Beckham Resources, Inc. and Kla Energy, Inc. v. Mantle Resources, L.L.C., William F. Miller, C.F. Funds, Inc., and Jim C. Snyder

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 25, 2010
Docket13-09-00083-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Beckham Resources, Inc. and Kla Energy, Inc. v. Mantle Resources, L.L.C., William F. Miller, C.F. Funds, Inc., and Jim C. Snyder (Beckham Resources, Inc. and Kla Energy, Inc. v. Mantle Resources, L.L.C., William F. Miller, C.F. Funds, Inc., and Jim C. Snyder) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beckham Resources, Inc. and Kla Energy, Inc. v. Mantle Resources, L.L.C., William F. Miller, C.F. Funds, Inc., and Jim C. Snyder, (Tex. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion



NUMBER 13-09-00083-CV



COURT OF APPEALS



THIRTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

CORPUS CHRISTI
- EDINBURG



BECKHAM RESOURCES, INC.

AND KLA ENERGY, INC., Appellants,



v.



MANTLE RESOURCES, L.L.C., WILLIAM F. MILLER,

C.F. FUNDS, INC., AND JIM C. SNYDER, Appellees.

On appeal from the 267th District Court

of Refugio County, Texas.



MEMORANDUM OPINION



Before Chief Justice Valdez and Justices Rodriguez and Garza

Memorandum Opinion by Justice Rodriguez



This appeal arises from a dispute over an oil and gas lease in Refugio County, Texas. Appellants Beckham Resources, Inc. and KLA Energy, Inc. complain of the motions for summary judgment and motion for instructed verdict granted in favor of appellees Mantle Resources, L.L.C., William F. Miller, C.F. Funds, Inc., and Jim C. Snyder and which, when considered together, disposed of all of appellants' claims against appellees. (1) By four issues, (2) Beckham argues that the trial court erred in: (1) granting Mantle's motion for summary judgment on Beckham's claim that Mantle breached certain provisions of the joint operating and exploration and development agreements between the parties; (2) granting Mantle's motion for summary judgment on Beckham's claim that Mantle breached a certain letter agreement between the parties and breached a fiduciary duty owed; (3) granting Mantle's motion for instructed verdict on Beckham's fraud and negligent misrepresentation claims; and (4) awarding attorneys' fees to Mantle where no evidence supported the award and the fees were not segregated. We affirm.

II. Background

A. The Scanio-Shelton Lease

Beckham is a company that develops oil and gas properties. In 1999, Beckham acquired a lease in Refugio, Texas, from the Scanio-Shelton family (the Lessors). Beckham developed the property, which resulted in oil and gas production and revenue for both Beckham and the Lessors. Beckham then sold ten percent of its interest in the Scanio-Shelton lease to KLA. For reasons not entirely clear from the record, a dispute over the lease arose between Beckham and the Lessors. The dispute was resolved without litigation, but the relationship between Beckham and the Lessors was strained from that point forward.

B. Beckham and Mantle's Relationship

In February 2004, Beckham sold seventy-five percent of its interest in the Scanio-Shelton lease to Mantle. As consideration for the acquisition, Mantle paid Beckham $395,000 and agreed to drill five new wells on the property. Mantle was responsible for the up-front costs of the five new wells; after that, the proceeds were shared between the parties according to their respective ownership shares--i.e., seventy-five percent to Mantle and twenty-five percent to Beckham. The five wells were completed without controversy.

Beckham and Mantle's relationship was governed by two agreements--an exploration and development agreement (the exploration agreement) and a joint operating agreement (the JOA). The JOA outlined the manner in which the parties would finance wells on the leased property after the first five that were drilled as consideration. The parties agreed that new operations would be subject to a "non-consent" clause, which meant, in short, that if one party proposed an operation, the other party had a choice to participate or not. Under the non-consent clause, if one party had chosen not to participate, the party who proposed the new operation would bear full responsibility for the up-front costs of drilling the well. The participating party would then be allowed to recover its costs out of production from the well until a stated percentage--here, 200%--was recovered. The percentage was meant to be a penalty to the non-consenting party. After the participating party recovered this amount, the non-consenting party would begin to receive its share of production from the well.

The exploration agreement contained an "area of mutual interest" clause (the AMI), which governed a large area around the lease and provided that if either party acquired an oil and gas interest within that defined area, the acquiring party was required to offer the other party a share of that acquisition in proportion to its ownership under the original lease. The AMI read, in relevant part, as follows:

Any Party acquiring an "oil and gas interest" within the AMI shall notify the other Party in writing of such acquisition, which notice shall include all pertinent terms of such acquisition (the "Notice"). For purposes of this Agreement, an oil and gas mineral interest shall include any leasehold, working interest, overriding royalty interest, mineral interest, royalty interest, farm-out, farm-in, or any other oil and gas interest of any nature or kind. The non-acquiring Party may elect to participate for its proportionate share in the acquisition by giving written notice of its election to the acquiring Party within ten (10) days from receipt of the Notice. A party electing to participate in an acquisition shall make payment of its proportionate part of all acquisition costs within twenty (20) days of its election. A Party's failure to timely elect or make its payment thereafter shall be deemed an election not to participate in the acquisition.



C. The May 2004 Lease

In May 2004, Mantle entered into a new lease with the Lessors (the May 2004 lease), and pursuant to the terms of the exploration agreement, assigned Beckham twenty-five percent of its interest in the new lease. (3) However, to obtain the Lessors' consent to the new lease in light of the strained relationship between Beckham and the Lessors, Mantle agreed to certain conditions in the lease that would eliminate any contact between Beckham and the Lessors and allow Mantle the right to execute a release on Beckham's behalf regarding its interest in the lease. Specifically, the May 2004 lease contained the following language:

This Lease may not be assigned by the Lessee [Mantle] . . . without the express written consent of the Lessor . . . . Should any assignment as to all or any part of the leasehold, or any interest therein, or as to any segregated acreage covered by the Lease, be made by Lessee, or should any subsequent assignment be made by any assignee, the Lessee shall have the right to execute and deliver a release or partial release of the Lease in accordance with the other release provisions of this Lease without the joinder or approval of any other leasehold interest owner. . . . Any such action by the Lessee . . .

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Beckham Resources, Inc. and Kla Energy, Inc. v. Mantle Resources, L.L.C., William F. Miller, C.F. Funds, Inc., and Jim C. Snyder, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beckham-resources-inc-and-kla-energy-inc-v-mantle-resources-llc-texapp-2010.