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Eason Oil Co. v. Oklahoma City Petroleum Corporation

Supreme Court of Oklahoma
Sep 19, 1939
185 Okla. 448 (Okla. 1939)

Summary

In Eason Oil Co. v. Oklahoma City Petroleum Corporation, 185 Okla. 448, 94 P.2d 222 (1939), we held that a receiver should not be appointed unless the evidence is such as to justify a reasonable inference that the remedy is necessary to prevent manifest wrong and injustice.

Summary of this case from Panama Timber Co., Inc. v. Barsanti

Opinion

No. 28387.

September 19, 1939.

(Syllabus.)

1. Receivers — Error in Appointing Temporary Receiver Without Notice Waived by Answering to Merits and Contesting Making of Appointment Permanent.

Where a temporary receiver is appointed without notice, and defendant files motion to vacate, motions and demurrers in the main case, and response to the order to show cause why the temporary appointment should not be made permanent, and appears at a hearing and contests the making of the appointment permanent, and is afforded opportunity to present evidence in opposition thereto, he will be held to have waived the error, if any, of the trial court in making the temporary appointment without notice.

2. Receivers — Requisite Showing for Appointment of Receiver — Sound Discretion of Trial Court to Be Exercised.

When the party applying for the appointment of a receiver pending the litigation has made a showing entitling him, upon some recognized rule, to have a receiver appointed, the matter is then within the sound discretion of the trial court as to whether a receiver should be appointed, and the appellate court will ordinarily refuse to interfere. But, unless a showing is made by the party making the application, entitling him to have a receiver appointed upon some theory recognized by courts of equity or authorized by statute, the appointment is an abuse of discretion.

3. Same — Evidence Required to Be Such as to Justify Reasonable Inference That Remedy Is Necessary to Prevent Manifest Wrong and Injury.

While, to authorize the appointment of a receiver as ancillary relief upon an interlocutory application, it is not necessary that the proof should be as full and complete as if the trial were upon the main issues, nevertheless the evidence must be such as to justify a reasonable inference that the remedy is necessary to prevent manifest wrong and injury.

Appeal from District Court, Oklahoma County; Ben Arnold, Judge.

Action by the Oklahoma City Petroleum Corporation against the Eason Oil Company. From order denying motion to vacate order appointing temporary receiver without notice and making temporary appointment permanent, defendant appeals. Reversed.

Simons, McKnight, Simons, Mitchell McKnight, for plaintiff in error.

Miley, Hoffman, Williams, France Johnson and M.W. Eddleman, for defendant in error.


This is an appeal by Eason Oil Company from an order entered in an action brought by Oklahoma City Petroleum Corporation, denying a motion to vacate an order appointing a temporary receiver, made without notice, and making such temporary appointment permanent.

The petition of Oklahoma City Petroleum Corporation, in its first cause of action, sought to cancel for fraud a partition sale under which defendant, theretofore owner of an interest in the oil and gas lease and well in controversy, acquired the entire property; in its second cause of action it sought an accounting, and the cancellation of a contract giving defendant the operation of the lease; and in the third cause of action it asked for a receiver on the ground of threatened abandonment of the property by defendant, and consequent loss and damage to plaintiff. When the suit was filed plaintiff had no title to, nor interest in, the property, its interest having been acquired by defendant at the partition sale aforesaid. There was no allegation of insolvency. On this petition, duly verified, the court appointed, without notice, a receiver to take charge of the property and operate the well thereon, and later refused, upon hearing, to vacate the appointment, but made it permanent.

1. Defendant urges in two assignments of error that the trial court erred in making the temporary appointment without notice. However, we are of opinion that the defendant, having filed its motion to vacate, and demurrers and motion to make more definite and certain, and having appeared and participated in the hearing to determine whether the temporary appointment should be made permanent, waived the error, if any, in making the appointment without notice. 23 R. C. L. 40, § 39; Union State Bank v. Mueller (1918) 68 Okla. 152, 172 P. 650; Morgan v. Daniels (1928) 130 Okla. 201, 266 P. 464. Defendant, as against this rule, cites and relies upon Oklahoma Cotton Growers' Association et al. v. Whitener et al. (1932) 155 Okla. 256, 8 P.2d 1106. That case does not overrule the cases above cited, and we think the point on which they were decided was not involved.

2. The third assignment, that the court erred in overruling defendant's application to vacate, and in making the temporary appointment permanent, is in our opinion well taken, and must be sustained.

An application for the appointment of a receiver is addressed to the sound judicial discretion of the trial court. It is argued that the court did not clearly abuse its discretion in refusing to vacate the appointment. The rule that the appellate court will not reverse a judgment in such a case unless there is a clear abuse of discretion shown is subject to this qualification: Before the trial court has any discretion to appoint a receiver of the property of a solvent going concern there must be a showing of a state of facts justifying the appointment on some theory recognized by courts of equity or authorized by statute. It was incumbent on plaintiff, at the hearing, to produce evidence establishing: (a) A strong probability that it would prevail on the merits in the main action; (b) that it would suffer irreparable loss and injury if the appointment were not made; and (c) that it had no other plain, speedy, or adequate remedy. Only upon such showing could the judicial discretion be called into operation, and failure to establish these three essential elements would be fatal to the application, and the appointment made thereon an abuse of discretion. 53 Corpus Juris, 65, § 64; Healy v. Steele (1932) 158 Okla. 194, 13 P.2d 140; Jackson et al. v. Ward (1925) 111 Okla. 73, 238 P. 429; Montana Ranches Co. v. Dolan et ux. (1917 Mont.) 164 P. 306; Ellis v. Panther Oil Gas Co. (1935) 171 Okla. 552, 43 P.2d 423; Scott v. Price et al. (1924) 103 Okla. 150, 229 P. 618.

Tested by the rule above set forth, which is almost universally adhered to by both text writers and courts of last resort, plaintiff failed in its proof. Alleging in its first cause of action fraud and misrepresentation by defendant to its then receiver, W.C. Kite, to induce the institution of the partition proceeding which resulted in the sale of the property to defendant, the proof showed that no representations were made by defendant to Kite, and he testified positively that he first conceived the idea of sale, and suggested it to defendant, and that defendant agreed with reservations. Its allegation in the same cause of action that the well was shut down for a period prior to the bringing of the partition action, fraudulently, and for the purpose of deceiving Kite, and inducing him to believe the well was dead, when in fact it was not, is likewise entirely unsupported by the evidence, except the fact, admitted by defendant apparently, that the well was shut down. Its allegation that defendant concealed from Kite the existence of possibly productive shallower sands is denied by Kite, who testifies he knew of them and so advised prospective bidders.

While, in support of its second cause of action, plaintiff introduced evidence of excessive operating charges, especially for power and cleanout equipment, it is significant that no effort was made to introduce the amount of expenses incurred by the owners of other wells in that vicinity, or similar items. Kite testified that many charges were adjusted, and that, as adjusted, the rental charge for cleanout tools was reasonable. There was no proof of oil produced and not accounted for by defendant.

The evidence wholly fails to show any intent on the part of defendant to plug and abandon the well at the time the suit was brought. Plaintiff's petition alleged, and the proof showed, that after acquiring the other interest, defendant continued production. Defendant, in its verified response, stated that since the acquisition of plaintiff's interest at the partition sale, it had expended $2,500 in cleaning out and reconditioning the well, and was still endeavoring to make it a paying producer. The present receiver testified that he was operating the property in exactly the same manner it was operated by defendant.

Evidence of imminent danger of irreparable injury or loss to plaintiff, or of an emergency justifying the taking of its property from defendant, is entirely lacking.

Judgment reversed.

BAYLESS, C. J., WELCH, V. C. J., and CORN and DANNER, JJ., concur.


Summaries of

Eason Oil Co. v. Oklahoma City Petroleum Corporation

Supreme Court of Oklahoma
Sep 19, 1939
185 Okla. 448 (Okla. 1939)

In Eason Oil Co. v. Oklahoma City Petroleum Corporation, 185 Okla. 448, 94 P.2d 222 (1939), we held that a receiver should not be appointed unless the evidence is such as to justify a reasonable inference that the remedy is necessary to prevent manifest wrong and injustice.

Summary of this case from Panama Timber Co., Inc. v. Barsanti

explaining that because "the defendant ... filed its motion to vacate ... and appeared and participated in hearing to determine whether the temporary appointment [of the receiver] should be made permanent, [the defendant] waived the error, if any, in making the appointment without notice"

Summary of this case from Truett v. Freedom Leaf, LLC
Case details for

Eason Oil Co. v. Oklahoma City Petroleum Corporation

Case Details

Full title:EASON OIL CO. v. OKLAHOMA CITY PETROLEUM CORPORATION

Court:Supreme Court of Oklahoma

Date published: Sep 19, 1939

Citations

185 Okla. 448 (Okla. 1939)
94 P.2d 222

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Truett v. Freedom Leaf, LLC

Id. (emphases added); see also Eason Oil Co. v. Oklahoma City Petroleum Corp. , 1939 OK 318, ¶ 5, 185 Okla.…

Truett v. Freedom Leaf, LLC

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