143 A. 913 | Pa. | 1928
Argued September 25, 1928.
This action in equity is to compel an accounting between partners, in which the defendant has appealed from a decree directing him to file an account. The parties hereto, residents of Punxsutawney, Jefferson County, entered into a partnership in the spring of 1922, which continued until July 1, 1926, when dissolved by mutual consent. That there was a partnership is admitted; the vital question is as to what it embraced. D. E. Brown, the defendant, contends that it extended only to the coal brokerage business and to a lumber business; *206
while W. F. Smith, the plaintiff, contends it also extended to some coal mining business and especially embraced an oil and gas operation in Indiana County. The last named was the nub of the case, as to which the evidence was very conflicting. On November 15, 1924, while the coal brokerage partnership business was in full operation, the defendant obtained from Dr. J. W. Morrow a written lease giving him the oil and gas rights in a tract of three hundred and nine acres situate in North Mahoning Township, on a royalty basis. While the lease was in defendant's name, plaintiff insists and the trial court has found that it was in fact a part of the partnership business. This finding of fact, supported by the weight of the evidence, direct and circumstantial, cannot be disturbed. In an equity case the trial court's findings of facts, on conflicting evidence, are as conclusive as the verdict of a jury: Garr et al. v. Fuls et al.,
Assuming, as has been found, that the oil and gas lease was a part of the partnership business, it would inure to the benefit of the firm, although taken in the name of one partner. In the instant case plaintiff did not consent to the taking of the lease in defendant's name or know it had been so taken until about the beginning of this suit. The expressed intention of the lease was the production of oil or gas or both through the drilling of wells. These were to be financed by the issuance of thirty-two shares of stock of the assumed value of $450 each, for each well, in a company called "The Mudlick Oil Gas Company"; of which, sixteen shares were to pay for drilling the wells, four shares to go to Dr. Morrow, as his royalty, and the remaining twelve shares were to be equally divided between the plaintiff and defendant. The first well produced gas in paying quantities; the second was a dry hole and for the drilling thereof the partnership, as the trial court has found, *207 paid a shortage of $723.50; the third and fourth wells are productive and the fifth was being drilled at the time this case was heard.
The defendant received the income from these wells but declines to share the same with plaintiff, denying that this lease was embraced in the partnership and contending that if it were the contract relating thereto between plaintiff and defendant, being oral, it is not enforceable because of the statute of frauds. It must be conceded that coal oil and natural gas, while in the ground, are a part of the real estate (see Marshall v. Mellor et al.,
Furthermore, real estate procured for and used in the business of the firm, as in the instant case, is, as between the partners, treated as personalty: Creise et al. v. Cartledge,
It will be time to consider the effect of the clause in the lease restraining the lessee from transferring the *209 leasehold estate, without the written consent of Dr. Morrow, the lessor, when he raises that question; the defendant cannot set it up to defeat plaintiff's demand in this case.
Under the facts as found, there was no error in the decree that the oil and gas lease be treated as firm property and that each partner be required to account to the firm for such of its business as came under his control.
The decree is affirmed, the appeal is dismissed, at the cost of appellant, and the record is remitted with a procedendo.