Central Natural Resources, Inc. v. Davis Operating Co.

201 P.3d 680, 288 Kan. 234, 170 Oil & Gas Rep. 259, 2009 Kan. LEXIS 20
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedFebruary 6, 2009
Docket96,463
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 201 P.3d 680 (Central Natural Resources, Inc. v. Davis Operating Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Central Natural Resources, Inc. v. Davis Operating Co., 201 P.3d 680, 288 Kan. 234, 170 Oil & Gas Rep. 259, 2009 Kan. LEXIS 20 (kan 2009).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Johnson, J.:

Central Natural Resources, Inc. (Central) appeals the district court’s order denying its motion for partial summary judgment and granting the defendants’ summary judgment motions in a quiet title action to determine ownership of methane gas in the coal formations of 16 tracts of Labette County land. Agreeing with the district court’s determination that the warranty deeds conveying the coal to Central’s predecessor in title did not convey the methane gas contained within the coal, we affirm.

FACTUAL OVERVIEW

During a period from 1924 through 1926, Central’s predecessors in interest paid money to the owners of 16 separate tracts of land in Labette County, Kansas,' in return for coal warranty deeds. All of the deeds recited that the landowners were conveying “all coal without reference to quality or quantity, . . . together with the right to mine and remove same.” The deed to one of the tracts, identified in this lawsuit as tract 12, contains a specific reservation, which recited that “it being further agreed that all rights, surface, mineral or otherwise not specifically granted herein are hereby reserved by first parties . . . together with the right to remove the same if other minerals are found.” Other differences in deed language are not germane to this opinion.

Neither Central nor any of its predecessors in title have ever exercised the right to mine and remove coal from any of the tracts. Likewise, Central has never attempted to explore for or produce the natural gas that resides within the seam of coal underlying the subject land, known as coalbed methane gas (CBM).

Three-quarters of a century after the coal transfers, the defendant oil and gas companies obtained oil and gas leases on some of the tracts. Pursuant to those leases, certain defendant companies *236 drilled for and obtained production of CBM. Thereafter, Central filed a quiet title action, claiming ownership of the CBM in all 16 tracts through the 1924-26 coal deeds, and seeking damages for trespass and conversion for the drilling and production activities.

Counterclaims and third-party petitions were filed. The district court bifurcated the action for purposes of dispositive motions and trial, first addressing the CBM ownership issue, and then, if necessary, the court would proceed to determine and resolve all remaining issues in the case. Central moved for partial summary judgment, and various defendants moved for summary judgment. Central was permitted to amend its petition.

Subsequently, the district court issued a memorandum decision and order, granting summary judgment to the defendants on the issue of CBM ownership, i.e., finding that the deeds conveying “all coal” to Central’s predecessors in title did not transfer ownership of the CBM. However, the court clarified that its order was not intended to address the plaintiff s claim for trespass or for damages to the coalbed inflicted by defendants in the process of extracting CBM.

The district court also found that the CBM ownership issue was one of first impression, involving a controlling question of law as to which there is substantial ground for difference of opinion, and that an immediate appeal pursuant to K.S.A. 2008 Supp. 60-2102(c) could materially advance the ultimate determination of the litigation. The Court of Appeals denied the interlocutory appeal. Upon a petition for review to this court, we granted Central’s motion to docket the civil interlocutory appeal directly with the Kansas Supreme Court.

COALBED METHANE GAS

Central’s arguments rely in part on the physical properties of CBM. It stresses that CBM is created during the natural process by which coal is formed. In Amoco Production Co. v. Southern Ute Tribe, 526 U.S. 865, 872-73, 144 L. Ed. 2d 22, 119 S. Ct. 1719 (1999), the United States Supreme Court explained that process as follows:

*237 “We begin our discussion as the parties did, with a brief overview of the chemistry and composition of coal. Coal is a heterogeneous, noncrystalline sedimentary rock composed primarily of carbonaceous materials. See, e.g., Gorbaty & Larsen, Coal Structure and Reactivity, in 3 Encyclopedia of Physical Science and Technology 437 (R. Meyers ed. 2d ed. 1992). It is formed over millions of years from decaying plant material that settles on the bottom of swamps and is converted by microbiological processes into peat. D. Van Krevelen, Coal 90 (3d ed. 1993). Over time, the resulting peat beds are buried by sedimentary deposits. As the beds sink deeper and deeper into the earth’s crust, the peat is transformed by chemical reactions which increase the carbon content of the fossilized plant material. The process in which peat transforms into coal is referred to as coalification.
“The coalification process generates methane and other gases. R. Rogers, Coalbed Methane: Principles and Practice 148 (1994). Because coal is porous, some of that gas is retained in the coal. CBM gas exists in the coal in three basic states: as free gas; as gas dissolved in the water in coal; and as gas ‘adsorped’ on the solid surface of the coal, that is, held to the surface by weak forces called van der Waals forces. These are the same three states or conditions in which gas is stored in other rock formations. Because of the large surface area of coal pores, however, a much higher proportion of the gas is adsorped on the surface of coal than is adsorped in other rock. When pressure on the coalbed is decreased, the gas in the coal formation escapes. As a result, CBM gas is released from coal as the coal is mined and brought to the surface.”

Central further urges us to consider the historical context in which the coal deeds were executed. At that time, the parties would have been well aware that coal contained a gas, sometimes referred to as “marsh gas” or “fire damp,” which posed a significant danger of explosion as the coal was being mined. Cf. Amoco, 526 U.S. at 875-76 (in 1909-10, CBM considered a dangerous waste product of coal mining which frequently sparked explosions). Statutes and regulations of the time placed a duty upon the owner/operator of a coal mine to provide for the safety of miners, including the proper control or ventilation of the CBM. Cf. Amoco, 526 U.S. at 876 (federal coal mine safety law of 1891 prescribed specific ventilation standards for coal mines of a certain depth to dilute and render harmless the noxious or poisonous gases).

Therefore, the context within which the coal deeds were executed was that CBM was a dangerous substance which had no economic value, but which, to the contrary, placed an additional burden and expense on the coal mine owner/operator to insure their miners’ safety. Moreover, as Central conceded at oral argu *238

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Bluebook (online)
201 P.3d 680, 288 Kan. 234, 170 Oil & Gas Rep. 259, 2009 Kan. LEXIS 20, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/central-natural-resources-inc-v-davis-operating-co-kan-2009.