Berry Energy Consultants & Managers, Inc. v. Bennett

331 S.E.2d 823, 175 W. Va. 92, 85 Oil & Gas Rep. 624, 1985 W. Va. LEXIS 480
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 28, 1985
Docket16315
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 331 S.E.2d 823 (Berry Energy Consultants & Managers, Inc. v. Bennett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Berry Energy Consultants & Managers, Inc. v. Bennett, 331 S.E.2d 823, 175 W. Va. 92, 85 Oil & Gas Rep. 624, 1985 W. Va. LEXIS 480 (W. Va. 1985).

Opinion

McHUGH, Justice:

This action is before this Court upon the petition of James C. Bennett, Joann Bennett and Nora M. Bennett for an appeal from the final order of the Circuit Court of Upshur County, West Virginia. The Ben-netts, lessors, seek relief from the determination of the circuit court that an oil and gas lease upon the Bennetts’ Upshur County property had not been abandoned by the lessees, W.B. Berry, et al. 1 This Court has before it the petition, all matters of record and the briefs and argument of counsel.

I.

The interest of the lessees in the Bennett property is derived from a written lease agreement dated April 4, 1979. That lease was made for the purpose of “exploring and operating for” and “producing and marketing” oil and gas. The lease was to remain in force for one year and as long thereafter as the property was operated by the lessees “in the search for or production of oil, gas, or related products.”

The lease provided, inter alia, that the Bennetts were to receive a royalty for the marketing of gas from their property. The Bennetts were otherwise to receive a “shut in royalty.” Under the “shut in” provision, the lessees agreed as follows:

[T]o pay “shut in” royalty, on each date that royalty otherwise would be due as hereinabove provided, based on $300 per well per year, for each well producing gas only when the gas from such well is not sold, marketed or used off the premises for thirty (30) days or more beyond the designated pay period, and upon such payment it will be considered that gas is being produced in paying quantities.

Furthermore, the lessees agreed under the lease to pay “rental” to the Bennetts at the rate of $25.00 — “Quarterly in advance, beginning April 9/79_” The rental payments were to be made “until, but not after the date oil or gas is marketed from the leased premises. Any rental paid for time beyond that date shall be credited upon the first royalty due, and all rentals shall cease after the surrender of this lease as hereinafter provided for.”

Finally, the Bennetts were entitled under the lease to “250,000 cubic feet per year [of gas from their property] for heat and light in one dwelling house....”

II.

Gas was discovered upon the Bennett property, and in February 1980 a well was completed. The lessees began making to the Bennetts the $25.00 quarterly rental payments required under the lease. 2 In July 1982, however, the Bennetts informed the lessees in writing that the Bennetts considered the lessees to have abandoned the lease. The Bennetts took that action principally upon the belief that the lessees had wrongfully failed to market gas from the well. The Bennetts refused to accept further rental payments from the lessees, and the lessees were denied access to the property.

Separate actions asserting the respective rights of the parties under the lease were filed in the Circuit Court of Upshur County. Those actions were consolidated, and a trial without a jury was conducted in June 1983. Ruling in favor of the lessees, the circuit court stated in its final order that the April 4, 1979, lease between the parties *95 was a “valid and subsisting” agreement. The Bennetts appeal from that order.

The Bennetts assert that the lessees failed to pursue opportunities during the period in question to sell the gas. 3 Furthermore, the Bennetts assert that the lessees failed to pay the “shut in royalty” required under the lease.

On the other hand, the lessees assert that, until December 1982, they were unable to obtain a purchaser for the gas. As the complaint filed by the lessees in circuit court stated:

From the time of completion of said well until the present, [lessees] have made diligent efforts to acquire a purchaser for the natural gas produced from said well; however, due to the unavailability of natural gas transmission pipelines in the area where said well is located, no gas purchase agreement could be obtained until December, 1982.

The lessees further assert that the Ben-netts’ acceptance (until July 1982) of the $25.00 quarterly rental payments negated the Bennetts’ theory of abandonment of the lease. In addition, the lessees assert that the Bennetts were not entitled during the period in question to receive a “shut in royalty.” In any event, the lessees assert, the failure to pay the “shut in royalty” would not justify the Bennetts’ declaration of abandonment of the lease.

III.

The question of abandonment by a lessee of a lease, such as the lease before this Court, is a matter of intent, and that intent may be determined by the lessee’s conduct and declarations. Smith v. Root, 66 W.Va. 633, 639, 66 S.E. 1005, 1007 (1910). See also 38 Am.Jur.2d Gas and Oil §§ 208, 209 (1968). The determination of such an intent has been facilitated in West Virginia by statute. W.Va.Code, 36-4-9a [1979], provides a “rebuttable legal presumption” of intent to abandon where a lessee fails to produce and sell oil and/or gas from the leased premises. That statute provides, in part:

There shall be a rebuttable legal presumption that the failure of a person, firm, corporation, partnership or association to produce and sell or produce and use for its own purpose for a period of greater than twenty-four months, subsequent to the first day of July, one thousand nine hundred seventy-nine, oil and/or gas produced from such leased premises constitutes an intention to abandon any oil and/or gas well and oil and/or gas well equipment situate on said leased premises, including casing, rods, tubing, pumps, motors, lines, tanks, separators, and any other equipment used in the production of any oil and/or gas from any well or wells on said leasé-hold estate.

The purpose of that statute, to give practical effect to leases for the production of oil and gas in this State, is in accord with prior decisions of this Court. For example, in Parish Fork Oil Co. v. Bridge-water Gas Co., 51 W.Va. 583, 42 S.E. 655 (1902), this Court stated that oil leases:

are executed by the lessor in the hope and with an expressed or implied condition that the land shall be developed and oil produced. When production takes place, the lease is mutually beneficial. The royalty, which it is stipulated in all these leases that the land owner shall receive, is generally the moving cause of the execution of the lease.

51 W.Va. at 591, 42 S.E. at 658. See also Ohio Fuel Oil Co. v. Greenleaf, 84 W.Va. *96 67, 74, 99 S.E. 274, 277-78 (1919), the lessor’s desire to receive royalties is a “material element to be considered in the interpretation” of oil and gas leases.

The “rebuttable legal presumption,” provided by W. Va. Code, 36-4-9a [1979], of a lessee’s intention to abandon is, however, subject to exceptions. W. Va. Code, 36-4-9a [1979], further provides:

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Bluebook (online)
331 S.E.2d 823, 175 W. Va. 92, 85 Oil & Gas Rep. 624, 1985 W. Va. LEXIS 480, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/berry-energy-consultants-managers-inc-v-bennett-wva-1985.