Antelope Co. v. Mobil Rocky Mountain, Inc.

51 P.3d 995, 2001 WL 546491
CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 20, 2001
Docket99CA2366
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 51 P.3d 995 (Antelope Co. v. Mobil Rocky Mountain, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Colorado Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Antelope Co. v. Mobil Rocky Mountain, Inc., 51 P.3d 995, 2001 WL 546491 (Colo. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

Opinion by

Judge ROTHENBERG.

Plaintiffs, Antelope Company, the An-schutz Family Foundation, and Piedmont Minerals Company (the royalty owners), appeal the trial court’s entry of summary judgment. Defendant, Mobil Rocky Mountain, Inc. (Mobil), cross-appeals an order denying it the defense of collateral estoppel. We reverse and remand for further proceedings.

I. Background

This case is the latest in a series of lawsuits concerning the payment of royalties from sales of natural gas extracted pursuant to an oil, gas, and mineral lease (the lease). The lease pertains to a large tract of land along the Wyoming-Utah border known as the Anschutz Ranch East Unit (the Unit).

The Unit, comprised of sections of oil and gas fields, is owned and leased by separate entities. The royalty owners are lessors that possess a property interest in the natural gas produced from two sections of the Unit. As relevant here, the working interest owners are entities that possess exclusive rights to exploit the natural gas as lessees of certain sections of the Unit. Mobil is a lessee of the royalty owners and a working interest owner on part of the Unit.

All of the lawsuits, including this one, involve the interpretation of four agreements: (1) the lease, (2) the Unit Agreement, (3) the Unit Operating Agreement, and (4) a ratification agreement to the Unit Agreement entitled “Royalty Owner Joinder in and Ratification and Approval of Anschutz Ranch East Unit Agreement” (collectively, the Agreements).

In July 1982, Mobil became a lessee of one-half of sections 20 and 30 of the Unit. The Anschutz Corporation (TAC), a Kansas corporation whose principal place of business is in Colorado, had a lease interest in the other half of sections 20 and 30. Mobil and TAC also had the right to sell the natural gas it produced from sections 20 and 30 to Natural Gas Pipeline Company of America (NGPL).

The royalty owners have royalty interests in sections 20 and 30 of the Unit. These interests arise from a lease signed by the parties’ predecessors in 1976. The lease binds the royalty owners and Mobil, and provides, inter alia, that lessees are to pay royalties to the lessors on gas “produced from the leased land and sold.”

The lease permits sections 20 and 30 to be “unitized” with other sections of the Unit to maximize recovery of the gas reserves, and in December 1982, Mobil and the other working interest owners agreed to unitization.

*998 Through unitization, or pooling of the fields, the working interest owners in the various sections of the Unit agree jointly to recover the oil and gas in the Unit without regard to their separate ownerships. The purpose of unitization is to prevent waste and maximize recovery by allocating more economically the costs and benefits under the working interest owners’ agreement.

Also, pursuant to the lease, Mobil entered into a Unit Agreement and a Unit Operating Agreement with the other working interest owners. Under the Unit Agreement, “Allo-cable Unitized Substances” are defined as almost all produced oil, gas, and associated hydrocarbons, except for “Injected Unitized Substances.” Injected Unitized Substances are substances injected back into the producing formation to maintain reservoir pressure, repressure the reservoir, cycle or recycle production, enhance production, or increase later production.

Allocable Unitized Substances (including gas) produced from the Unit are allocated among the tracts of land within the Unit according to the tracts’ respective “hydrocarbon pore volume.” Section 1.1.2 of the Unit Agreement provides that the point at which the Allocable Unitized Substances are identified and measured for purposes of allocating them among the tracts is “where such Alloca-ble Unitized Substances are available for delivery to the respective owners thereof.”

Section 10.8.1 of the Unit Agreement provides that once allocated among the “allocation tracts” in the Unit, all Allocable Unitized Substances are:

owned by the owner or owners of the Working Interest in such Allocation Tract and each owner shall take in kind or separately dispose of its share of Allocable Unitized Substances, subject to the provisions of Section 13.1 hereof and in accordance with Article 5 of the Unit Operating Agreement, (emphasis added)

As pertinent here, § 5.11 of the Unit Operating Agreement provides that:

Inability to Market All Gas. If at any time a Party’s share of the gas available for sale exceeds the quantity of gas such Party’s gas purchaser will take (excess gas), then every other Party, if requested to do so by the Party owning such excess gas, shall be obligated to share its market for gas with the Party owning such excess. However, if all excess gas cannot be sold, and the Plan of Depletion then in effect will not permit a reduction in the volume of gas produced, then any of such excess gas that must be reinjected or otherwise disposed of will be deemed to be the gas of all Parties such that all Parties will share ratably (in proportion to their ownership of the total volume of gas available for sale) in any deferral of sales or loss which might result from the reinjection or disposal of such excess gas sold on a monthly basis.

In November 1982, a representative of the royalty owners signed a Ratification Agreement to the Unit Agreement. The Ratification Agreement states that the royalty owners received “full and true copies of the Anschutz Ranch East Unit Agreement and the Anschutz Ranch East Unit Operating Agreement.”

The royalty owners admit they ratified the Unit Agreement, but deny they are parties to the Unit Operating Agreement.

The 1982 Ratification Agreement does not expressly adopt the Unit Operating Agreement. However, ratification is unnecessary under the express terms of § 7 of the lease which provides that:

Lessee also shall have the right to unitize, pool, or combine all or any part of the above described lands with other lands in the same general area by entering into a cooperative or unit plan of development or operation approved by any governmental authority.... In such event, the terms, conditions, and provisions of this lease shall be deemed modified to conform to the terms, conditions, and provisions of such approved cooperative or unit plan of development or operation. ... (emphasis added)

A. The Wyoming Litigation

From 1985-87, Mobil and TAC sold gas from the Unit to NGPL. When a dispute arose over the proper allocation of the proceeds, the working interest owners other than Mobil filed an action against TAC in the federal district court in Wyoming. The com *999 plaint alleged claims for breach of contract and sought an accounting and a determination of the working interest owners’ share of the proceeds. See Amoco Rocmount Co. v. Anschutz Corp., 7 F.3d 909 (10th Cir.1993).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
51 P.3d 995, 2001 WL 546491, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/antelope-co-v-mobil-rocky-mountain-inc-coloctapp-2001.