Irvine Development Co. v. Clark
Irvine Development Co. v. Clark
Opinion of the Court
Opinion of the Court by
Reversing.
This is an appeal by tbe defendant from a judgment for $2,329.50 rendered against it in favor of the plaintiff, now appellee, for labor performed by him in drilling an oil well upon the property of another than the defendant, namely, the New York-Irvine Oil 'Company, called hereinafter the oil company.
Considerable portions of the briefs are devoted to a discussion of whether or not the petition is. a declaration upon an express or an implied contract, but it will not be necessary for us to consider that question because of our conclusion that there is no evidence to sustain either and that the court erred in overruling defendant’s motion for a directed verdict made at the conclusion of plaintiff’s 'evidence and renewed after all of the evidence had been heard.
Plaintiff had a written contract with defendant to drill an oil well on the A. S. Pasley lease owned by defendant at $1.50 per linear foot, which contract contained the provision that the defendant was to pay the plaintiff “$50.00 per day in case of any delay in drilling on said, lease if said party of the first part (plaintiff) is on the lease and ready to drill and the delay is the cause of the ¡Second party (defendant).”
Mr. II. C. Jordon was the resident manager of both the defendant and the oil company, both of which were non-resident corporations. Shortly after plaintiff began to drill the well upon the Pasley lease, operations were stopped by an injunction and Jordon directed plaintiff to move his rig on to the Hiram Reed lease, which was some five or six miles distant from the Pasley lease and was owned by the oil company. Plaintiff drilled two wells
The rule is thoroughly established that neither an agency nor the extent thereof can be established by opinion evidence. It is thus stated in 2 C. J. 948, “A witness on the issue of agency must state only the facts and 'circumstances concerning the various transactions, leaving the court or jury to determine whether or not an agency Was created and hence may not give his opinion or state
There is therefore absolutely no evidence that Jordon had any authority to bind.defendant for work he might order for the oil company, plaintiff does not even so state; and his statement that in iso doing Jordon was acting for defendant is proven by his own admissions on the facts to be but an unwarranted conclusion and without probative value.
Hence plaintiff by his evidence did not prove against defendant either an express or an implied contract to pay him for drilling the well upon the F-riend lease owned by the oil company. Nor was his case made out by th!e> evidence for the defendant.
Jordon testified that he employed the defendant to perform the work here involved for the oil company and not the defendant, development company, and that he so informed the plaintiff at the time. That this is true is conclusively established by letters introduced by the defendant which plaintiff wrote to Mr. Jordon and to the oil company.
Just after plaintiff moved his rig to the Friend lease and started drilling the well on same he wrote a letter to Mr. Jordon in which he said, among other things: “What company will I charge the account to ? I believe you told me one time but I have forgotten and I have no contract to rtefer to.” A few days later he made out a bill to the New York-Irvine Oil Company and mailed it to Mr. Jordon as its agent for the expense of moving his drilling outfit from the Eeed to the Friend lease. About a month later he wrote Mr. Jordon a letter which begins, “Will drop you a few lines to see if you have heard from the New York-Irvine Oil Company. I have not heard from the move bill and I think it is time. I paid out my money a long time ago for them.” This letter ends with, “Please give me a reply in regard to the New York-Irvine Co. without delay.” When he completed drilling the well, he sent his bill therefor and for plugging same to the “New York-Irvine Company.” A few weeks still later, he wrote Mr. Jordon another letter in which he said, “I begin to want to see somle money. I have written today to the New York Company, if they don’t make me reply I will have to give it to attorney.” The letter
“Furnace, Ky., 5-11-1918.
“New York-Irvine Oil Co.,
New York, N. Y.,
“My dear Sirs:
“A long’ time ago I sent your man Jordon at Winchester, Ky., the move bill to the Wince Friend farm $1,087.50 later sent him the bill for drilling the well (4/8) $1,242.00 I have called his attention to the fact these bills has. not been paid be replies he had written also wired you and it appeared you give it no attention. Please give this your attention and send me check by return mail for the bills $2,329.50 as I will be compelled to put it in attorney’s hands for collection.
“Yours truly, IT. W. Clark.”
Great stress is laid by counsel for plaintiff upon the fact that he refused to sign a written contract with the New York-Irvine Oil Co. for drilling tbe wells upon the Reed lease which Mr. Jordon delivered to him in duplicate while he was drilling those wells. It is insisted that his refusal to sign this contract was notice to the defendant through its agent Jordon that he was unwilling to perform work for the oil company, but even if this were true, that fact would not be sufficient to charge defendant for work that plaintiff was performing upon tlxei property of another and not under contract with or by direction of defendant or Jordon as its agent.
Equally unfounded is the contention that the work done by plaintiff on the Friend lease as directed by Jordon was doniei for defendant under an authorized extention'of the written contract with reference to the Pasley lease. The sum of the argument in support of this contention is that the provision in that contract quoted above for the paymlent by defendant of $50.00 per day during any delay for which plaintiff was not responsible authorized Jordon to employ plaintiff’s time for defendant during the delay occasioned by the injunction and that he was so acting when he directed plaintiff to drill tb© wells on the Reed and Friend leases or at least that plaintiff was justified in so assuming. Obviously, however, such a. provision and any contingency that might arise thereunder could not possibly be construed into an authority
Wherefore the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded for another trial consistent herewith.
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