229 F. 933 | 8th Cir. | 1915
“Rolls of Citizenship.
“7. All children bom to those citizens who are entitled to enrollment as provided by the act of Congress approved March 1, 1901 (31 Stat. 861), subsequent to July 1, 1900, and up to and including May 25, 1901, and living upon the latter date, shall be placed on the rolls made by said commission. And if any such child has died since May 25, 1901, or may hereafter die before receiving his allotment of lands and distributive share of the funds of the tribe, the lands and moneys to which he would be entitled if living shall descend to his heirs as herein provided and be allotted and distributed to them accordingly.”
-It thus appears that Andrew J. Berryhill was never entitled to an allotment in his lifetime, but under the statute quoted an allotment was made to Andrew J. Berryhill, deceased. Among the lands thus allotted was the N. E. ¼ of the N. W. ¼ of section 18, township 17 N., range 12 E. of the Indian principal meridian. On October 10, 1904, the Principal Chief of the Creek Nation issued a deed or patent of said land to the heirs of Andrew J. Berryhill which was approved by the Secretary of the Interior on October 31, 1904. On March 24, 1906, George F. Berryhill and wife, reciting that they were father and mother and sole and only heirs at law of Andrew J. Berryhill, deceased, executed and acknowledged an oil and gas mining lease of the land above specifically described to Albert W. Shulthis for a period of 15 years. April 19, 1907, this lease was approved by the Secretary of the Interior. On June 5, 1906, George F. Berryhill and wife deeded the land to Edmond McKay and Perry McKay, again reciting in the instrument that the grantors were the sole and only heirs of said Andrew J. Berryhill. On October 12, 1906, the two McKays and their wives executed, and on the next day acknowledged, an oil and gas lease of the premises to Arthur B. Reese for 15 years. This lease, by various assignments, became the property of the Kiefer Oil & Gas Company. It entered upon the premises and bored a well for oil and gas, striking oil about the latter part of August, 1907. From the middle of August, 1907, on, seven uncles and aunts, and their wives and husbands, of Andrew J. Berryhill on his paternal side, conveyed the land in question to D. A. McDougal. On October 21, 1907, McDougal and wife executed an oil and gas lease to the Kiefer Oil & Gas Company, and the same day the parties to this lease signed a collateral contract.
“In further response to complainant’s prayer for discovery, and as a muniment of title in the defendant Kiefer Oil & Gas Company to the oil and gas rights to the land in controversy, defendants state that on October 21, 1907, defendant 1). A. McDougal, with his wife, Myrtle A. McDougal, joining therein, entered into a lease contract with the defendant Kiefer Oil & Gas Company, whereby said D. A. McDougal, for a valuable consideration, and a one-fifth part of all oil produced and saved from the premises by said Kiefer Oil & Gas Company, its successors and assigns, did grant, demise, lease, and let unto said Kiefer Oil & Gas Company, its successor and assigns, for the sole and only purpose of mining and operating for oil and gas, the said N. E. 44 of the N. W. ¼ of section 18, township 17 N., range 12 E, containing 40 acres, being the land in controversy, for and during the term of 15 years from and after October 32, 1906, and so long after the expiration of the 15 years as oil or gas, or either of them, is produced from the land by defendant Kiefer Oil & Gas Company, its successors or assigns, in paying quantities.”
In the same document the defendants aver and plead that the Kiefer Oil & Gas Company is rightfully and lawfully entitled to operate the land in controversy for oil and gas purposes and extract said minerals therefrom under and by virtue of the McKay lease, “in connection and conjunction with the lease contract executed to it, Kiefer Oil & Gas Company, by D. A. McDougal and wife, on October 21, 1907, and
“defendants further aver and plead that, if they be mistaken as to the quantum of title taken by George Franklin Berryhill, or George Franklin Berry-hill and wife, Clementine Berryhill, and it should be held and decided by the court that George Franklin Berryhill, or George' Franklin Berryhill and wife, Clementine Berryhill, was or were vested with the fee-sijnple title in and to the land in controversy under the laws of descent and distribution in force at the time, then defendants rely upon their superior rights to the oil and gas in the land in controversy under the deed from George Franklin Berryhill and Clementine Berryhill to Edmond and Perry McKay, heretofore set up, and the lease made by them to Arthur B. Reese on October 12, 1906, now owned by Kiefer Oil & Gas Company.”
On March 4, 1908, George Franklin Berryhill with leave of court filed a bill of intervention, in which he claimed that the complainant’s lease was valid and that the deed to the McKays was invalid, because he was then under restrictions, and asked that the title be quieted to the land and for other relief. To this bill of intervention the Kiefer Oil & Gas Company and D. A. McDougal made an answer in which they said:
“Defendants aver and plead that the uncles and aunts and grandmother of Andrew J. Berryhill, from the father’s side, took the entire title to said land, and that the title in fee is now in defendant D. A. MicDougal, under and by virtue of deeds executed to him by the uncles and aunts of Andrew J. Berry-hill, deceased, to wit,-the brothers and sisters of intervener, George Franklin Berryhill, named and specified in the answer of defendants and in the intervening petition of intervener, and in addition thereto defendant D. A. Mc-Dougal is the owner and holder of whatever right, title, and interest the grandmother, Airy Anne Berryhill, acquired in said land by virtue of the deed executed and delivered’ by her to said D. A. McDougal on October 18, 1907.”
The case was tried in the District Court, and resulted in a finding and decree that George Franklin Berryhill took a life estate only in the lands in question, and the uncles and aunts of Berryhill took the remainder; that George Franklin Berryhill was under no restrictions as to conveying his life estate, but that as a tenant for life could not grant the right to mine for oil and gas, and dismissed the bill and the petition of intervention. Shulthis v. MacDougal, 162 Fed. 331. This case was appealed to this court, where it was held that George Franklin Berryhill took the land in fee, and therefore had the right to grant an oil and gas lease thereto, but that the complainant, having failed to record his lease until May 18, 1907, and long after the deed to the McKays, the complainant’s lease was ofvno validity as against the McKays and their grantees, who took their interest for a valuable consideration and. without actual or constructive notice. Shulthis v. McDougal, 170 Fed. 529, 95 C. C. A. 615.
It will be observed that, while there was a difference of opinion between the District Court and this court as to the law applicable to this case, there was no difference in the result reached, and the case was accordingly affirmed. Shulthis and Berryhill attempted to appeal from the decree of this court to the Supreme Court, but their appeals were on motion of the original defendants dismissed. Shulthis v. McDougal, 225 U. S. 561, 32 Sup. Ct. 704, 56 L. Ed. 1205. The opinion of this court was, however, in part sustained by the subse
The lease from McDougal to the Kiefer Oil & Gas Company, and accompanying contract, provided that the Kiefer Oil & Gas Company would pay to McDougal $5,000 and one-fifth of all oil produced, or its equivalent in money, and certain other stipulated sums. A receiver had collected, after deducting his expense of operating and developing the property, $169,480.97. After this court had affirmed the action of the District Court, Mr. McDougal filed his ancillary, bill against the Kiefer Oil & Gas Company, asking that the receiver pay to him $41,913.44 out of the funds collected by him. On June 21, 1913, the Kiefer Oil & Gas Company filed its amended answer to said ancillary bill and its cross-bill. In the latter it sought an injunction and cancellation of the lease and contract with McDougal. On July 2, 1913, Mr. McDougal moved to strike the cross-bill. The case was tried November 25, 1913, and the court ordered the money in the hands of the receiver turned over to McDougal and made the following order:
“This cause came on to be further heard at this time, and was argued by counsel upon the motion of D. A. McDougal to strike the cross-bill heretofore filed herein by the Kiefer Oil & Gas Company; and it is by the court considered, ordered, adjudged, and decreed that said motion be and is hereby snstained, and that said cross-bill be and the same hereby is stricken, to which order and decree of the court the said Kiefer Oil & Gas Company except.”
And:
“Provided, however, that this order and decree does not adjudicate or determine the rights of the said D. A. McDougal or of the said Kiefer Oil & Gas Company as to any other things or matters than the aforesaid sum now-in the custody and control of this court, nor does it determine the rights of either of said parties in or to the premises described in said ancillary bill, nor to the rents, issues or profits thereof that may have accrued or may hereafter accrue, subsequent to the restoration of said premises to the said Kiefer Oil & Gas Company, under the decree of this court herein entered on the 19th day of July, 3912, nor in or' to the $5,000 promissory note described in said ancillary bill.”
And the Kiefer Oil & Gas Company appeals.
There was neither in the lease nor the supplemental contract any warranty of title in McDougal. At the outset it appears that there were, shortly prior to the commencement of this suit, three conflicting claims to the oil and gas upon the land in question:
First. The claim of Shulthis under the lease from Berryhill, which is conceded was first in time of origin.
Second. The claim of the Kiefer Oil & Gas Company from the McKays, which the Oil & Gas Company claimed was superior to the Shulthis lease, because the latter was not recorded, and they claim that Reese and his grantees had no notice of it, actual or constructive. The last question was far from being a clear one. See Shulthis v. McDougal, 170 Fed. 529, 538, 95 C. C. A. 615. But if Berryhill only had a life estate then his lease to complainant, without the remainder-man similarly leasing, was not valid. Marshall v. Mellon, 179 Pa. 371, 36 Atl. 207, 35 L. R. A. 816, 57 Am. St Rep. 601; Gerkins v.
Third. McDougal had title from all the supposed remaindermen. McDougal had 'received an offer from Shulthis of $25,000 bonus and one-eighth of the oil and gas. McDougal asked $40,000 bonus. Then negotiations commenced with the Kiefer Oil & Gas Company, at its instance, as testified to by Mr. McDougal. His claims were adverse to those of Shulthis and the Kiefer Oil & Gas Company. The latter had at considerable expense sunk a well, and knew it had struck oil, and had every incentive to want to hold its previously assumed rights. To show that the question involved was doubtful only needs that it be recalled that the learned District Judge, upon reiterated pleading of the McDougal claim by the Kiefer Oil & Gas Company, decided the question practically upon and in favor of his rights. Under these circumstances after prolonged negotiations the two claimants, the Kiefer Oil & Gas Company and McDougal, compromised their claims, and McDougal took a $5,000 bonus after he had been offered $25,000 by Shulthis and increased his royalty. He agreed in tire supplemental contract which was made at the time of the lease:
“The Kiefer Oil & Gas Company agrees and binds itself to faithfully and diligently prosecute the pending suit with Albert W. Shulthis over the oil and gas mining rights to the said land, and to take, perfect, and prosecute appeals to the higher courts from any and all judgments, orders/ and decrees adverse to it in said litigation with Albert W. Shulthis.”
In addition in the same contract it is stipulated:
“Said D. A. McDougal waives any and all claims to improvements placed, on said land, and agrees that Kiefer Oil & Gas Company may remove them at the expiration of this lease, and may remove them, should Albert W. Shulthis win his said suit in the end.” ,
Thus the Kiefer Oil & Gas Company was in full charge of all litigation. It secured a written stipulation that the $5,000 bonus should not be in fact turned over to McDougal unless it finally won its suit with Shulthis. There is present every evidence that, the three parties all claiming the right, McDougal and the Kiefer Oil & Gas Company decided to compromise their contention, and this lease was made as a part of the compromise.
“The prevention of litigation is a valid and sufficient consideration; for the law favors the settlement of disputes.- * * * On the same ground a mutual compromise is sustained. With the courts of this country, the prevention of litigation is not only a sufficient, but a highly favored, consideration, and no investigation into the character or value of the different claims submitted will be entered into for the purpose of setting aside a compromise; it being sufficient if the parties entering into the compromise thought at the time that there was a question between them. So giving up a suit, or any equivalent proceedings, instituted to try a question of which the legal result is doubtful, is a good consideration for a promise t.o pay a sum of'money for an abandonment thereof. And in these cases inequality of consideration does not constitute a valid objection; it is enough if there be an actual controversy, of*939 which the issue may fairly he considered by both parties as doubtful.” Parsons on Contracts (9th Ed.) 477.
This doctrine is abundantly sustained, not only by the authorities there cited, but by Hager v. Thompson, 1 Black, 80, 17 L. Ed. 41; Hennessy v. Bacon et al., 137 U. S. 78, 11 Sup. Ct. 17, 34 L. Ed. 605; Railway v. Clark, 178 U. S. 353, 20 Sup. Ct. 924, 44 L. Ed. 1099; Williams v. Bank, 216 U. S. 582, 30 Sup. Ct. 441, 54 L. Ed. 625; Coffee v. Emigh, 15 Colo. 184, 25 Pac. 83, 10 L. R. A. 125; Wells v. Neff, 14 Or. 66, 12 Pac. 84, 88; Smith v. Farra, 21 Or. 395, 28 Pac. 241, 20 L. R. A. 115; Cassell v. Ross, 33 Ill. 244, 85 Am. Dec. 270; Rowe v. Barnes, 101 Iowa, 302, 70 N. W. 197; Hall v. Wheeler, 37 Minn. 522, 35 N. W. 377; Tessendorf v. Lasater, 10 Kan. App. 19, 61 Pac. 677; Sango v. Parks (Okl.) 143 Pac. 1158; Tyson v. Woodruff, 108 Ga. 368, 33 S. E. 981; Pomeroy’s Equity Jurisprudence, § 850; 5 Ruling Case Law, 882, 883. And the doctrine has been sustained by this court. Daly v. Busk Tunnel Railway Co., 129 Fed. 513, 64 C. C. A. 87; Sovereign Camp v. Bridges, 165 Fed. 342, 91 C. C. A. 328.
There is no question of fraudulent representation of the facts. Both parties understood the elementary facts fully, but it is claimed that, as they did not understand the law as it was ultimately determined to be, this led to a mutual mistake as to the ultimate fact of ownership; but this wLas one of the very matters in dispute at the negotiations. The representative of the Oil & Gas Company claimed at that time that they had a good title, and Mr. McDougal in substance said the courts must determine that. Then they compromised, and Mr. McDougal surrendered $20,000 of his bonus offered him by Shulthis and agreed to lose the remaining $5,000 if the Kiefer Oil & Gas Company did not win its suit with Shulthis for an increased royalty, and agreed to turn the management of the litigation over to the Kiefer Oil & Cas Company. They took charge of the litigation and stood upon their rights under the lease and contract with McDougal as a defense, won their suit substantially on these alleged rights in the District Court, and now want to repudiate the contract because they ultimately won their case on other grounds in this court. This, under the facts shown here, they cannot do. The District Court was right in ordering that the sum in the hands of the receiver of $41,-913.44 be paid to Mr. McDougal.
The decree of the district court is affirmed.