Baytide Petroleum, Inc. v. Continental Resources, Inc.

2010 OK 6, 231 P.3d 1144, 173 Oil & Gas Rep. 190, 2010 Okla. LEXIS 6, 2010 WL 436606
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 9, 2010
Docket106,117
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 2010 OK 6 (Baytide Petroleum, Inc. v. Continental Resources, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baytide Petroleum, Inc. v. Continental Resources, Inc., 2010 OK 6, 231 P.3d 1144, 173 Oil & Gas Rep. 190, 2010 Okla. LEXIS 6, 2010 WL 436606 (Okla. 2010).

Opinion

WATT, J.:

{1 We granted certiorari to consider an issue of first impression: whether an oil and gas lease sought to be terminated for failure to produce in paying quantities during the secondary term remains effective until the lease has been judicially cancelled? We hold that it is not the court order which terminates the lease. Rather, it is the failure to produce in paying quantities under the ha-bendum clause during the lease's secondary term. In the instant cause, the lease terminated by its own terms before the Alfalfa County court issued its order. 1

12 Our determination that the date of termination may precede the date of adjudication and did so here, necessitates that we also address Baytide's assertion that it should not be held to the legal obligations arising based on its status as a lessee in the Unit. Specifically, Baytide insists that it should not be bound by its agreement to accept $13,200.00 for its equipment located on the lease.

13 Baytide voted to approve the method of valuation of the equipment and the values assigned thereto, totaling $13,200.00 for the two Ford wells. 2 Under these facts, 3 Baytide *1146 is bound by its agreement to accept $13,200.00 for the lease equipment. 4

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

1 4 The cause arises from a tortured procedural and factual background involving litigation in two counties and before the Corporation Commission giving rise to three appeals. Two of the matters were decided by unpublished Court of Civil Appeals opinions and the third was dismissed. 5

T5 In 2000, Baytide acquired the equipment and working interests in two wells operated in Alfalfa County and known as the Ford B # 1 and the Ford B # 2. The following year, Continental obtained top leases 6 covering the two oil and gas wells. In July of 2001, Continental filed an action in Alfalfa County seeking to have Baytide's base lease terminated for failure to produce in paying quantities. In September of the same year, while the termination cause remained pending, the Commission established a Plan of Unitization creating the Aline Oswego Unit and designating Continental as the unit operator. The Unit includes the Ford wells. Under the plan, each lessee had the option to participate. The existing oil and gas equipment on the leases was to be evaluated, and its owner given credit for the appraised value of the same.

T 6 In November of 2001, the Alfalfa County court granted Continental's request for a temporary injunction. Baytide was ordered to comply with the plan and to deliver the two wells and all operating equipment to Continental along with production and well records. The order did not require that Baytide participate in the unit's operation or set a price for the sale of the operating equipment. 7

*1147 T7 The Alfalfa County court issued it's order in favor of Continental on November 19, 2002 finding that Baytide's lease had terminated under the habendum clause for failure to produce in paying quantities. Until that date and thereafter in a subsequently dismissed appeal, Baytide contended that its leases were valid. 8 Nevertheless, the trial court found that: Continental was not claiming that Baytide's leases automatically terminated; there was a twenty-eight (28) month cessation of production during which time Baytide made no effort to restore production; Baytide presented no reasonable basis for the cessation of production; the leases expired by their own terms by reason of cessation of production for an unreasonable period of time (28 months); and the underlying lease should be canceled for failure to produce in paying quantities. 9 Baytide appealed, but dismissed the cause on May 2, 2006.

{8 Baytide filed the present action in Garfield County in April of 2006 asserting that it was not a lessee when the Unit was formed and that its oil and gas equipment located on the Ford wells had been wrongfully converted and Continental had been unjustly enriched. The petition was amended on May 12th to add a misuse of process allegation. Through a series of orders, the Garfield County district court: quieted title in the equipment in the Unit; awarded Baytide $13,200 for the equipment, including the heater treater; and determined there was no evidence of misuse of process.

T9 Baytide filed its appeal on July 18, 2008. In May of 2009, the Court of Civil Appeals affirmed finding that Baytide remained a lessee when the Unit was formed because, prior thereto, no court order had been entered terminating the lease for failure to produce in paying quantities We granted certiorari on October 5, 2009.

DISCUSSION

4 10 a. A court order may be necessary to adjudicate the rights of the parties when allegations are that a lease has terminated for failure to produce in paying quantities. Nevertheless, the lease is not cancelled because of the entrance of the court order. The lease terminates for the failure to produce in paying quantities under its own terms pursuant to the habendum clause.

Baytide asserts that cessation of production in paying quantities in the see-ondary term of a lease for an unexplained or unreasonable period of time results in the lease's expiration. Under such cireum-stances, Baytide contends that it is the period of time found to have exceeded the bounds of reasonableness which fixes the date of lease cancellation rather than the date a court decree enters cancelling the lease contract. Continental argues that a lease expires for lack of production in paying quantities only upon the date a court order enters cancelling the same. We disagree with Continental's argument.

12 Both parties find support in our pronouncement in Stewart v. Amerada Hess Corp., 1979 OK 145, 604 P.2d 854. Stewart *1148 made it clear that, in Oklahoma, the cessation of production during the secondary term of a lease is not in and of itself sufficient to automatically terminate a lease. Rather, a lease remains viable so long as the interruption of production in paying quantities does not extend for an unreasonable period which is not justifiable in light of all the cireum-stances. Under Stewart, a decree of cancellation may issue where the record supports a determination that a lease is not held by production in paying quantities and no compelling cireumstances justify continued production from the unprofitable well operations. Nevertheless, Stewart does not hold, as Continental argues, that a lease will expire for lack of production in paying quantities only upon the issuance of a judicial decree.

{13 Smith v. Marshall Oil Corp., 2004 OK. 10, 85 P.3d 830 is instructive. In Smith, two issues were presented. The first was whether the evidence was sufficient to support the determination that the subject leases expired due to lack of production in paying quantities.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2010 OK 6, 231 P.3d 1144, 173 Oil & Gas Rep. 190, 2010 Okla. LEXIS 6, 2010 WL 436606, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baytide-petroleum-inc-v-continental-resources-inc-okla-2010.