16 Ohio C.C. 62 | Oh. Circ. Ct. | 1898
This, case comes into this court on appeal from the court of common pleas of this county. The petition sets forth, in substance, that about March, 1896, the plaintiff and the defendants William M, Masterman, H. W. Townsend, F, W. Zorn and F. C. Hornung, entered into a contract of partnership under the firm name..of the Ervin Oil Company, for the purpose of owning, operating and developing a certain leasehold of oil lands, and to produce and market the product of said lease; said leasehold being known and described as the Kimball lease, situate in Freedom township, Wood county, Ohio, and containing about sixty acres of land. That since March, 1896, said partnership has been in the open and actual possession of said premises, and engaged in drilling wells thereon, and producing oil therefrom. That the place nf business and office of said partnership is at Gibsonburg, Sandusky county, Ohio. That by the terms of said partnership agreement said leasehold and partnership property, consisting of structures, machinery, wells, engines, boilers, derricks, tanks, tools and other equipments of said property for the development of oil, was to be held, owned and operated by said partnership, and said partners respectively were to own the property of said partnership all and singular and to bear its ex
That in the prosecution of said business said partnership borrowed large amounts of money, which were used by said partnership in its business of drilling, shooting and completing oil wells on said lease, and for other expenses of said firm, and that the real value of said lease consisted of said wells and equipment and the product of said wells;, 'that said partnership owes for money borrowed and used as aforesaid to different creditors something over five thous- and dollars; that said W. M. Masterman has become, and is, wholly insolvent. Francis H Steel is also made a party defendant, and it is averred with respect to him, that he claims some interest in, or lien upon said partnership property growing out of certain alleged transfers and incumbrances said to have been made by said W. M. Master-man to him, and that he is claiming a right to sell, and has sold certain of said partnership property, and is threat-' ening to cause a sale of certain other parts of said property of said partnership, and its oil product, by virtue of said transfers from Masterman, without an adjustment of the affairs of said partnership, the payment of its debts, or the determination of the rights of the plaintiff and his co-partners, and that the alleged transfers and incumbrances made by Masterman to Steel were for the purpose of securing and providing for the payment of a private indebtedness of said Masterman to Steel. That the interest of Masterman in the partnership property is not more than sufficient to satisfy his just proportion of the partnership debts. That since about April 1st, 1897, Steel has sold one fourth of the oil product of said partnership property, and kept and retained the proceeds thereof in violation of the rights of said partnership.
To this answer the plaintiff replies denying the allegations thereof, and averring that any assignment made by Masterman to Steel was solely as security or mortgage to secure payment of a loan made by Steel to Masterman, individually, and was not for any debt of said partnership or loan to the same. That all -of the property aforesaid was ■purchased with partnership funds; that the title thereto was taken and is held for the benefit and use of said partnership, and that any conveyance, assignment or transfer of any interest in the same that Steel may have received from Masterman, was so received with full knowledge upon the part of Steel of the facts aforesaid, and of the interest of «the paxtnershp in said property. The other defendants
From the evidence submitted, it appears that on the 15th day of November, 1894, Joel Kimball and wife executed an: instrument in which it is set forth that in consideration of seventy-five dollars, the receipt of which is acknowledged, they do grant unto N B. Ervin and William M. Masterman and their assigns,all the oil and gas in and under the premises descibed in the petition,together with the right to enter thereon at all times for the purpose of drilling and operating for oil, gas or water; to erect and maintain all buildings and structures, and lay all pipes necessary for the transportation of oil, gas and water taken from said premises, excepting and reserving, however, the one-sixth part of all the oil produced and saved from said premises to be delivered in the pipe line to the credit of the grantors.. And this instrument provides that Ervin ad Masterman and their assigns are to have and hold the premises on certain other conditions as to the amount to be paid for gas-used off the premises; as to gas being furnished to the grantors for their dwelling house; as to the burying of oil and gas lines, paying damage to growing crops, etc., and-various other provisions usual in instruments of this character, which are commonly known and designated as oib and gas leases. This instrument was duly executed and acrknowledged, and was recorded in the, lease records of Wood* county, on April 5th, 1895. By an instrument bearing: date of April 20th, 1889, W. M. Masterman and - N B, Ervin assigned and.transferred to H. W. Townsend an undivided one-fourth interest in said leasehold, and to F. CL Hornung and F. W. Zorn, each an undivided one-eighth interest therein. This instrument is also duly executed* and acknowledged, and was recorded, on September 13th,. 1897.
On April 25th, 1895, all of the alleged partners, together with Joel Kimball, the owner of said land, joined in the-
In our opinion this evidence establishes a partnership, If not án ordinary commercial partnership, at least' a partnership inter sese, partaking of the characteristics of a mining partnership, having as one of its incidents a right, in each member to require that partnership property shall' be applied to the debts due to the creditors of the partnership before it shall be devoted to the discharge of the individual indebtedness of the members thereof. • There is
Each partner may transfer his interest without consulting his fellow partners, and such transfer will not work a dissolution of the partnership. Jones v. Clark, 42 Cal., 180.
It is a matter of common knowledge that customarily co-owners of oil leases and the equipment thereof, transfer their respective interests in such property, as well as in the product, without th'e consent of those interested with them as co-owners, and that purchasers thereof, are admitted into the company or firm as a matter of right, and the business is continued and no dissolution of the partnership occurs from, such transaction merely.
“Tenants in common or joint tenants of a mine or quarry may, or may not be partners; and the mine or quarry it•self may or may not be part of the common stock. But it is highly inconvenient, if not altogether impossible, for co-owners of a mine or quarry, to work it themselves without becoming partners, at least in the profits of the mine, and partners who work a mine or quarry in common, are regarded rather as partners in trade than as mere tenants in ■common of the land.’’
In Butler Savings Bank v. Osborn et al., 159 Pa. St., page 10, it is held that tenants in common, engaged in the improvement or development of the common property, will be presumed, in the absence of proof of a contract of partnership, to hold the same relation to each other during such improvement or development as before it began; that as to each other, their relations depend on their title until, by their agreement with each other, they change it, and that when tenants in common of on oil lease, agree to carry on operations upon their land, each contributing toward the expenses in proportion to his respective interest in the land, they will be considered with respect both to themselves and third persons, as the' ordinary owners of and working their respective shares of the wells, responsible only for their own acts, subject to no law of partnership whatever, and possessing distinct rights in the property; :and in that case the tenants in common, having entered into an agreement with each other to drill wells on the leasehold property, each to pay one-half of the costs of Sinking ’the wells and pumping the oil, the oil produced to be run into pipe lines serving the district, and there credited one-half to each of the tenants in common, it was held that ■no partnership existed between the tenants in common. *But in that case as W9Ü as in Dunham, Appellant, v. Love-rock, 158 Pa. St. 197,.and Neill, Appellant, v. Shamburg, lb. 263, and other cases decided by the courts of Pennsyl
In the Farmers’ Ins. Co. v. Ross & Lennan, 29 Ohio St., page 429, Judge Gilmore speaking for the court at page 432, quotes the following paragraph from Story on Partnership section 27, to-wit:
“When each of the parties contributes labor and services and materials in the manufacture of any articles of trade, and the articles, when made, are to be equally or propor*73 tionately shared between them, they will be deemed partners inter sese-, for the articles manufactured, and so to be • divided, may well be deemed the profits or losses of their: joint undertaking and business.”
And, while the decision of that case does not rest upon the principle quoted, yet, this language from Justice Story’s work is quoted with approval, and it is distinctly intimated that if necessary it would have been applied to-that case. This doctrine finds support in Autary v. Fries, 59 Ala., 587; Everett et al. v. Chapman et al., 6 Conn., 347; Stapleton v. King, 33 Iowa, 28; Curtis v. Cash, 84 N. C. 41, and Jones v. McMicheal, 12 Rich., (S. C. ) 176.
We hold that where all the other indicia of a partnership ’ are unquestionably present, the mere fact that the gross■■ product is to be divided, instead of the net profit; will not necessarily prevent a partnership, especially where by reason of the partnership obligations being met from time to-' time by means of assessment or otherwise, the result to the partnership is precisely the same as if the net profits were • the subject of division, instead of the gross product.
It is zealously contended, however, on behalf of the defendant Steel, that where the title to real estate or chattels real amounting to a right to produce oil is vested in an individual or individuals, section 4112a of the Revised Statutes precludes a court of equity from giving effect, to the . principles which govern such courts in other cases where-they treat such property as partnership property, and such-titles as held in trust for the partnership, and that this same section of the statutes prevents the courts from giving effect to the ‘‘partners’ lien” upon such property. The attaching of the partners’ lien, or of the equity which results in real estate, or an interest therein, being regarded" and treated as partnership property, though the legal title-is vested in a member or members of the firm, does not, in our judgment, come within the purview of section 4112a-
The defendant Steel is not in a situation to object to ■ the application of these rules giving effect to the partners’ ’ lien and to the trust in favor of the partnership. Taking ■no account of the evidence which tends to show that he was advised of this partnership relation, or, by the firm’s • possession of the property, was put upon inquiry and had constructive notice as to such relation, and the rights growing out of it, we look for a moment at the nature of ' his claim and the circumstances under which it arose. About November 30th, 1896, Masterman borrowed from ’ Steel two thousand dollars, for which he gave his promis
“This assignment made this 20th day of April, A. D. 1897, by and between W. M. Masterman, of Gibsonburg,. Ohio, of the one part, and F..H, Steel, of Toledo, Ohio,, of the other part, witnesseth, that for'and in consideration of one dollar to me paid to my full satisfaction by the said F. H. Steel, I have sold, assigned and transferred, and by these presents do hereby sell, assign and transfer unto the-, said F, H. Steel, all my right, title and interest in the - following leases of land situate in the counties of Sandusky and Wood, and state of Ohio, described, as follows: A-half interest in the west half of the north half of the northeast quarter of section 12; also the north half of the southeast quarter of the southwest quarter of section 1, both of Woodville township* Sandusky county, Ohio, containing sixty (60) acres leased by Wm. Bidke. A one quarter interest in the south sixty (60 )acres of the northeast quarter-of section 25, Freedom township, Wood county, Ohio,, leased by Joel Kimball to N. B. Ervin and W. M. Master-man. To have and to hold all my right, title and interest m the above mentioned leases, (subject to the con-*76 editions mentioned therein), together with the wells, tubing, ■ casing and fixtures thereon, or which pertain thereto, to ■ the said F. H. Steel, his heirs and assigns. In witness whereof, I have hereunto set my hand and seal the day and year first mentioned.
Hpi(Signed)
‘‘W. M. Masterman.”
N‘In the presence of,
‘‘D. D. Grant, Thos. Kelly.”
■(Acknowledged in due form.)
From the testimony of Steel and Masterman, as well as fiom this instrument, it appears that the transfer certificate of Novemebr 30th, 1896, was given as a security for this loan, and that this assignment of April 20th, 1897, was given as a further security for the debt then existing, and that there was no additional or new consideration therefor.
That Steel was not in the situation of an innocent purchaser for value is quite clear from the authorities.
Eaton & Company v. Davidson, 46 Ohio St., 355; Page v. Thomas, 43 Ohio St., 38; Grever & Sons v. Taylor, 53 Ohio St., 621.
We hold, therefore, that the prayer of plaintiff’s petition should be and it is granted, excepting as to the oil sold by Steel before he was served with process in this case. It ap. pearing that the partnership agreement authorized each partner to sell his respective interest in the oil produced, we hold that Steel acquired by the transfer certificate a perfect title to the oil produced and sold prior to the time the suit to reach Masterman’s interest in the oil, as well as the property, was pending as to Steel. That, while a perfect title to the oil produced could be conveyed, yet the •partners had a right to impress the partners’ lien upon the oil production not actually brought to the surface, reduced to possession and sold, as well as upon the other partnership property; that the institution of the suit was notice, not only of the partners’ rights, but of their purpose in that respect, and that it operated by way of Us pendens as to all of the property aforesaid.
Since this is an action to wind up the business of the •partnership, and in doing this it becomes necessary to ascertain the state of the account of each partner, and the in■terst of each, including Steel, in the partnership- stock and property, we conclude to order that all’the costs, including 'those incurred upon the trial of the issues between Steel and ¡the others,shall be paid out of the partnership fund.
A decree will be entered accordingly.