Bryan v. Big Two Mile Gas Co.

577 S.E.2d 258, 213 W. Va. 110
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 8, 2002
Docket29641
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 577 S.E.2d 258 (Bryan v. Big Two Mile Gas Co.) 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
Bryan v. Big Two Mile Gas Co., 577 S.E.2d 258, 213 W. Va. 110 (W. Va. 2002).

Opinions

STARCHER, J.

In the instant case we rule that an oil and gas company whose lease terminated due to an unexeused cessation of production must pay to the property owner the value of the gas that was produced after the lease termination, less a portion of the reasonable costs of production.

I.

Facts & Background

The appellant is Isabel J. Bryan (“Mrs. Bryan”); the appellee is Big Two Mile Gas [115]*115Company (“BTM”). In 1935, BTM’s prede-eessor-in-title entered into an oil and gas lease with Mrs. Bryan’s predecessor-in-title. The lease contained a “thereafter” clause that provided that the lease would last “for the [primary] term of one (1) year” and “as long thereafter as oD or gas, or either of them is produced.” The lease also provided for a royalty to the lessor of 1 cent for every thousand cubic feet of gas produced from the well. During the 1-year primary term of the lease, a well was drilled, gas production began, and royalty payments began. Continuous gas production from the well apparently continued thereafter until the period of time at issue in the instant case.

In early 1987, BTM lost its contract with the customer that had been purchasing gas from the well. BTM ceased gas production and royalty payments. In November of 1988, Mrs. Bryan’s husband died. As executrix of his estate, Mrs. Bryan contacted BTM in 1989, advising BTM that she believed that BTM’s non-production of gas had terminated its right to operate the well. BTM replied in a letter stating that BTM still had the right to operate the well, and that BTM was hopeful that renewed production would begin when BTM obtained a new customer for the gas from the well.

In December of 1991, Mrs. Bryan had an attorney write to BTM, again asserting that non-production had terminated BTM’s rights to the well. BTM replied to this letter by stating that BTM had (without advising Mrs. Bryan) resumed production in December of 1990. BTM sent Mrs. Bryan a royalty check for gas that had been produced since production resumed. Mrs. Bryan refused the check and she filed suit against BTM in 1993, as-sertmg inter alia that BTM had lost its right to operate the well because of BTM’s cessation of production.1

During the discovery phase of the litigation, Mrs. Bryan inspected BTM’s production records. These records showed that no gas production was metered from the well from November of 1979 to April of 1980 (although BTM claimed at trial that there had been gas production during this period that was not recorded because of a defective meter).

At trial, Mrs. Bryan claimed that the (disputed) cessation of production in 1979-80, as well as the undisputed cessation of production in 1987-90, had terminated BTM’s leasehold rights to produce and sell gas from the well.

The circuit court, with the agreement of the parties, decided to separate the case into a liability phase, and if necessary, a damages phase. The issue in the liability phase was whether cessation of production by BTM in 1979-80 and/or 1987-90 had terminated BTM’s leasehold rights.

The jury found for Mrs. Bryan with respect to both periods of time. The circuit court then entered an order under Rule 54(b) of the West Virginia Rules of Civil Procedure,2 entering final judgment on the jury’s verdict and certifying that order as immediately appealable. BTM filed a petition for appeal; however, this Court voted not to accept the petition.

After we refused to hear BTM’s petition for appeal on the liability issues, the circuit court determined that as a matter of law Mrs. Bryan was entitled to a “reasonable royalty” on gas produced from the well after [116]*116the 1979-80 cessation of production, and that a one-eighth royalty was a reasonable royalty. The trial court, sitting without a jury, computed the royalty based on the undisputed facts regarding production and entered judgment accordingly.

Mrs. Bryan has appealed this judgment; she contends that the trial judge used the wrong measure of damages. Specifically, she claims that she is entitled to the actual value of the gas taken and sold from the well after 1979, without any deduction for costs of production. She also raises other issues challenging the trial judge’s rulings relating to her monetary recovery, that we discuss infra at III.C. BTM defends the trial judge’s approach to damages as being correct. Additionally, BTM has cross-appealed the jury’s liability determination as not being supported by the evidence.

II.

Standard of Review

We review jury determinations (assuming that the jury was properly instructed, of course) under a highly deferential standard. We review a trial judge’s strictly legal rulings on the proper measure of damages de novo.

III.

Discussion

A.

Liability

The first issue that we address is the cross-appeal by BTM of the jury’s determination that BTM’s lease terminated due to non-production in 1979-80.

Mrs. Bryan argues that BTM is barred from raising this issue by the doctrine of res judicata, because this Court voted not to accept and hear BTM’s petition for appeal of the circuit court’s partial judgment on liability-

However, Mrs. Bryan’s argument on this point runs directly counter to the principle that “an appellate court ought to usually have before it all of the controversy that was brought to the court below.” Riffe v. Armstrong, 197 W.Va. 626, 637, 477 S.E.2d 536, 546 (1996), modified on other grounds by Moats v. Preston County Commission, 206 W.Va. 8, 521 S.E.2d 180 (1999). We stated in Riffe that in the case of partial judgments, even though they áre certified by a trial court as immediately appealable under Rule 54(b), this Court may “elect to defer consideration of [an] appeal until an appeal is taken from the order terminating the entire action.” Syllabus Point 3 (in part), Riffe, supra.3

We hold therefore that when a party has petitioned for appeal of a circuit court’s partial judgment entered pursuant to West Virginia Rules of Civil Procedure, Rule 54(b) or otherwise, and this Court does not accept the petition, the petitioner is not barred by res judicata from raising the errors that were asserted in the refused petition for appeal of the partial judgment in a [117]*117subsequent petition for appeal arising out of the same action.

Turning to the substance of BTM’s cross-appeal, BTM argues that there was not sufficient evidence for the jury to determine that BTM had ceased production in 1979-80; or to determine that any cessation of production by BTM in 1979-80 or 1987-90 was not excusable, under the “temporary cessation of production” doctrine.

Our law is well-settled that a lease of the type that BTM had with Mrs. Bryan automatically terminates when there is a cessation of mineral production, unless the cessation of production is excused under the “temporary cessation of production doctrine.” We stated in Syllabus Points 1, 2, 3, and 4 of McCullough Oil, Inc. v. Rezek, 176 W.Va. 638, 346 S.E.2d 788 (1986):

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Bluebook (online)
577 S.E.2d 258, 213 W. Va. 110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bryan-v-big-two-mile-gas-co-wva-2002.