DocketNumber: No. 08-16-00038-CV
Judges: Hughes, McClure, Rodriguez
Filed Date: 8/23/2017
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
In the world of oil and gas, it is no great secret that mineral owners generally prefer to have their minerals gathered and sold. The lease bonus paid at the outset of a mineral lease is nice, but a stream of royalty payments is better. On the other hand, mineral lessees must measure the cost to gather and bring the minerals to market against the expected return. They must prioritize where best to invest the substantial costs of hiring a drilling rig. At the intersection of these sometimes competing interests are three clauses in a typical oil and gas lease: (1) the habendum clause that sets a termination date for the lease unless the lessee is producing minerals from the leasehold; (2) the continuous development clause which similarly requires production or at least drilling activity; and (3) the retained acreage clause that defines what portion of the entire leasehold is protected from termination when the lessee develops some, but not all the land encompassed by the lease.
Today we are asked to construe a lease containing variants of these clauses. The dispute arises out of a 640-acre leasehold that contains four equal proration units of 160 acres.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
On July 11, 1975, the predecessors of Apache Deepwater, LLC (Apache) leased from Gladys Clark the mineral rights to Section 43, Block Y, Abstract 360 of the M. K.&T. RR Co. survey in Reagan County. The lease provided for a primary term of three years. During that primary term, Apache's predecessors drilled and brought into production four wells.
Under the habendum clause to the lease, the primary term of the lease was extended "as long thereafter as oil, gas or other hydrocarbons or other minerals or leased substances, or either or any of them, are produced from the leased premises...." In the ensuing years, the wells on three of the four proration units ceased to produce. The wells in the southeast, northeast, and northwest proration units stopped producing in 1999, 2004, and 2008 respectively.
Apache or its predecessors did not develop any new wells in the southeast, northeast, and northwest proration units of Section 43. In 2012, the property owner executed mineral leases in favor of Double Eagle Development LLC (Double Eagle) or its predecessors for the portion of Section 43 comprising those three proration units, and those leases have been extended through at least 2018. We refer to these three 160 acre proration units as the Disputed Tracts. This litigation arose after Double Eagle demanded that Apache release its interest to the Disputed Tracts. Apache, however, contended that it still owned the rights to the Disputed Tracts by virtue of its continued production from the well in the southwest proration unit of Section of 43. Double Eagle filed suit seeking a declaration of its rights in the Disputed Tracts. Apache answered and both sides filed competing motions for summary judgment. Both sides agree to the factual history as to when the respective wells were brought into and taken out of production. Both sides agree that the decision here turns on the construction of the original lease that Apache's predecessors signed with the property owner in 1975, *653and neither side believes the lease to be ambiguous.
The parties focus on several provisions in the lease. First, the lease uses the defined term "leased premises" to include all 640 acres of Section 43. The lease then incorporates the term "leased premises" in several other provisions, including the habendum clause which reads:
TO HAVE AND TO HOLD the leased premises for a term of three (3) years from the date hereof, hereinafter called 'primary term,' and as long thereafter as oil, gas or other hydrocarbons or other minerals or leased substances, or either or any of them, are produced from the leased premises or from lands with which the leased premises are pooled or unitized.
The lease itself appears to be a pre-printed form, but it contains several typewritten special provisions that the parties added. One of those includes the three-year term which was typed in after the original term on the pre-printed from was struck out. The stated purpose of the lease includes "drilling, producing and operating wells or mines" on the leased premises. Consistent with that goal, the lease contains a delay rental clause, such that if the lessee had not begun drilling operations within the first year of the lease, additional delay rental payments were due. The lease also contained a "drilling operations" clause which in part provides:
If, at the expiration of the primary term, oil, gas or other minerals are not being produced from the leased premises ... but Lessee is then engaged in operations for drilling or reworking of any well, this lease shall remain in force so long as such drilling or reworking operations are prosecuted, or reworking operations on any well or additional drilling operations are conducted on the leased premises, ... with no cessation of more than sixty (60) consecutive days, and if any such operations result in production then as long thereafter as such production continues.
One of the typewritten inserted provisions reflects an intent to develop the minerals on the property:
11(a) This lease contemplates the reasonable development of the above designated minerals, including the drilling, or mining, or production as the facts may justify. Lessee shall adequately protect the mineral under the above described lands, or acreage pooled therewith, from drainage from the adjacent lands or leases.
The "retained acreage clause" which is central to this case, was also typewritten. The parties agree that its terms are unique at least in the sense that no reported case directly interprets its text:
17. Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in the foregoing, Lessee covenants to release this lease after the primary term except as to each producing well on said lease, operations for which were commenced prior to or at the end of the primary term and the proration units as may be allocated to said wells under the rules and regulations of the Railroad Commission of Texas or 160 acres, whichever is greater, insofar as said proration units cover from surface to the base of the deepest formation penetrated by the deepest of said wells. The description of said tracts around said well shall be compiled and prepared by the Lessee for purpose of executing such release.
Apache contended below that the retained acreage clause involves a single snapshot-in-time evaluation as of July 11, 1978 (the end of the primary term) and because each of the four proration units had operating wells on that date, the termination obligation under the clause does *654not apply. Conversely, Double Eagle contends the clause unambiguously calls for "rolling terminations" following the primary term for any proration unit in which the lessee allows the operating well to go out of production, and no new well is developed. The trial court ruled in favor of Double Eagle, granting its summary judgment, and denying Apache's motion.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
Each party contends that the lease at issue is not ambiguous and that its legal construction favors its position. We review the trial court's construction of an unambiguous oil and gas lease de novo. Anadarko Petroleum Corp. v. Thompson ,
Our primary duty is to ascertain the parties' intent as expressed within the four corners of the lease. Luckel v. White ,
When both parties move for summary judgment on the same issue and the trial court grants one motion and denies the other, we determine if the trial court erred in doing so, and either affirm or render the judgment that the trial court should have rendered. Valence Operating Co. v. Dorsett ,
WAS THERE A CLEAR INTENT TO NEGATE THE HABENDUM CLAUSE?
We begin our construction of the lease with the habendum clause. That clause permits a single operating well (producing *655in paying quantities) anywhere on the leasehold to continue the entire 640 acres past the primary term. It extends the lease "as long thereafter as oil, gas or other hydrocarbons or other minerals or leased substances, or either or any of them, are produced from the leased premises. " [Emphasis added]. The term leased premises is defined to encompass the entire 640 acre section. This habendum clause is consistent with other such clauses that set a relatively brief period of time for minerals to be located on the property ("primary term"), and then allows the lease to continue so long thereafter as oil, gas, or other minerals are produced. Thompson ,
This feature of the habendum clause is consistent with the "drilling operations" clause which also contemplates that a single well might prevent termination of the lease. It provides that if there are no minerals being produced at the end of the primary term, but "Lessee is then engaged in operations for drilling or reworking of any well , this lease shall remain in force so long as such drilling or reworking operations are prosecuted, or reworking operations on any well or additional drilling operations are conducted on the leased premises , ... with no cessation of more than sixty (60) consecutive days, ...." [Emphasis added]. If that additional drilling results in production, then the lease remains in effect "as long thereafter as such production continues." This language contemplates a single well preserving the entire leased premises, which fits hand in glove with well ATM-5 extending the entire lease.
Double Eagle does not argue otherwise, but rather claims that the retained acreage clause, which begins with the clause "notwithstanding anything to the contrary", negates and modifies the clear wording of the habendum and drilling operations clauses. Reduced to its essence, the question before us is whether a retained acreage clause which requires the lessee "to release this lease after the primary term except as to each [proration unit with a producing well commenced before or at the end of the primary term]" intends either that:
1. The lessee will release any proration unit which has neither an operating well, nor well in development as of the date when the primary term ends ; or
2. The lessee will release any proration unit that has neither an operating well, nor well in development at any time after the end of the primary term.
Our answer to that quandary begins with a review of our recent decision in Chesapeake Exploration., L.L.C. v. Energen Resources Corp. ,
*656
We held that it did not, and that the lease remained in effect as to all 640 acres because the plain language of the retained acreage clause did not provide for the "rolling" termination of proration units.
Applying the same logic here, we conclude that the retained acreage clause does not express a clear intent to negate the habendum clause. Instead, it can be read to mean that at the end of the primary term, the lessor could insist that any part of the leasehold that was not within a proration unit which had either a producing well, or a well under development that later came into production, must be released. This reading harmonizes the retained acreage clause with the habendum clause and the drilling operations clause, giving effect to each. Double Eagle correctly points out that the clause uses the phrase "after the primary term" and not "at the expiration of the primary term" as is used elsewhere in the lease. But the retained acreage clause ties the release "after the primary term" to all land except those with a producing well, "operations for which were commenced prior to or at *657the end of the primary term." Thus the lessor would not know if a well was producing exactly at the end of the three-year term if that well was commenced "at the end of the primary term." The clause would therefore have to allow for termination "after the primary term" if such a well was started close to or on the last day of the primary term and never panned out.
Draftsmen understand how to create rolling termination clauses in oil and gas leases. See Parten v. Cannon ,
Double Eagle argues that Chesapeake is distinguishable on several grounds. First, it contends that the precise lease language differs from that here. We agree the lease terms are not on all fours, and we also agree that each lease must be construed on its own terms. But Double Eagle cannot escape that it must find language that clearly negates the habendum clause, and we simply fail to find that kind of clear unequivocal language in the retained acreage clause. Double Eagle also contends that the lease in Chesapeake involved a date certain trigger for the retained acreage clause-the date at which the lessee obtained the maximum well density allowed by the regulatory authorities. Chesapeake ,
*658We are also unpersuaded by Double Eagle's additional arguments. It contends that the phrase "after the primary term" is synonymous with "secondary term" in industry terminology. Thus the first portion of the retained acreage clause actually reads something like, "lessee covenants to release during the secondary term" for any non-productive units. If the parties had intended "after the primary term" to really mean "during the secondary term" they could have said so, as they chose to define "leased premises." They did not, and we will not re-define a word's ordinary meaning absent some indication that the parties meant otherwise.
Double Eagle also suggests its construction can be harmonized with every clause in the lease. That harmonizing mostly consists of using the "notwithstanding anything to the contrary" clause from the retained acreage to negate parts of the habendum and drilling operations clauses. Or it means to carve the leased premises into separate leaseholds where the habendum clause operates separately as to each proration unit as the court did in Nafco Oil & Gas, Inc. v. Tartan Res. Corp. ,
Double Eagle pitches this construction as being consistent with the lease's stated goal of encouraging production (the lease was granted "for the purpose of exploring by geological, geophysical and all other methods, and of drilling, producing and operating wells or mines"). While this and most other mineral leases share the same stated or unstated purpose, that goal cannot override express language in the lease. As in Chesapeake , Double Eagle's concern that Apache can tie up the entire section with a single well with modest production has some equitable appeal. But the concept that a single producing well can dictate the term for an entire leasehold is not novel. Chesapeake Expl. ,
Finally, Double Eagle places greater emphasis on the retained acreage clause because it is typewritten, while other provisions are on a pre-printed form. See *659McCreary v. Bay Area Bank & Trust ,
CONCLUSION
We sustain Apache's two issues which urge that the trial court erred in its construction of the lease. We grant judgment in Apache's favor in one regard, but deny it in another. Apache's motion for summary judgment sought a declaration that the express language of the 1975 Lease provides for the determination of retained acreage on a date certain, July 11, 1978 and as of that date, Apache retained the acreage in each quarter section by virtue of the then operating wells. It also sought a declaration that it "holds record title and ownership to the entire mineral leasehold interest, thus, Double Eagle's claims for partial termination of the 1975 Lease fail as a matter of law." We sustain that relief, but only to the depth of 10,004 feet because as Double Eagle alleged in its petition, and Apache has not challenged otherwise, that a predecessor in interest to Apache has already released the entire section below 10,004 feet.
Hughes, J., not participating
See Bruce M. Kramer, Oil and Gas Leases and Pooling: A Look Back and A Peek Ahead ,
Absent an express contractual agreement providing otherwise, a proration unit is defined for regulatory purposes as "the acreage assigned to a well for the purpose of assigning allowables and allocating allowable production to the well." 16 Tex.Admin.Code § 3.38(a)(3) (West 2013); see Operating, LLC v. Chesapeake Expl. LP ,
Gladys Clark No 1 located on the NW/4 was completed on January 3, 1977; Gladys Clark No. A-1, located on the NE/4 was completed on October 16, 1977; Gladys Clark No. A-2 located on SE/4 was completed on October 25, 1977 and Gladys Clark No A-3, located on the SW/4 was completed on October 27, 1977.
Gladys Clark, No. A-2 well produced until December 14, 1999. The Gladys Clark No. A-1 well has not produced since April 26, 2004. The Gladys Clark No. 1 well, has not produced since August 1, 2008.
We pause to note that the final order being appealed from does nothing more than grant and deny the respective parties' motions. It does not actually order anything or grant any specific relief. A final order or judgment should, however, specifically deny or grant the relief sought, as opposed to merely granting or denying a motion. Here, the parties would have to go back to Double Eagle's motion to ascertain what relief was sought. Even then, the prayer from the granted motion asks that the court:
[F]ind as a matter of law that the 1975 Lease has terminated as to the Expired Tracts, and order the 1975 Lease removed from the record as to the Expired Tracts, thereby quieting title in Double Eagle.
A third party researching the mineral interests would have to look further into the motion to see how the term "Expired Tracts" is defined. One might also wonder from what "record" Double Eagle asks the lease to be removed. Additionally, the parties dispute not only the acreage that may have been released, but also the depth at which the mineral lease terminates. A predecessor of Apache released any mineral claims below 10,004 feet which Double Eagle claims it has leased irrespective of the outcome of this appeal. Apache does not directly address this contention, but it is not expressly part of the relief requested in Double Eagle's motion. A final judgment that set out specifically the declaration being granted would have easily resolved these concerns.
The term "producing" in a habendum clause such as this requires actual production in paying quantities. See, e.g., Thompson ,
The relevant language from continuous operations clause in Chesapeake read:
Lessee shall continuously develop the above described land by commencing operations for the drilling of a well on or before the expiration of the primary term of this lease and thereafter shall allow not more than sixty (60) days to elapse between the completion or abandonment of one well and the commencement of the next until the above described land is drilled to the density necessary to obtain the maximum allowable per well under the rules and regulations of the Railroad Commission of Texas (or other governmental authority having jurisdiction), or this lease shall terminate as to all of the above described land.... [E]ach proration unit established under [the] rules and regulations [of the RRC ...] upon which there exists (either on the above described land or on lands pooled or unitized therewith) a well capable of producing oil and/or gas in commercial quantities....
Double Eagle also notes that the lease in Chesapeake included a pooling clause with language that also avoided termination of the lease so long as one well tied to the leased section was in production. Pooling is not a consideration here, but the habendum clause is clear enough on its own, and as we note above, is also buttressed by the drilling operations clause.