fleming, were and are limited to the "right, title and interest" of Hardie and Bardwell. They could not rely upon the simple fact that Hardie and Bardwell were in possession of this casing, as establishing ownership. It was their obligation to ascertain the actual ownership thereof. (Culp v. Kiene,
J.J. Hardie and L.C. Bardwell were in possession of an oil and gas lease, and on the twenty-eighth day of April, 1930, *307 they entered into a written contract with Harold J. Hayes and William C. Fleming, copartners doing business under the name of Acme Drilling Company, for the drilling of a well on the lease. The contract provided that a well should be drilled to the depth of 3,300 feet, unless the Madison limestone or commercial production of oil should be encountered at a lesser depth; there was a further provision for deeper drilling under certain conditions. The drilling contractors were to pay all bills for material and labor. Hardie and Bardwell were to furnish all casing required for use in the well at the drilling location without cost to the drilling contractors. The drilling of the well was begun on the first day of June, 1930, and was completed to the Madison limestone, to the satisfaction of Hardie and Bardwell, on the twenty-second day of February, 1931. There was an interval during which no drilling was done. Hardie and Bardwell notified the contractors in writing that the well had been completed according to contract. The total compensation due the drillers was $35,350, $10,485 of which was paid, leaving a balance of $24,865. The casing was furnished and used in the well. The court entered judgment for the amount demanded, plus attorneys' fees in the sum of $1,100, and for costs and disbursements.
The casing used in the well was actually furnished by the defendant, the California Company. The well was not a commercial oil or gas well. Plaintiff alleged in his complaint that L.C. Stevenson and the California Company claimed some interest in the oil and gas leasehold and the appurtenances, and asked for the foreclosure of a lien against everybody. The drilling contract is set out at length as an exhibit to the complaint. Stevenson defaulted, and his default was entered. Hardie and Bardwell filed answer denying some allegations of the complaint, but admitting the drilling of the well, the cost of the same, and the amount of cash paid thereon. As an affirmative defense they set up that leases and interests in leases were assigned to Harold J. Hayes, one of the drilling contractors, covering 4,160 acres of land, in full payment and discharge of the balance of the cost of the drilling. *308
The California Company filed a separate answer in which it alleged that the casing in the well was furnished by it to Hardie and Bardwell under a written contract entered into by it with Hardie and Bardwell, under the terms of which it was agreed that sufficient casing for the required purpose should be furnished and delivered at the well, but the title to the casing should remain in the company until the well was completed, and that, if oil and gas should be encountered therein in commercial quantities, the title to the casing should then vest in Hardie and Bardwell.
After the lien was filed, the drilling contractors assigned the balance due and the lien to E.K. Cheadle, Jr., trustee and plaintiff in this action. The cause was tried to the court without a jury; requests for findings of fact were made by both parties, and the court finally entered its findings, conclusions of law and a judgment. It found that the well was completed to the satisfaction of Hardie and Bardwell, that the drillers were entitled to the amount above mentioned, and that the casing furnished by the California Company and used in the well was not subject to plaintiff's lien.
The only real controversy tried by the court involved the casing. Plaintiff claims that his lien foreclosed by the court should have been decreed to include the casing. The defendant California Company denies that. The court found in accordance with the latter contention. All other questions seem to have passed out of the case, or to have been abandoned at the trial and on appeal. There are other collateral facts connected with the transaction, but we do not deem them of sufficient importance to detail here. Apparently the major issue of the case, and that upon which the decision turns, is involved in the question of the ownership of the casing.
The lien was filed under the provisions of section 8375,[1] Revised Codes of 1921, as amended by Chapter 152 of the Laws of 1923, which section reads as follows: "Any person, corporation, or co-partnership who shall under contract, expressed or implied, with the owner of any leasehold for oil and gas purposes, or the owner of any gas pipe or oil pipe line, or with *309 the trustee or agent of such owner, who shall perform labor or furnish material, machinery, and oil well supplies used in the digging, drilling, torpedoing, completing, operating, or repairing of any oil or gas well, or who shall furnish any oil well supplies, or perform any labor in constructing or putting together any of the machinery used in drilling, torpedoing, operating, completing or repairing any gas well, shall have a lien upon all of the right, title and interest of such owner in and to the whole of such leasehold or oil pipe line or gas pipe line, or lease for oil and gas purposes, the building, and appurtenances, and upon the material and supplies so furnished, and upon all of the right, title and interest of such owner in and to said oil and gas well for which they were furnished, and upon all of the right, title and interest of such owner in and to all other oil wells, fixtures, and appliances used in the operating for oil and gas purposes upon the leasehold for which said material and supplies were furnished and labor performed."
Each party has attempted to construe the statute. We find that it is incumbent upon us to make a construction of the section. In so doing, it seems to us that it is helpful to segregate the provisions of the section so that each may be properly understood. We propose to take the section apart and put it together again. We must analyze the section in order to demonstrate what it really means. It would appear that the provisions may be segregated into three parts. Two of these parts may well be combined. Here is what we think the section really says: Any person * * * who shall under contract * * * with the owner of any leasehold, etc., perform labor or furnish material, etc., shall have a lien * * * upon the material and supplies so furnished, and upon all of the right, title and interest of such owner in and to the whole of such leasehold, or oil pipe line or gas pipe line, or lease for oil and gas purposes, and the oil and gas well for which they were furnished, etc.
There were two contingencies, under either of which plaintiff could have held the casing: (1) If he, or his assignors, had furnished the casing, the lien would have attached to the casing *310 absolutely, and in disregard of transfers, etc.; the theory of the statute being that the vendor of an article may perfect a lien thereon and hold the same against the world. Here plaintiff and his assignors do not claim that they furnished the casing. (2) Not having furnished the casing, and having no direct lien for the purchase price of that particular property, another contingency of the statute was invoked. Whatever ownership or title the defendants Hardie and Bardwell possessed in any of the other enumerated property was by the statute made subject to the lien for the work and labor.
As has been pointed out, the arrangement of the clauses of the section is confusing, but the purpose of the legislature is clear. The intent was that a vendor may, if he pursues his remedy under the statute, follow the property he sold or furnished, and recover it or its value from the vendee, or from any other person into whose possession it may have passed. It may be said that, for the purpose of affixing the lien to the thing sold, the statute is impersonal. The article sold or furnished, wherever found, stands as security for its own purchase price. But, when the other provisions of the section are invoked, they come into play in a personal or qualified way. They declare that, in addition to the lien on the thing sold, a vendor may also have a lien on other property, not an unqualified lien "willy-nilly," but a lien upon whatever title and ownership the lienee may have in such additional property.
The principles involved are manifest. A vendor may be said to have either a right to receive payment for his wares, or, failing in that, a right to recover them back. This right may be said to be largely fundamental, and is founded upon an equitable principle; the principle that he is entitled to the price of the thing, or, if he fails to obtain that, the thing itself. But, when a vendor seeks to go beyond the recovery of the property he sold or furnished, he proceeds upon a different theory — a less fundamental, a less equitable, one. The legislature evidently designed to permit a lien upon the other enumerated property, but only to the extent of the rights of the lienee therein. It sought to hold the lienor short of the invasion of *311 the rights of third persons. It said: "You may, in addition to taking the article sold, recoup from the other property of the vendee, but you cannot subject property rights of others to the payment of your claim." Under the circumstances of this case, it is obvious that the lien of plaintiff did not attach to the casing under the absolute clause of the statute for the purchase price of the casing, but only went to the "right, title and interest" of the defendants Hardie and Bardwell therein.
What, then, was the title of the defendants Hardie and[2] Bardwell? To answer this question we must look to the facts and circumstances in which the casing came to the property and went into the well. The well was drilled under contract between Bardwell and Hardie, owners of the leasehold, and Hayes and Fleming (Acme Drilling Company), assignors of the plaintiff. By the terms of that contract, plaintiff's assignors agreed to drill the well, and Bardwell and Hardie agreed to furnish all casing at the well. The well was drilled in accordance with the contract. Bardwell and Hardie notified plaintiff's assignors to that effect.
We find that the casing was furnished under a separate written contract made between the defendants the California Company and Bardwell and Hardie. Plaintiff objected to the introduction of the contract, and says it was not admissible in evidence. We will discuss that feature of the case later; first let us see what the contract did provide. It was lengthy, and covered the assignment of certain leases. The provision pertinent to the instant point is paragraph E thereof, which reads as follows: "It is understood and agreed between the parties hereto that title to the casing and equipment shall remain in the party of the second part [The California Company] at all times until said well is completed. If oil or gas is encountered therein in commercial quantities, title to said casing and equipment shall then vest in the parties of the first part [Bardwell and Hardie]. If such well is drilled to the depth hereinabove specified or deeper without encountering oil or gas in commercial quantities, or if the parties of the first part shall at any time discontinue drilling operations upon said well for a period *312 of ninety days except for the reasons hereinabove expressly provided, the parties of the first part shall thereupon make every reasonable effort to salvage so much of such casing as is then in the well and will return the same to the party of the second part at the well. It is understood that if said well is drilled to the depth above specified or deeper without encountering oil or gas in commercial quantities, the party of the second part will contribute the sum of five hundred dollars toward the cost of salvaging such casing, and will also pay the cost of shooting such casing if in its opinion it is advisable to shoot the same."
The fair intent of this paragraph was to the effect (1) that the California Company was to furnish the casing; (2) that the title thereto was to remain in that company at all times until the well was completed; (3) that, if oil or gas was encountered in commercial quantities, the title should vest in Bardwell and Hardie; and (4) that, if the well was drilled to the specified depth without encountering oil or gas in commercial quantities, Bardwell and Hardie were to return the casing to the California Company at the well. Provision was made for the expenses of salvaging the casing in case of certain contingencies.
It is contended by plaintiff that the casing must be deemed to have been affixed to the realty, by virtue of the provisions of section 6670, Revised Codes of 1921, which reads: "Sluiceboxes, flumes, hose, pipes, railway tracks, cars, blacksmith shops, mills, and all other machinery or tools used in working or developing a mine, are to be deemed affixed to the mine." With this contention we do not agree. Our Code section was taken from California. It has been construed by the courts of that state, and the construction is not in accord with such construction. The California court recognized the rule that chattels may be annexed to real estate and still retain their character as personal property. (Hendy v. Dinkerhoff,
There is a legal presumption that one in possession of land is presumed to be the owner of the fixtures thereon, unless the contrary is made to appear by the person who owns it, by a preponderance of the evidence. This is a disputable presumption, and, of course, must give way to facts. (Schmuck v. Beck, supra.) We hold that in this case the presumption of the statute was overcome by undisputed evidence to the contrary.
Having decided that the casing did not become a part of the[3] leasehold under the terms of the statute, we must construe the legal effect of the contract between the California Company, and Bardwell and Hardie — the contract under which the casing was delivered by that company for the benefit of Bardwell and Hardie and for the use of plaintiff's assignors in the drilling of the well. It is suggested that the transaction amounted to a conditional sale. We do not agree with that theory. As was said by this court in Ferry Co. v. Forquer,
Was the California Company estopped to raise the question of[4, 5] ownership of the casing? Plaintiff's complaint alleges that the California Company claimed some interest in the casing, and in its separate answer the company pleaded the facts of that claim and attached a copy of the contract as an exhibit to the answer. Plaintiff's reply to the contentions of the company contains only denials. No plea of estoppel is asserted. It would seem to us, in view of the pleadings and in the light of all the facts, that the case finally proceeded to the very issue now under consideration, and that that issue came to the district court and comes to us head-on without any special plea to break its effect or divert its course. (Eisenhauer v. Quinn,
We cannot see how a plea of estoppel would have aided in the present situation. There is nothing in the contract for the drilling of the well that imposes upon Bardwell and Hardie the obligation to own the casing to be furnished. That contract merely provides that Bardwell and Hardie agreed to furnish all casing at drilling location without cost to the contractor. It is now too late to insist that Bardwell and Hardie were obligated to furnish casing owned by them. They had to furnish all casing, and no one contends that they failed to do what they agreed to do.
It is urged that, in view of the fact that the casing was furnished without notice to the drilling contractors that it was not owned by Bardwell and Hardie, and that it was owned by the California Company, it must be presumed, for the purposes of this action, that the casing was owned by Bardwell and Hardie, and therefore subject to the lien as their property. Appellant says that "the California Company clothed Bardwell and Hardie with every indicia of ownership." The record does not bear out this statement. It is silent as to representations of ownership. The mere delivery of the casing without any representation of ownership does not meet the requirements of the *315
rule in such cases. The rule is laid down in Corpus Juris as follows: "In order that the real owner of personal property may be estopped to assert his title against one who has dealt with the apparent owner on the faith of his apparent ownership of, or authority over it, something more is required than mere possession on the part of the apparent owner, since merely entrusting a third person with possession does not constitute holding him out as owner. * * * The owner must go further, and do, or omit to do, some act of a nature such as to mislead persons as to the true possession of the title." (21 C.J. 1178; see, also, Dever v. Girson,
Finally we come to the question of the admissibility of[6] Defendant's Exhibit 8, the contract for the furnishing of the casing, entered into between the California Company and Bardwell and Hardie. It is urged that, because Hayes and Fleming, the drillers, were not parties to the contract, it was not admissible, and that it merely constituted a declaration in support of title. Such a contention is not tenable in the light of the record. An examination thereof clearly indicates that all other issues passed out of the case, and the ownership of the casing remained as the only real issue. The issue of indebtedness for the drilling of the well was contained in the pleadings, but was not seriously urged at the trial. Bardwell and Hardie did allege the assignment of certain leasehold interests to Hayes and Fleming in payment of the balance due on the contract. Hayes took these to Wisconsin in an effort to raise money, but was unsuccessful in the attempt. The claim that the drilling debt was paid by such assignment was not substantiated, and was not seriously urged on this appeal. So the only issue really contested involved the title to or ownership of the casing. This issue came into the case by virtue of the provisions of section 8375, supra, construed earlier in this opinion. We there pointed out that the statute itself contemplates such an issue of ownership whenever a lienor seeks to extend his lien beyond the property he sold or furnished. *316
In such event it is the right, title and interest of the debtor that must stand as the additional security for the debt. That being the case, the facts and circumstances showing the character of the ownership — the kind of title, whether absolute or qualified — must at once become a proper and, in this case, a controlling subject of investigation. As we have indicated, the trial proceeded at once, and properly, to that issue. The title to the casing being involved, evidence as to that title was, of course, proper. "A contract is not to be disregarded in a controversy between either of the parties thereto and a third person concerning the subject matter of the contract, for it is prima facie evidence of the relation that the contract and the parties to the contract bear to each other in respect to such matter." (10 Cal. Jur. 886; Ellis v. Crawford,
The court was entitled to the best evidence available. The theory of best evidence has been crystallized into a rule. Corpus Juris says: "The rule of evidence commonly known as `the best evidence rule' — one which from early times has been repeatedly enunciated by the courts — is that the highest degree of proof of which the case from its nature is susceptible must if accessible be produced; or in other words, that no evidence shall be received which presupposes that the party which offers it can obtain better evidence. If the best evidence possible cannot be produced, then the next best evidence should be admitted. It is for the court to determine what is the best, and what is secondary, evidence of any fact which it is desired to prove." (22 C.J. 974, "Evidence," sec. 1220.)
What, then, was the best evidence? It seems to us that the written contract, the contract entered into between the parties at the time of the delivery of the casing, was the best evidence of title. (See, also, 10 R.C.L. 903-905; Dixon-Pocahontas FuelCo. v. Myers Grain Co.,
What we have said with relation to the contract between the California Company and Bardwell and Hardie disposes of the theory of appellant that that company was a coadventurer in the drilling of the well. The elements necessary to such a relation do not appear in the contract or in the record. Likewise the repurchase theory discussed by appellant is without force. It follows that, if the casing was not sold by the California Company, no repurchase was contemplated or involved.
It is not necessary to discuss other assignments of error. It is sufficient to say that all have been examined, and in our opinion the judgment must be affirmed.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE CALLAWAY and ASSOCIATE JUSTICES ANGSTMAN, MATTHEWS and ANDERSON concur.