195 Ky. 654 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1922
Opinion op the Court by
Affirming.
This controversy arose out of a sale by appellee, A. E. Miller, to appellants, Larmon, et al., of the Ike Eickman oil and ;gas. lease on 37% acres of land situated in Allen county at the price of $60,000.00. Appellants, who were defendants below, by counterclaim asked a cancellation of three promissory notes aggregating $15,000.00, executed by them, on the ground of fraud. On the lease are several oil producing wells and a large quantity of valuable machinery, including power plant, vacuum pumps, pipes and tanks. After Eickman and wife granted the lease it was transferred several times until it reached the Covington Oil Company* incorporated, with offices in the city of Covington, Kentucky. At that time the lease was undeveloped, but there were some wells on farms nearby. The Covington Oil Company gave $10,000.00 for the undeveloped lease. It then employed oil well drillers to sink wells on the property and this was done at great expense. After pumping the wells for several months and marketing oil to the amount of about $6,000.00, the company decided it could increase its production from the wells by installing a certain character of vacuum pumps, and it gave an order for these pumps, which were in the course of a few months delivered on the premises at a cost of about $9,000.00. These pumps were about to be installed when appellee, William Brown, conceived the idea of purchasing the lease from the Covington Oil Company before these pumps were put in operation, anticipating that the flow of oil would be greatly increased by the use of the pumps. He was not able to swing the deal by himself although he was the owner of some oil drilling machinery and some oil leases and perhaps wells. At that time the market price of
The defendants answered and admitted the execution of the notes but denied their liability on the same, avering that the said notes were obtained through fraud on the part of the Covington Oil Company, A. R. Miller and William Brown, and by cross-petition and counterclaim all the facts as understood by Larmon, Hogan and Bunnell were set forth, concluding with a prayer for a cancellation of the notes and the recovery of damages from plaintiff Miller, defendant Brown and the cross-defendant, Covington Oil Company. The company filed answer to the cross-petition and counterclaim, the plaintiff, Miller, filed reply and defendant Brown filed answer, each denying the allegations of fraud contained in the cross-petition and counterclaim of Larmon, Hogan and Bunnell. Issue being joined the parties took a large volume of evidence, principally directed to the issue of fraud in the sale and transfer of the leasehold by the Covington Oil Company and A. R. Miller to Brown, Larmon, Hogan and Bunnell. To support their averment that the notes were obtained by fraud and deceit the defendants, Larmon, Hogan and Bunnell, testified and introduced witnesses to prove that defendant Brown approached them and induced them to buy an interest in the Rickman leasehold with its equipments on the basis of $60,000.00 for the entire property, representing to them at the time that the wells on said lease were then producing forty barrels per day and would produce twice that amount as soon as the vacuum pumps were installed and put into operation, and that defendants believing and relying upon said representation, and not knowing otherwise, bought the interest set forth in their pleading and gave their checks for one-half of the price to Brown, whom they thought was the agent of the Covington Oil Company, and which checks were made payable to said company, and at the same time executed and delivered to him for the said company the notes sued on; that they afterwards learned for the first time that the wells on the leasehold were producing only about ten barrels of oil per day, and the installation of the vacuum pumps had failed to increase the production to eighty barrels per day, or to increase it at all; or, if any but very little. They further testified that Brown repre
For the appellees, Miller, Brown and the Covington Oil Company, it is shown that a short time before the execution-of the notes on January 26, 1920, the oil company, then owner of the Rickman lease and all improvements and machinery thereon, became desirous of disposing of the same at the price of $30,000.00. Brown, who had drilled the wells on the lease for the Covington Oil Company at so much per foot, concluding the work several months before the transaction in question, entertained a high opinion of the lease, its oil producing possibilities and its value, and desired to own an interest in it. Brown testified that he in good faith believed the leasehold and equipment to be worth $60,000.00, and thought it a. good purchase if it could be had for that sum. Proceeding upon that basis and believing that it was a good opportunity to make money in the oil business, Brown says he approached his friends, Larmon, Hogan and Bunnell, separately, and at different times and places and laid the matter before them and told them he believed the lease was a valuable one and was well worth the $60,000.00 for which he thought it could be purchased and that he was willing to take a one-half interest in it at the price of $30,000.00 and that he told them he believed the suction pumps then about to be installed would greatly increase the production of the wells as it had done in other oil territory under his observation, and that he believed the wells when connected up with the suction pumps would produce enough oil to soon pay for the lease and all the machinery; that he and Larmon went to Covington for the express purpose of seeing A.
“Of the consideration herein there remains unpaid $15,000.00, for which A. R. Miller has this day executed his note to the Covington Oil Company, the same to bear interest at the rate of 6% from date until paid, and as*660 collateral to said note, the said A. R. Miller has attached the note of W. Roy Hogan for $3,750.00, payable six months from date, to the Covington Oil Company; the note of- John H. Larmon, for $3,750.00, payable six months from date, to the Covington Oil Company. In addition to the foregoing, the said A. R. Miller agrees to attach to the said notes a certain mortgage, to be executed to him by, the parties purchasing said property from him. ’ ’
In the meantime, as shown by the evidence of Brown, he had obtained from Larmon a check for $3,750.00 and a note for a like amount, both payable to the Covington Oil Company, and a like check and note from Hogan, also a check for $7,500.00 and note of equal amount from Bunnell, payable to the company, and these were delivered to A. R. Miller who, after paying to the Covington Oil Company $15,000.00 in cash (the total cash paid by Larmon, Hogan and Bunnell), gave to the company his individual note for $15,000.00, due in six months, to which was attached as collateral the note of Bunnell for $7,500.00, the note of Hogan for $3,750.00, and a note of Larmon for $3,750.00. To secure these notes Larmon, Hogan and Bunnell executed to Miller a mortgage on the leasehold and appurtenances for $15,000.00, and this mortgage was attached to Miller’s note to the company. On January 26th Miller transferred by separate writing to Bunnell a one-fourth undivided interest in and to the leasehold and its improvements and appurtenances, to Hogan a one-eighth interest, and to Larmon a one-eighth interest, retaining a lien for the unpaid purchase money. No transfer was made to Brown for his one-half interest in the whole lease property. Although it is testified that Brown delivered his check for $30,000.00 to Miller for his one-half interest in the lease, it is admitted that the check was never paid and that Brown never received any transfer of the interest in the lease nor received loyalties from the oil produced from the lease. It is shown, however, that a division order was executed between Larmon, Hogan, Bunnell and Miller whereby these persons received their proportion of the oil from the-lease and approximated the results, totaling almost $10,000.00 from March to November, 1920.
On this evidence the appellants earnestly insist in long and well prepared briefs that Brown was the agent of the Covington Oil Company, and that he and Miller were partners, the three — Brown, Miller and the Covington
While fraud may be and generally is established by circumstantial evidence alone, it must be clear and convincing. Fraud will never be presumed. On the contrary, the presumption prevails that no fraud or wrong has been perpetrated or done. To justify the granting of relief against fraud by a court of equity, evidence of a convincingly probative nature must be produced to sustain the charge. Gahren, Dodge & Maltby v. Parkersburg National Bank, 157 Ky. 266; 31 B. 978; 31 B. 855.
So far as we are able to discover there is not a line or word of competent evidence in the record before us which tends in the slightest degree to prove that the Covington Oil Company and its officials, or any of them, were guilty of fraud or bad faith in the sale of the leasehold to appellee Miller, or in the sale of the same property by Miller to appellants. It did not even have information of the terms or conditions of the sale which Miller made to Larmon and the other appellants so far as the record shows. The only evidence on the subject in- the record proves that the company and its officials were entirely ignorant of the character of deal Miller was making or attempting to make with Brown and the other appellants, and that it was not even remotely interested therein. The only evidence relied upon by appellants to prove that BroAvn was the agent of the company is the statement of appellants alone, denied by Brown, that he (Brown) Avas the agent of the appellee company. Such statements, even if made, were not competent to prove the agency and did not establish its existence. Brown had not communicated with the company nor entered into any arrangement or agreement with it whereby the lease property was to be sold to appellants >or to any one at any price, so far as the record shows, but it is positively shown that he did not have such communication or make such agreement. If Brown was not the agent or sub-agent of and acting for the company at the time and
Tbe only evidence in the record which shows how the deal was originally proposed tends convincingly to prove that Brown, who had great faith in the possibilities of the lease, conceived the whole plan, intending thereby to obtain for himself an interest in the property. He had drilled all the wells on the lease and being an experienced oil man was in position to know something about its production and value. If Brown represented to appellants, Larmon, Hogan and Bunnell, that the lease was then producing forty barrels of oil per day, such representation was false as shown by all the evidence. He says he made no such representation and that he knew it did not produce that much but only yielded about ten barrels per day. This fact he says he made known to appellants. He further says that Larmon, who lived close to the wells, visited the lease in company with him and saw its wells, Watched the pumping and talked to the man in charge, who gave Larmon full information about the capacity of the lease. From other evidence we know appellant Larmon visited and inspected the lease more than one time before he purchased an interest in it with the other appellants. He had opportunity to and did investigate the capacity of the wells. From this he was able to figure the reasonable value of the lease. The other appellants made no such investigation although they had opportunity through the invitation of Brown to do so. The weight of the evidence shows that Larmon was quite anxions to acquire an interest in the lease before the vacuum pumps were put in operation for he expected the production of the wells to be greatly increased, and the price of the lease to advance in consequence. Brown and Larmon were animated by the same purpose. They went to Covington for the purpose of consulting appellee Miller and entering into an arrangement with him whereby he was to purchase the lease from the company and turn it over to Brown and appellants at the price of $60,000.00, Miller to have as his commission the difference, if any, between the price at which he could buy the property and $60,000.00. Up to the time of the visit of appellant Larmon and appellee Brown to Miller at Covington, neither the Covington Oil Company nor Miller knew anything of the proposed deal, so far as the evidence shows.
“Q. Where did you go? A. To Covington. Q. How did you go ? A. In an automobile. Q. Then direct to Mr. Miller’s house? A. I don’t know that we went direct. Q. Who did you see in Covington with reference to this transaction? A. Nobody. Nobody but Mr. Miller? A. That is all. Q. Did you see anyone else at all in regard to it? A. No, sir, nobody. Q. Did you see anyone else in Covington in connection with this transaction? A. No one else. Q. Then’where did you go? A. Back to Lexington. . . . Q. Now, you went up to see Mr. Miller with Mr. Brown, I believe? A. Yes, sir. Q. At whose instance did you go? A. Mr. Brown’s. I didn’t know he was going there when we started. Q. At that time you had already contracted or agreed to take an interest in this lease? A. Yes, sir, already agreed. Q. Who did you buy from, as you understood it? A. The Covington Oil Company. Q. Did you go to Mr. Miller’s at Covington on Sunday and request him, in connection with Mr. Brown, to buy this lease for you all from the Covington Oil Company, stating that you was afraid the Covington Oil Company would require you to pay more than $60,000.00? A. No, sir. Q. You say you thought you were transacting business with the Covington Oi'l Company all the time? A. Yes, sir. Q. Did you say there you wanted to purchase it before the Covington Oil Company knew that they were installing the vacuum pumps ? A. No, sir, I did not. Q. Did you tell Mr. Miller, that to buy it for $60,000.00 and you didn’t care how much money he made out of that? A. Nothing like that. Q. Was that talked by you or Brown to Miller, or by Brown in your presence? A. I don’t think so. Q. What connection did you understand Mr. Miller had when you were dealing with Brown? A. I thought he was the Covington Oil Company; after we got up there possibly Mr. Brown told me that, I think Brown told me that Mr. Miller was the Covington Oil Company, if I remember right.
“Mr. Larmon set out the fact that they had agreed amongst themselves that in the event they went to the Covington Oil Company to purchase the property they might have to pay more than $60,000.00 for it, because it might raise a suspicion in their minds as to the results of the vacuum pump; that they wanted to buy it before the Covington Oil Company became .possessed of the knowledge of the results obtained by the vacuum pumps, and they thought I would be able to buy the property to a better advantage than they themselves would.”
Appellants point with confidence to the fact that Brown did not become the owner of a one-half interest in the oil property as conclusive of the existence of a corrupt secret arrangement between Brown and Miller, and this is the strongest circumstance in appellants’ favor. The explanations given by Brown and Miller are reasonable. Brown, they say,, gave Miller his cheek for $30,000.00 for a one-half interest, expressly stating at the time that he did not have that much cash in bank but would soon have that sum from the sale of certain oil property which he expected to sell right away. Miller accepted the check but gave Brown no assignment of an interest in the lease on account, as he says, of the verbal arangement made between them, whereby Miller was to hold the interest in the lease as security for the payment of the check. Brown failed to make his oil deals and could not meet his check. The matter drifted along for awhile until the oil business began to wane. This suit was brought by Miller on the notes. Concerning this Miller testified:
“I — on several occasions — pressed Mr. Brown for the payment of this check, as well as other money that was due me from him. In order to secure me he made a transfer to me of his entire interest in this property, with the understanding that it was to be re-transferred to him as soon as he was able to pay the $30,000.00, setting out the fact that his failure was because of the fact that his deals that were pending had not materialized.”
Against this positive evidence for appellees there is only interposed the circumstance that Miller failed to .convey to Brown an interest in the lease but gave to
A careful reading of all the evidence gives an impelling impression that appellants were not caused to purchase the oil lease at $60,000.00 so much by representations of Brown as by the general prevailing excitement over the oil business in that field, and the wild stories of large fortunes quickly realized from such investments. Certainly there is no evidence that Miller was guilty of fraudulent conduct which led appellants to buy the lease at a high price. He was asked by Brown and Larmon to make the purchase on the assurance that if he could buy it they would pay him $60,000.00 for the lease. He found he could buy the property at less than $60,000.00 and he wanted to make the difference which the proposed purchasers agreed he should have. All this was but natural. If the facts with respect to the negotiations which led up to the deal, were not as stated by Brown and Miller we are unable to say, from the evidence, how the deal came about, or what were its terms and conditions. Larmon only half-heartedly denies his part in the conversation which led to the purchase agreement with Miller at Covington, while both Brown and Miller speak out plainly. On this point the decided weight of the evidence is against appellants. If the deal was brought about by the meeting at Covington, as stated by Brown and Miller, appellants were not wronged and have no just ground of complaint. Had the vacuum pumps come up to appellants’ expectations and the oil business continued good they would have made money from the deal, but when it closed down with the general business depression, and crude oil, which was selling at about $4.00 per barrel at the time of the deal, brought
Without evidence, either direct or circumstantial, tending strongly to establish fraud, courts of equity are not authorized to cancel the obligations of sui juris parties to such contract.
Perceiving no error to the prejudice of the substantial rights of appellants, the judgment is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.