71 F.2d 81 | 5th Cir. | 1934
Appellant filed a bill in equity to establish title in itself to a fourth interest in an oil and gas lease as to 1,329 out of a total of 3,000 acres covered by the lease. The hill was based on a written contract, hut in the alternative prayed for reformation of that contract on the ground of mutual mistake. This appeal is taken from a decree of dismissal on final hearing.
The contract upon which the rights of the parties depend was executed on May 11,1927, by Lloyd Sigler, William H. Reynolds, and the Sigler Oil Company. At that time Sigler owned one-fourth and Reynolds three-fourths of the company’s capital stock. The contract recites that there was then pending a suit brought by Sigler against Reynolds, and that they had agreed upon a compromise settlement “of all matters in controversy between the said parties hereto.” It then provides for the surrender by Sigler of all claims against Reynolds and of all the stock which he held in the company in consideration of the assignment and transfer to Sigler by
js p]ajn enough from the terms of the contract that Sigler was to have an interest' on]y pai.te of the inside 1,671 acres. “The remaining acres, * * * consisting of 1,023.31 acres,” could not have referred to flle -whole tract, because they were exactly the ^mber of acres that would be left of the 1;671 aeres after taking into account the 10 aeres that went with the well and the 637 acres as to which assignment had been previously executed by the Sigler Oil Company,
There is no evidence whatever to support the contention that a mutual mistake was made in failing to include in the assignment from Reynolds and the Sigler Company to Sigler a fourth interest in the outside 1,329 acres. There was not even a one-sided mishike. Sigler got precisely what he testified it was agreed that he should have. He thought the 1,329 outside aeres had been lost for failure to comply with the terms of the lease, as he freely admitted. It was not until after the discovery of oil on the outside acreage that the possibility occurred to anybody of having the contract so construed or reformed as to sustain the claim now asserted, The most that can be said is that Sigler, if he had known that the courts would ultimately hold that the company had not lost the outfide acreage, would have insisted upon havmg ai1 interest in it. There was no mistake as to any fact in existence when the settlement was made. Mistake as to what courts may hold in the future on a pending appeal furnishes no ground for setting aside or reforming a contract which at the time it was entered into correctly expressed the intention of the partios to it. Chicago, etc., Ry. Co. v. Wilcox (C. C. A.) 116 E. 913. This was a contract for an exchange of stock for property and not an agreement of partition between joint owners. As Sigler owned no interest in the land and the corporation owned no interest in the stock, the principles °f Iaw governing the partition of jointly owned property do not apply,
The decree is affirmed,