CLAUDE C. ARNOLD NON-OPERATED ROYALTY INTEREST PROPERTIES v. CABOT OIL & GAS CORP.

2021 OK 4, 485 P.3d 817
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 26, 2021
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 2021 OK 4 (CLAUDE C. ARNOLD NON-OPERATED ROYALTY INTEREST PROPERTIES v. CABOT OIL & GAS CORP.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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CLAUDE C. ARNOLD NON-OPERATED ROYALTY INTEREST PROPERTIES v. CABOT OIL & GAS CORP., 2021 OK 4, 485 P.3d 817 (Okla. 2021).

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CLAUDE C. ARNOLD NON-OPERATED ROYALTY INTEREST PROPERTIES v. CABOT OIL & GAS CORP.
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CLAUDE C. ARNOLD NON-OPERATED ROYALTY INTEREST PROPERTIES v. CABOT OIL & GAS CORP.
2021 OK 4
485 P.3d 817
Case Number: 115807
Decided: 01/26/2021
THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF OKLAHOMA


Cite as: 2021 OK 4, 485 P.3d 817

CLAUDE C. ARNOLD NON-OPERATED ROYALTY INTEREST PROPERTIES, L.L.C.; WILLIAM V. YORK & GALEETA M. YORK REVOCABLE TRUST; GUNN LIVING TRUST DATED 12-17-91; and SHARON L. MARTIN, Plaintiffs/Appellees,
v.
CABOT OIL & GAS CORPORATION, Defendant/Appellant.

CERTIORARI TO THE COURT OF CIVIL APPEALS, DIVISION 4;
ON APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF BEAVER COUNTY

HONORABLE JON PARSLEY, TRIAL JUDGE

¶0 Plaintiffs held an overriding royalty interest in oil and gas produced under mineral leases executed in 1973. In 2012, defendant began producing oil and gas from a new geologic formation on lands covered under those same leases. Plaintiffs sought payment of their share of royalty from the new production, defendant refused, and plaintiffs brought this lawsuit. Finding they continued to hold a valid overriding royalty interest under the 1973 leases, the district court granted judgment to the plaintiffs after a bench trial. The Court of Civil Appeals, however, reversed after determining that a statute of limitations barred plaintiffs' claims in full due to a purported cloud on their interest arising from subsequently recorded oil-and-gas leases. Because the later-recorded leases did not reasonably give plaintiffs notice of any interest adverse to their own, we hold that their cause of action did not accrue until defendant refused to pay royalties on the new production in 2012. Plaintiffs filed a timely lawsuit. On certiorari granted upon plaintiffs' petition,

THE COURT OF CIVIL APPEALS' OPINION IS VACATED; THE TRIAL
COURT'S JUDGMENT IS AFFIRMED.

Thomas G. Wolfe, Catherine L. Campbell, and John M. Bunting, Phillips Murrah, P.C., Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, for Plaintiffs/Appellees.

Jesse R. Pierce, Pierce & O'Neill, LLP, Houston, Texas, Douglas D. Dale, Wright & Dale, Guymon, Oklahoma, Mark D. Christiansen, Edinger Leonard & Blakley PLLC, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, and Michael F. Smith, McAfee & Taft, Tulsa, Oklahoma, for Defendant/Appellant.

Kraettli Q. Epperson, Maris A. Skinner, Mee Hoge PLLP, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, Amicus Curiae.

GURICH, J.

1 This appeal asks us to decide whether the plaintiffs in this case waited too long in asserting their right to payment of an overriding royalty interest in an oil-and-gas-producing formation. In other words, does a statute of limitations defeat their claim for payment of oil-and-gas royalties? The Court of Civil Appeals reversed the trial court's judgment in favor of the plaintiffs on those grounds. We do not agree.

¶2 For reasons we explore below, this litigation could not have arisen until the defendant first developed the disputed formation--which proved productive and profitable--in 2012, and then refused the plaintiffs' request for payment of royalties from that production. Nothing preceding that sequence of events could reasonably have foreclosed the plaintiffs' ability to press their claim for the payments to which they were entitled under valid mineral leases. Accordingly, we hold that the plaintiffs filed a timely lawsuit to enforce their valid overriding royalty interest.

Facts and Procedural History

3 The dispute in this case centers around two oil-and-gas-producing formations--known as the Chester and the Marmaton--located in Beaver County, Oklahoma.1 In 1973, a company called Arnold Petroleum, Inc.--the predecessor in interest of the plaintiffs, whom we collectively refer to as Arnold--obtained six oil-and-gas leases covering land in Beaver County. Each of these 1973 leases was filed in the county land records. The leases had a primary term of three years, plus a five-year extension period.

¶4 In all of the leases, however, the provisions on lease expiration were modified by the following clause, which has often been described in this litigation as unusual and is termed by the parties as the exception clause. It says: "provided, however, that Lessee shall not be obligated to release any formation, horizon or zone, the production from which would conflict with any existing producing horizon, formation or zone." The leases also allowed the lessee to surrender the leases "as to any part or parts of the leased premises by delivering or mailing a release thereof to lessor, or by placing a release of record in the proper County."

¶5 Over the course of 1973 and 1974, Arnold Petroleum assigned its leases to Dyco Petroleum Corporation, expressly reserving an overriding royalty interest in any oil and gas produced under the leases.2 Dyco then assigned the leases to Harold Courson--the predecessor in interest of the defendant, Cabot Oil & Gas Corporation. This assignment, too, was expressly subject to Arnold's overriding royalty interest. Before the end of the leases' primary term, Courson drilled and completed two vertical wells in the Chester formation, which underlies the lands covered by the 1973 leases. Importantly--and indisputably--the two wells drilled in the Chester formation have produced "mostly gas with some oil" continuously since the mid-1970s, and at no point since then has Arnold ever stopped receiving payments on its overriding royalty interest in those producing wells.

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