Lead Opinion
The sole question presented by this appeal is that of jurisdiction. The appellants, citizens of Illinois and plaintiffs below, commenced this suit against J. E. Crosbie, Incorporated, an Oklahoma corporation, and Henry H. Cross Company, an Illinois corporation, in the Chancery Court of Ouachita County, Arkansas. J. E. Crosbie, Inc., removed the suit to the court below upon the ground that there was in suit a controversy wholly between the plaintiffs and the defendant J. E. Crosbie, Inc., which could be fully determined as between them. 28 U.S.C.A. § 71. The plaintiffs moved to remand the suit, asserting that no separable controversy was involved and that only one cause of action was stated against the defendants jointly. The motion to remand was denied, and, after a trial, judgment for the defendants was entered. The only .ground upon which the judgment is challenged is that the court erred in refusing to remand the case to the State court.
Whether the trial court erred in retaining jurisdiction must be determined from the complaint as it was at the time the defendant J. E. Crosbie, Inc., petitioned for the removal of the suit, and not as it was subsequently amended. Pullman Co. v. Jenkins,
At the time the suit was removed, the allegations of 'the complaint were: That plaintiffs are citizens of Illinois; that defendant J. E. Crosbie, Inc., is an Oklahoma corporation engaged in leasing and operating oil lands and marketing oil and gas; and that Henry H. Cross Company is an Illinois corporation engaged in purchasing oil and operating oil refineries. That ‘‘the claims here asserted are of a complicated character for which plaintiffs seek an accounting.” That plaintiffs each own a full one-sixteenth royalty interest in certain oil-producing lands in Arkansas, which are being operated by J. E. Crosbie, Inc., under leases requiring the lessees “to deliver to the Credit of lessor, free of cost, in tanks or pipe lines to which it may connect its wells, the equal one-eighth (%) part of' all oil produced and saved from
“First, By entering into secret contracts between themselves whereby J. E. Crosbie Incorporated received a greater price per barrel than that paid to plaintiffs for their proportionate royalty interest in the same oil.
“Second, By not disclosing to the plaintiffs that J. E. Crosbie Incorporated was being paid a higher price than plaintiffs for the same oil.
“Third, By not disclosing to these plaintiffs that other royalty owners similarly situated to the plaintiffs were also being paid a higher price than plaintiffs for the same oil.
“Fourth, By failing to protect the royalty interest of these plaintiffs in not paying such plaintiffs the same price for oil as that secured by and paid to J. E. Crosbie Incorporated for the same oil.
“That said acts, violations and breaches of duty on the part of the defendants were done and committed in the knowledge that these plaintiffs were being paid less for their oil than was being paid to J. E. Crosbie Incorporated and plaintiffs here invoke and claim all of the benefits, damages and penalties accruing to them under the provisions of said Act 222.”
The prayer for relief reads as follows: “Plaintiffs pray for a full accounting and that upon final hearing for a decree in judgment against the defendants, jointly and severally, for all sums lawfully due them together with statutory penalties provided in Act 222 of the Acts of Arkansas, 1929, for costs and for all other proper relief to which the plaintiffs are entitled.”
The plaintiffs assert that their complaint charges the defendants with participating in a conspiracy to defraud the plaintiffs of the fair price of their oil. The defendants contend that the complaint clearly charges a breach of the contract or lease pursuant to which the defendant J. E. Crosbie, Inc., produced and marketed the oil and gas in suit and which gave rise to the plaintiffs’ rights to royalties and to
We think it is not necessary to determine whether the liability, if any, of the defendants under the statute of Arkansas which they are charged with violating would be joint or several, since, in our opinion, the complaint, among other things, clearly charges the defendant J. E. Crosbie, Inc., with a breach of contract in failing to account to plaintiffs for the correct proceeds of oil sold on their behalf. This cause of action was necessarily one in which only the plaintiffs and the defendant J. E. Crosbie, Inc., were involved. The other defendant was a purchaser of oil and was not a party to the contract between the plaintiffs and J. E. Crosbie, Inc.
The Supreme Court of the United States, in Fraser v. Jennison,
That a joint accounting is demanded cannot affect the separability of the controversy between the plaintiffs and the defendant J. E. Crosbie, Inc., over its alleged failure to pay over to them what, by the terms of their contract, they were lawfully entitled to receive. Chicago & A. Ry. Co. v. New York, L. E. & W. R. Co., C.C.,
Charges that a party to a contract colluded or conspired with others in connection with its breach will not serve to convert what is essentially a separable cause of action for a breach of contract into a joint cause of action for tort. This suit is substantially similar to that of Hamilton v. Empire Gas & Fuel Co., 8 Cir.,
In Genuine Panama Hat Works, Inc., v. Webb, D.C.,
Our conclusion is that the complaint disclosed at least one separable controversy between the plaintiffs and the defendant J. E. Crosbie, Inc., and that therefore the court below did not err in refusing to remand the case.
The judgment is affirmed.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting) .
It seems to me that the federal court should have remanded this case to the state court from whence it came. The plaintiffs are the owners of oil lands from which defendant Crosbie extracts the oil under a lease which reserves to the landowners one-eighth of the oil produced and saved from the premises. Over a course of years the non-resident defendant Crosbie
The removal to the federal court has been sustained on the ground that there was a separable controversy between plaintiffs and Crosbie to which Cross was not a party. The complaint plaintiffs filed in the state court contained twenty paragraphs. It was discursive and by piecing together some of its parts and disconnecting other parts, quite a number of separable controversies have been drawn out of it. In Crosbie’s petition for removal it was alleged “that the primary and fundamental controversy is for an accounting by the defendant Henry H. Cross Company.” In Crosbie’s brief three entirely different separable controversies between plaintiffs and itself are drawn from the complaint and argued at length. This court finds a separable controversy in that the complaint charges Crosbie with a breach of contract in failing to account to plaintiffs for the correct proceeds of oil sold on their behalf.
On the argument at the bar Crosbie’s counsel frankly conceded that the plaintiffs had tried to plead a joint cause of action against both defendants and there is no claim that there was any sham or fraudulent joinder. That being so, I would indulge every fair intendment to sustain the pleading as a whole in accord with its intention, and going at it in that way, it seems reasonably clear to me that the plaintiffs charged and relied for their recovery on more than a mere failure of Crosbie to account for the correct proceeds of oil sold on plaintiffs’ behalf. They relied rather on the joint action of both defendants cooperating to accomplish a concealment of the facts concerning the disposition of the oil production and consummation of actionable deceit whereby plaintiffs were defrauded of their full royalty rights. Therefore it seems to me the case is not analogous to Hamilton v. Empire Gas & Fuel Co., 8 Cir., 297 F. 422. There owners of oil land charged their lessee, a nonresident corporation, among other things, with a wrongful failure to drill offset wells, in violation of the implied obligation of the lease contract. They, made the company’s resident employees parties defendant and claimed that the action was for joint tort. This court found upon close reasoning that the cause of action stated against the company for damages on account of the company’s failure to perform its contractual obligation to drill offset wells presented a separable controversy to which the company’s employees were not parties, and that controversy was cognizable in the federal court.
But the picture here is that as the plaintiffs’ oil comes out of the wells it flows into the hands of two parties. Neither is a servant of the other or of the plaintiffs, but both know the plaintiffs’ rights. The physical possession of the oil afforded opportunity to dispose of it and an obligation to account for the correct proceeds or true value of it is an obligation that the law imposes on any one who has the property of another in his possession and sells it. For breach of that obligation the law affords a choice of remedies. In Arkansas where two or more conspire to cheat the owner out of the value or proceeds they commit a joint tort and are subject to a joint action. Wilson v. Davis,
