Shell Oil Co v. Anderson Tully Co ( 1993 )


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  •                           IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI
    NO. 94-CA-00004-SCT
    SHELL OIL COMPANY, SHELL WESTERN E & P,
    INC., AND SHELL ONSHORE PARTNERSHIP
    v.
    ANDERSON TULLY COMPANY
    THIS OPINION IS NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION AND MAY NOT BE CITED,
    PURSUANT TO M.R.A.P. 35-A
    DATE OF JUDGMENT:                              11/23/93
    TRIAL JUDGE:                                   HON. HYDE RUST JENKINS II
    COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED:                     JEFFERSON COUNTY CHANCERY COURT
    ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANTS:                      A. JERRY SHELDON
    SI M. BONDURANT
    ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE:                        R. WILSON MONTJOY II
    KATHRYN R. GILCHRIST
    ALLEN LAMAR BURRELL (WITHDRAWN)
    NATURE OF THE CASE:                            CIVIL - CONTRACT
    DISPOSITION:                                   AFFIRMED - 1/30/97
    MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:
    MANDATE ISSUED:
    BEFORE PRATHER, P.J., PITTMAN AND SMITH, JJ.
    SMITH, JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:
    Shell Oil Company and affiliates pray for relief from the judgment of the Jefferson County Chancery
    Court, claiming that the chancellor erred in awarding Anderson Tully Company $214,524.73 plus
    prejudgment interest. The award was based upon charges which the chancellor ruled were wrongfully
    attributed to Anderson Tully, stemming from the development and drilling of a gas well on property
    which Shell had leased from Anderson Tully and then relinquished the lease prior to actual
    production. Shell claims that because they relinquished the lease, the parties are in a cotenancy and,
    as such, Shell is entitled to recoup development costs from its cotenants. Anderson Tully argues that
    the relationship between itself and Shell at the time pertinent to the suit was that of lessor and lessee
    and as a result the terms of the lease control whether or not Shell can recoup development costs from
    Anderson Tully.
    This Court affirms the judgment of the chancellor in this case.
    FACTS
    Until March, 1983, Shell held a tract of land under lease from Anderson Tully. The lease provided for
    a royalty to the lessor of one-eighth of the amount realized by the lessee from gas sales. On August
    20, 1981, the Mississippi Oil and Gas Board entered an order creating the Shell-Mann 320-acre Gas
    Unit. That order integrated the interest of all the owners therein, including the interest of those who
    had not voluntarily contributed their interest to the unit, ordering that the land be developed as a
    single drilling and production unit for the sake of resource conservation. The involuntary joinder of
    property owners is known as "force pooling" or "force integration." A portion of the Anderson Tully
    mineral interest covered by the lease to Shell was included in the Shell-Mann Gas Unit. The well was
    completed on November 2, 1981, and then shut in awaiting a pipeline connection. Under the lease,
    Shell was required to pay Anderson Tully shut-in royalties. Anderson Tully did not feel that the shut-
    in royalties were timely paid and demanded a release. Shell relinquished the lease on March 25, 1983.
    When the pipeline connection to the well was completed, and the well began to produce, Shell
    deducted from Anderson Tully's revenues that portion of drilling and completion costs attributable to
    the Anderson Tully tract which Shell had previously incurred while it held the tract under lease, $214,
    524.73. Anderson Tully requested and received an accounting from Shell as to the well's drilling and
    operating costs in September, 1984. Apparently dissatisfied with Shell's accounting, Anderson Tully
    filed a lawsuit demanding an equitable accounting in March, 1985. Anderson Tully alleged that Shell
    was not entitled to offset Anderson Tully's pro rata share of well costs against Anderson Tully's
    interest in production because at the time the well was drilled, completed and shut in, Shell held a
    valid oil and gas lease covering Anderson Tully's mineral interest in the unit.
    Anderson Tully filed a Motion for Partial Summary Judgment requesting the Chancery Court of
    Jefferson County to declare as a matter of law that Shell could not charge Anderson Tully for
    expenses incurred by Shell under a lease with Anderson Tully prior to March 25, 1983, and that Shell
    was bound to pay prejudgment interest on costs improperly withheld from the date of such
    withholding up to the date of actual payment.
    The chancellor concluded that Shell must repay to Anderson Tully the amount of $214,524.73
    previously deducted by Shell, plus interest from the date that each payment was deducted.
    Subsequently, Shell petitioned for reconsideration, raising as a new contention that it was entitled to
    deduct Anderson Tully's proportionate costs because Anderson Tully's interest was pooled into the
    unit and was thus subject to costs incurred by Shell as operator of the unit. The chancellor apparently
    disagreed and overruled Shell's Motion for Reconsideration.
    Shell appeals.
    DISCUSSION OF LAW
    Shell cites five issues for this Court's consideration. In the interest of conserving space and time, two
    of those issues have been combined, and the issue of unjust enrichment is meritless and thus, will not
    be addressed by this Court.
    I.
    WHETHER A VOLUNTARILY POOLED LESSEE WHO HAS THE DUTY TO PAY
    DRILLING COSTS WHEN INCURRED, AND WHO THEREAFTER VOLUNTARILY
    RELINQUISHES THE LEASE, CAN THEN CHARGE THE LESSOR FOR THOSE
    DRILLING COSTS PREVIOUSLY PAID.
    From the outset, this case turns upon the nature of the relationship between the parties at the time the
    costs were incurred, not at the time in which they were deducted. Shell insists that the change in the
    nature of the relationship with Anderson Tully from lessor/lessee to that of a cotenancy entitles Shell
    to recoup previously incurred drilling costs. If Shell's relationship with Anderson Tully had been a
    cotenancy from the beginning, it would have no problem recovering the costs which it had incurred in
    drilling the well. Unfortunately for Shell, from the beginning and at all times relevant to this lawsuit,
    its relationship with Anderson Tully was that of lessor and lessee of a mineral interest in acreage
    which it contributed to a unitized well. Shell had leased Anderson Tully's mineral interest in Anderson
    Tully's property in exchange for a one-eighth royalty and then force integrated the remaining owners
    in the area who did not voluntarily contribute their acreage to the pool pursuant to Miss.Code Ann. §
    53-3-7. A royalty is defined to be: " 'A share of the product or profits reserved by the owner for
    permitting another to use or develop his property.' From this definition, which has been accepted by
    the courts, it is obvious that a royalty is a share in proceeds, free and clear of all expense. Both in
    theory and in practice it presupposes a lease, or production under a lease, in order to obtain that
    profit." Palmer v. Crews, 
    203 Miss. 806
    , 820, 
    35 So. 2d 430
    , 435 (1948); quoting Glassmire, Oil &
    Gas Leases & Royalties, (Second Edition), at page 63. (emphasis added).
    Thus if Shell held a lease from Anderson Tully in exchange for a royalty, it could have no expectation
    that Anderson Tully would share in the costs of production. Therefore the chancellor was correct in
    holding Anderson Tully liable only for those production, development and marketing costs developed
    after Shell had relinquished the lease.
    Shell additionally argues that it should be allowed to charge Anderson Tully with production costs
    incurred under the lease because the terms of the lease do not preclude Shell from doing so. Superior
    Oil Co. v. Beery, 
    216 Miss. 664
    , 674, 
    63 So. 2d 115
    , 118 (1953), says that absent ambiguity, we
    must apply the language of the provisions in the contract as written and agreed on by the parties
    thereto, subject to the applicable statutes for the conservation of oil and gas and the orders, rules, and
    regulations of the State Oil an Gas Board, promulgated and adopted pursuant to such statutes. In
    other words, Shell cannot charge Anderson Tully with costs properly payable by Shell just because
    the lease does not say they cannot do so. Accordingly, this Court finds that this issue is meritless.
    II.
    WHETHER THE FORCE POOLING ORDER OF THE STATE OIL AND GAS BOARD
    WAS AN IN REM ACTION AUTHORIZING SHELL TO RECOUP ITS COSTS OF
    DRILLING AND COMPLETING THE GAS WELL OUT OF THE WELL'S
    PRODUCTION.
    While Shell is correct in asserting that a force pooling order is an in rem action, they are wrong to
    assert that the nature of the action in any way changes the obligations of any of the property owners.
    While cotenants are all responsible for sharing in the costs of production, Anderson Tully was not a
    cotenant until the lease expired. So the real question is whether or not a lessor of a force integrated
    unit should be required to pay production costs incurred and payable by the lessee absent contractual
    authority.
    Shell claims that Anderson Tully's interest at the time of the lease was that of a possibility of a
    reverter. But a possibility of a reverter is an unrealized interest, and was such at the time that the
    costs were incurred. It would be inequitable to charge an unrealized interest for production costs
    properly payable by the holder of the right of production under that interest. At the time the force
    pooling order was entered, Shell owned the right to produce as to Anderson Tully's mineral interest
    by virtue of its lease from Anderson Tully. By the time production actually started and Shell became
    obligated to account, Anderson Tully owned the right to produce as to its minerals. Since a change in
    ownership does not terminate a force pooling order, Anderson Tully became liable for production
    costs incurred only from the time the lease terminated. Superior Oil Co. v. 
    Beery, 63 So. 2d at 129
    ;
    Kramer & Martin, The Law of Pooling and Unitization, § 15.04, p.15-12 (1993). Therefore, this
    Court finds this issue to be meritless.
    III. WHETHER AN AWARD OF PREJUDGMENT INTEREST IS PROPER IN AN
    EQUITABLE ACCOUNTING IN THE ABSENCE OF ANY CONTRACT, STATUTE OR
    CONDUCT BY THE ACCOUNTING PARTY THAT PROVIDES FOR INTEREST.
    Under Murphree v. Aberdeen-Munroe Hospital, 
    671 So. 2d 1300
    , 1304-05 (Miss. 1996), the
    chancellor is free to award prejudgment interest as he sees fit because the amount of the award was
    liquidated (a known quantity) at the time that the claim was first made, or if the claim was frivolous
    or in bad faith. Given that the claim was liquidated, the chancellor's discretion to award prejudgment
    interest will remain undisturbed by this Court. Furthermore, the reason that prejudgment interest is
    awarded is to compensate the prevailing party for the time value of their money dating back to the
    time when they should rightfully have had use of it. To decline to do so allows Shell to retain any
    interest that they may have gained in the interim, especially given this case where the interim has been
    nearly thirteen years.
    CONCLUSION
    We affirm the judgment of the chancellor because as lessor of the mineral interest at the time that the
    charges were accrued, Anderson Tully was not liable for production costs. The fact that the forced
    pooling order was an in rem action was insufficient to affect the lease or the rights of either party to
    the lease. Finally, the chancellor properly awarded prejudgment interest to Anderson Tully Company,
    and we affirm that award.
    JUDGMENT AFFIRMED.
    LEE, C.J., PRATHER AND SULLIVAN, P.JJ., PITTMAN, BANKS, McRAE AND
    ROBERTS, JJ., CONCUR. MILLS, J., CONCURS IN RESULT ONLY.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 94-CA-00004-SCT

Filed Date: 11/23/1993

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/30/2014