40 F.2d 241 | 10th Cir. | 1930
On March 6, 1925, the appellants filed their bill in behalf of themselves as beneficiaries in the Oklahoma-Louisiana Syndicate, and for those similarly situated, against Cromwell, Graves and Warne, as trustees for said syndicate, against Cromwell and Graves individually, and against three named oil companies, in which they asked that the trustees be enjoined from acting further as such, that a receiver of the trust property be appointed, that the trust estate be closed and its assets distributed among the beneficiaries, that Cromwell and Graves be held to account for their administration of the trust and that judgment be rendered against them for the value of certain property that had belonged to the estate which it was alleged they had wrongfully sold and converted to their own use. The trust estate, when the trust was formulated, consisted entirely of oil and gas leases given to Cromwell and Graves on lands in Louisiana and Oklahoma, and they proposed the trust in a written statement to which the beneficiaries made their subscriptions, thus:
*242 “Subscription Memorandum.
“Kansas City, Missouri, June 30, 1920.
“Whereas, E. L. Graves and J. L. Cromwell of Oklahoma, and associates, are the owners of good subsisting leases on oil and gas lands in Oklahoma and Louisiana selected and purchased by them with the assistance of a competent geologist, comprising 3,307 acres in nine parishes in Louisiana and 1,080 aeres in six counties in Oklahoma, a total of 4,387 acres in 35 separate tracts as scheduled and described in detail in the written statements, geological reports and maps presented herewith; and
“Whereas, These oil properties are appraised at $62,413 as itemized on lists shown, the owners now offer to sell an undivided three-fourths interest amounting to $46,810 and retain the other one-fourth interest amounting to $15,603 of the foregoing appraisement; the properties to be transferred under a trust contract that recites supervision, control and disposition of them to a trustee selected by the several purchasers;
“Now, Therefore, it is mutually that the subscribers hereto agree to buy an undivided interest as above explained equal to the amount written opposite his name, after payment therefor said interest to be included in a declaration of trust combining the interests of all purchasers and present owners.
Name Amount
H. G. Warne........ $5,000.00
H. B. Keim......... 5,000.00
Dr. H. S. Hickok.... 5,000.00
N. C. Eastabrooks... 5,000.00
Chas. A. McNeese... ,..$2,500.00
A. M. Bates......... ... 1,000.00
Martha Thompson..... 5,000.00
Stone Gamble MeDermott & Wife...... ... 2,500.00) --
McCaules Kennard &
Trusty .......... ,.. 2,500.00)' IS
Then on August 18,1920, the trustees executed a declaration of trust, to which was attached a description of lands in ten Louisiana parishes and six Oklahoma counties, on which Cromwell and Graves had obtained and then held oil and gas leases. And the declaration stated that the trustees held said property (leases) and all profits and proceeds thereafter arising therefrom, and all future accessions and additions thereto, in trust as an estate for the benefit of the shareholders. The whole number of shares, stated in the declaration, was to be 625, of no par value and non-assessable. The trustees were to issue to the subscribers certificates for their shares, the form being prescribed, each share to represent a l/625th interest in the trust estate. These certificates on endorsement and surrender entitled the transferee to a new certificate from the trustees. The shareholders were not to be liable for debts of the trustees and the trustees liable only to the extent of the trust estate. Each shareholder was to participate pro-rata in profits and assets on distribution. The trustees, however, might deduct from funds of-the trust estate expenses incurred in its administration and a reasonable compensation for their services. The trustees were to constitute a board, but their action was not confined to board meetings. Amy two of them controlled, and their acts would be valid and binding. They were to keep papers, books and accounts of the trustees separate and apart from all other papers, books and accounts, accessible and open to the inspection of any shareholder, and they were to render to each shareholder a quarterly account and report of the financial condition of the estate. . The life of the trust was limited to twenty years . The power of the trustees was broad: To sell, pledge or. mortgage any property belonging to the estate, to apply any income' of the estate to its development or the acquisition of additional property, and to do all lawful acts and transact any business incident or appurtenant to and consistent with the terms of the trust. When the trust agreement was executed by the trustees the leases, all in the names of Cromwell and Graves, were assigned by them to the trustees. Cromwell and Graves resided in Oklahoma and Wame in Kansas City, Missouri.
The record does not'show the names of the shareholders and the shares held by each at the time of the trial, but from an exhibit attached to the bill it seems that three-fourths of the offered shares were not subscribed, only 275. That left 350 unsold in the hands of Cromwell and Graves, and the testimony indicates that some of the subscribers did not and have not paid their subscriptions in full, so that, Cromwell and Graves, instead of receiving $46,810.00, as proposed in the subscription memorandum, for assigning the leases to the syndicate, received, according to the proof, less than $25,000. But the parties interested went on with the trust arrangement. All of the leases were of speculative value, none was producing mineral, or then being prospected and developed, and it could not have .been believed or hoped that many, of them would ever be productive. Which of them would prove to be of value because of underlying oil or gas was a recognized un
Among the leases put into the trust by Cromwell and Graves and named in the schedule attached to the declaration of trust was a lease to Cromwell and Graves given by Sam Little, an Indian allottee, on his homestead of 120 acres in Okfuskee county, Oklahoma. Little’s wife did not join him in executing that lease, and in the latter part of 1922 Cromwell and Graves surrendered it and took a new lease on the homestead from Little and wife, on the same terms and conditions that were contained in the prior lease. This was done because the Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit, on July 3, 1922, had held in Sperry O. & G. Co. v. Chisholm, 282 F. 93 (reversed in 264 U. S. 488, 44 S. Ct. 372, 68 L. Ed. 803), that such lease, without the wife’s joinder, was void. The negotiations leading to the approval of the new lease to Cromwell and Graves from Little and wife by the Secretary of the Interior, were these: On September 27, 1922, Cromwell wrote to the Superintendent of the Five Civilized Tribes calling attention to the decision of the Court of Appeals in its holding that such a lease as that given by Little was not legally made because Little’s wife did not join in its execution, and said:
“In order to legalize the title to our lease defined under these decisions, we ask relief on the part of the lessors by submitting hereto attached, an oil and gas lease executed by Sam Little, the allottee, and Hepsy Little, his wife, for your consideration and approval as a substitute lease, bearing the same rental and royalty, * * * to cover the unexpired time of the original lease. My attorney and the attorneys for many of the large lease owners * * * hold a substitute lease approved by the Department, is the only legal recourse to supply the deficiency, * * * unless it is reversed by the Supreme Court at Washington. We had recently paid the annual rental and advance royalty on the original lease- due on August 8, 1922. * * * In equity to both lessor and lessees, we know of no better method of handling such a ease,- and, therefore, submit the leases and all facts relative to the transaction to you and ask your cooperation to legalize this lease.”
The Department concluded to accept the prior lease of Sam Little for cancellation and to approve the substitute lease therefor made by little and his wife. It treated the new lease as a substitute for the prior lease and Cromwell and Graves accepted it, with the Department’s approval,' as a substitute. They signed a stipulation, in negotiating with the Department, in which they stated it to be a substitute for the prior lease, and said that they asked: “The approval of this substitute lease for the unexpired time of lease No. 39351” (the prior lease). Cromwell and Graves were put to an expense of about $900 in obtaining the new lease, and from the time they got it they claimed and ever thereafter have claimed it as their property, and that the Oklahoma-Louisiana Syndicate had no title to or interest in it, and they later sold it for a large sum which they have retained and applied to their own private uses. Obviously, that claim cannot be sustained, because (1) the Supreme Court, in reversing the Court of Appeals, held in effect that the prior lease was valid — that is, the wife’s signature was not needed, (2) Cromwell and
“If among the assets of the trust estate there are leases, the trustee cannot renew them in his own name; and if he renews them in his own name, he must hold them by a constructive trust for the same persons beneficially interested in the old lease. Even if the lessor refuse to renew the lease for the benefit of the cestui que trust, and the trustee takes it in his own name, he is still a constructive trustee, and he must account for all the" income and profits. This is on the ground that a trustee should be under no temptations to make any contracts in relation to the trust property, even collaterally, on his own private account.”
See, also, 2 Perry on Trusts, § 538; McCourt v. Singers-Bigger (C. C. A.) 145 F. 103, 7 Ann. Cas. 287.
Graves’ deposition was taken but he was not personally served in this suit, and no personal judgment can be rendered against him. However, that is no reason why Cromwell should not be held for what they both received, or the full value of the lease if that be greater. Cromwell throughout co-operated with Graves in obtaining the substitute lease, in claiming that they received it and thereafter held it in their individual right, in failing to assign it to the syndicate in the manner in which the prior lease had been assigned, in neglecting to notify their co-trustee and the beneficiaries, and finally in selling the lease without objection or protest on the part of Cromwell.that it belonged to the syndicate, but with his consent and co-operation. 2 Perry on Trusts, § 848:
“If co-trustees are jointly implicated in a • breach of trust, the cestui que trust may have a decree against them jointly, or he may take an execution against any one of them separately, or he may levy an execution on the property of one, as each one is liable for the whole amount.”
ffame was wholly inactive as a trustee in lpoking after the trust estate and its interests) and took no part in and knew nothing about the taking of the substitute lease and its sale by Cromwell and Graves. No personal liability against him is claimed and no accounting asked.
We return to the trustees’ meeting at Kansas City on July 20, 1921. The appellants claim and allege in belated amendments to their bill that the result of that meeting was to bring into the trust estate other Oklahoma oil and gas leases held by Cromwell and Graves, not named in the schedule of leases attached to the declaration of trust as. constituting the trust estate, and that they should account therefor. The most valuable of these leases is the Hepsy Little lease on her 160 acres adjoining her husband’s 120 acres. Wame testified that he called the Kansas City meeting to order and then “stated to Cromwell and Graves that they had not re-syndicated, developed, or sold any of the leases to bring in money to carry on the business as they had guaranteed to do, and additional to that they had allowed leases to lapse, including some that were represented as the most valuable the syndicate had * * * that unless they convinced us they would carry out some of their original promises I intended to sue them. * * * It was the Louisiana leases that had lapsed. Graves Said they would substitute leases equal to or exceeding the value of those that had lapsed. * * * I inquired what leases they proposed to substitute and he mentioned a number, to all of which Cromwell agreed except the Hepsy Little, which Graves had mentioned. * * * I said to leave that one (Hepsy Little) in because it is on the structure. Cromwell then said ‘If that wiE settle the question alright, I wiE put it in.’ Graves and Cromwell themselves were going to- raise the money to pay the rentals. That is why they sold us this stuff and we paid them thousands of doEars to have t|ie funds to proceed to develop.They sold us this stock as absolutely non-assessable. Yes, my $5,000 subscription was for an interest in the leases before they were syndicated, but they were to develop them. There never was a word mentioned about rentals. It is true when these lapsed in Louisiana there was no money in the treasury to pay them.” Warne’s subscription for shares
It was stipulated at the trial that the-issue of accounting should be reserved until the issue as to the liability of Cromwell and Graves to account should be first determined. The decree dismissing the bills, except as to defendants oil companies, will be reversed and the cause remanded to the district court to take that accounting as to the Sam Little lease, and to ascertain the shareholders in the Oklahoma-Louisiana Syndicate for the purpose of making distribution among them. The only credits to be allowed in favor of’ Cromwell against the full amount for which the Sam Little lease was sold, on its reasonable value, are the rentals paid on syndicate leases by Cromwell and Graves. Any unpaid stock subscriptions will be credited to Cromwell and' Graves. Coste of this appeal will be adjudged against Cromwell. The dismissal of the bill against the three corporate defendants is affirmed. As to all other parties it is reversed and remanded.