Camp Ne'er Too Late, LP v. Swepi, LP

185 F. Supp. 3d 517, 2016 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 59657, 2016 WL 2594186
CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 5, 2016
DocketNo. 4:14-cv-01715
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 185 F. Supp. 3d 517 (Camp Ne'er Too Late, LP v. Swepi, LP) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Camp Ne'er Too Late, LP v. Swepi, LP, 185 F. Supp. 3d 517, 2016 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 59657, 2016 WL 2594186 (M.D. Pa. 2016).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM

Matthew W. Brann, United States District Judge

The renowned eighteenth-century English poet Alexander Pope once wrote, “Blessed is the man who expects nothing, for he shall never be disappointed.”1 The dispute presently before the Court was fueled by the outsized and unsupported expectations of landowners who entered into a natural gas lease and subsequent agreements during a time when such exploration was steadily reaching its zenith in Pennsylvania’s northern tier counties. As the natural gas boom gradually winnowed, drilling companies, like the one hauled into court here, reacted with con-tractionary business decisions that included, among other defensive strategies, halting plans for the development of future wells.

The unfolding of this dispute has confirmed the well-established principle that the disappointment and dissatisfaction felt by a natural gas lessor as a result of the lessee’s failure to develop its property— what plaintiffs representatives in this case have called their “shattered dreams” — do not afford the lessor a remedy at law if such development is not mandated by the clear text of an agreement between the parties.

Plaintiff, Camp Ne’er Too Late, LP, petitions this Court to extrapolate a set of contractual obligations on the part of Defendant, SWEPI, LP, from a single introductory paragraph of a right-of-way addendum, which Plaintiffs representatives drafted. This Court considers it highly'un-befitting for federal judges to substitute their own predilections for those of the litigants who appear before them, particularly when those litigants have already [522]*522expressed their intentions in the clear text of a bargained-for agreement.

Consequently, because Plaintiffs case theory simply is not borne out either by the text of the parties’ agreements or the plain reality of the parties’ course of dealings, its request that the Court engage in judicial revisionism of the instant natural gas lease and intervene on its behalf, now having the benefit of hindsight, must be rejected. Instead, this Court will honor the written agreement for which the parties bargained. As such and in accordance with the following reasoning, Defendant’s Motion for Summary Judgment is granted and Plaintiffs corresponding Motion for Summary Judgment is denied.2

1. BACKGROUND3

A. Ne’er Too Late Lodge and East Resources, Inc., negotiate and execute the 2008 lease and addendum.

The instant dispute springs from the terms of natural gas lease governing a wooded 230-acre plot of land in Rutland Township, Tioga County, Pennsylvania.4 That property, to which the subject lease applies, was acquired by Ne’er Too Late Lodge, a Pennsylvania nonprofit corporation, in 1966.5 The nonprofit entity Ne’er Too Late Lodge shares its name with a small cabin that sits on the land in question, land which according to one of Plaintiffs partners, has been used throughout the years for private-brook trout fishing, hunting, and similar outdoor activities.6

On June 17, 2008, Ne’er Too Late Lodge and SWEPI, LP’s predecessor-in-interest, East Resources, Inc., executed the oil and gas lease that ultimately gave rise to the present litigation.7 The lease was negotiated on behalf of Ne’er Too Late Lodge by shareholder-brothers Robert A. Schwoyer and David Schwoyer, Sr., both of whom would later become general partners in Camp Ne’er Too Late, LP, the organization formed by Ne’er Too Late Lodge’s shareholders to manage the business affairs associated with the lease,8 David Schwoyer would also go on to testify in this matter as Plaintiffs Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 30(b)(6) designee.

In 2008, the parties agreed to a “paid-up” lease, meaning that Ne’er Too Late Lodge, solely for entering into the lease, received an up-front payment of $287,500, which compensation was comprised of a bonus and accelerated delay rental fees.9 The lease also provided that Ne’er Too Late Lodge would receive as a royalty payment one-eighth of the proceeds real[523]*523ized by East Resources through its sales of natural gas extracted from the property.10

According to the text of the agreement, Ne’er Too Late Lodge leased the subject land to East Resources “for the purpose of exploring for, developing, producing and marketing oil and gas.”11 The parties do not dispute that the lease gave East Resources the authority to place well pads on the leased premises and that nothing in the lease required the drilling of any number of wells.12 In fact,, prior to the expiration of the primary term of the lease, only one well had actually been drilled on the land.13

Importantly, the Lease also granted East Resources the right to construct pipelines throughout the leased premises.14 Specifically, Paragraph 11 of the lease (“Ancillary Rights”), provides that Ne’er Too Late Lodge granted to East Resources “the right of ingress and egress over, under and through said leased premises with the right to conduct such exclusive operations on the leased premises as may be necessary for such purposes, including but not limited to... the constructions and use of roads, pipelines, tanks, water wells, disposal wells injection wills, pits electric and telephone lines, and other facilities.”15

Although the lease provided that such constructions could be made “regardless of the source of such substances,” during the course of the negotiations, the parties composed a lease addendum containing twenty additional paragraphs, one of - which— Paragraph 12 — restricted East Resources from constructing a pipeline on the leased premises unless that pipeline was used to transfer oil and/or gas from one or more wells drilled on the leased premises.16 In the context of natural gas leases, gas transported across leased premises that is drilled from those same premises is known as “domestic” or “native” gas.17 The parties attached the addendum to the lease and explicitly incorporated it.18 The addendum provisions were therefore made effective upon execution of the lease itself. For the record, I will also note that the parties do not dispute either that the lease was a completely integrated document with a standard integration 'Clause or that the lease disclaimed any and all implied obligations.19

At this juncture, it is also important to note that because Defendant ultimately did construct a pipeline that transported nonnative gas over the subject land, the ele[524]*524mental issue in this litigation is whether the text of certain subsequent agreements between the parties incorporated Paragraph 12 of the lease addendum in any manner. Because the text of those agreements indicates otherwise, I conclude in my analysis below that Paragraph 12 of the lease addendum was not so incorporated.

Shortly thereafter, the shareholders of Ne’er Too Late Lodge engaged in the first of two inconsistent transactions.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
185 F. Supp. 3d 517, 2016 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 59657, 2016 WL 2594186, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/camp-neer-too-late-lp-v-swepi-lp-pamd-2016.