Babin v. First Energy Corp.
This text of 693 So. 2d 813 (Babin v. First Energy Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Nancy Rogers BABIN, et al.
v.
FIRST ENERGY CORPORATION, Pacific Enterprises Oil Company, Exxon San Joaquin Production Company, IP Petroleum Company, Inc., and Resource Investment Corporation.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.
*814 Davis C. Treen, Ellis B. Murov, W. Christopher Beary, and J. Wayne Gilette, New Orleans, for Plaintiffs-Appellants Nancy Rogers Babin, et al.
Randall C. Songy, and Ted M. Anthony Lafayette, for Defendants-Appellees First Energy Corporation, et al.
Before WATKINS, GONZALES and KUHN, JJ.
WATKINS, Judge.
Plaintiffs are 131 royalty and overriding royalty owners (Owners) in the Irene Field near Baton Rouge, Louisiana,[1] who appeal a summary judgment dismissing their suit, alleging underpayment of royalties, against First Energy Corporation, Exxon San Joaquin Production Company, and IP Petroleum Company (Lessees). We reverse.
PROCESSING COSTS
The most important issue presented by Owners' claim against their Lessees is: if *815 actual gas processing costs to make the extracted gas marketable ranged from $.08 to $.17 per MMBTU, was it proper for Lessees to charge Owners $.20 or $.25, on the grounds that non-royalty owners were charged as much as $.35 to $.60 for use of the Irene Central Facility (ICF) that Lessees caused to be constructed at a cost of $9.7 Million?
The royalty owner's obligation to share in processing costs has been explained as follows:
Louisiana Mineral Code article 213 defines "royalty" as "any interest in production, or its value, from or attributable to land subject to a mineral lease, that is deliverable or payable to the lessor or others entitled to share therein." Neither the terms of article 213 nor the accompanying comments shed any light on the question of which costs, if any, are deductible by the lessee in determining the royalty due to his lessor....
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The terms of [Article 80] indicate that in the absence of any express provision to the contrary in the lease agreement, the royalty owner is exempt from any liability for drilling and production costs....
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It is generally accepted that the production phase of oil and gas operations terminated upon reduction of the minerals to possession at the well. While the peculiarities of individual lease provisions may provide otherwise, the general rule is that a royalty owner is liable for a proportionate share of the costs incurred subsequent to production. Such "subsequent to production" costs generally include those related to taxes, transportation, and processing.
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Oil and gas usually contain impurities which must be removed to make the product marketable.... [R]emoval of impurities... increase[s] the value of the product above that which it had in its natural state. At issue is whether the costs incurred in processing the product are deductible.
The general rule in Louisiana was summarized in 1960 by the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit in Freeland v. Sun Oil Co. [277 F.2d 154 (5th Cir.1960), cert. denied, 364 U.S. 826, 81 S.Ct. 64, 5 L.Ed.2d 55 (1960)][2] ... [Footnote supplied.]
[T]he rule stated therein ... presents a concise summary of Louisiana law on the issue of the deductibility of processing costs....
Although neither the relevant cases in which the issue has been considered nor the general rule established therein present a detailed analysis of the specific costs that may be included, logic dictates that the allowable deduction is of necessity a function of both direct and indirect costs. At issue in determining the reasonableness of the deduction should be the question of whether proper cost accounting techniques have been followed. (Emphasis supplied.)
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The costs of severance taxes, transportation, processing, and treatment are considered to be post-production costs and are, therefore, borne proportionately by the lessee and the royalty owner....
While the deductibility of any cost may be determined with reference to its nature, the question remains as to the reasonableness of the particular item deducted. It is submitted that the deductibility question should focus primarily on the propriety of the deduction in light of acceptable cost accounting standards. Once the theoretical construct has been established that costs in certain categories are deductible, the principle follows that all relevant costs should be included. Among such relevant costs are those of depreciation, overhead, and interest. (Emphasis in original.)
In addition to the character or nature of the costs deducted is the question of the *816 reasonableness of the amount deducted. The relevance of this question can be seen in terms of the lessee's duty to act as a reasonably prudent operator to the benefit of the royalty owner and himself. When considering the reasonableness of the amount deducted, it is submitted that one should first consider the reasonableness of the cost incurred, and then assess the reasonableness of the amount allocated to the lessor in terms of acceptable cost accounting standards. (Emphasis in original.)
F. Parker, Costs Deductible by the Lessee in Accounting for the Production of Oil or Gas, 46 La.L.Rev. 895, 895-911 (1986).
In the instant case, Lessees assert they are entitled to summary judgment because it was reasonable to charge Owners for the market value of the processing services. Lessees argue that the market value of the processing at the ICF was at least $.35 and as much as $.60, and because they charged Owners considerably less (from $.20 to $.25), they made no impermissible deductions from the royalty payments.
The trial court agreed with Lessees, stating:
The third issue is ... a legal question then perhaps a question of fact and it is this: People in the treating plant, why (sic) should they charge to sweeten the gas? Should they charge reasonable costs which is the actual cost, or can they charge fair market value of that service?
It was argued that fair market value of the service isit can amount to gouging the poor people because they are really captive in having to go to that particular treatment plant.
Then it is argued also that if you do the cost factor and if there is inefficiency in the plant, then the cost could be more than what other plants in the near locality was charged. Tit for tat.
I understand that if actual cost is the legal standard that is to be applied then obviously there are questions of fact as to what is the actual cost of the treatment over the various years that we are involved in.
I am taking the position that the expense to be charged is a fair market value of that service.
Now, inasmuch as the court feels that that is the proper standard for the charging of costs (fair market value of the service), then I have to look and see whether or not there are now material issues of facts.
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693 So. 2d 813, 1997 WL 155022, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/babin-v-first-energy-corp-lactapp-1997.