Contango Resources, Llc v. Fremont County, Wyoming

2025 WY 29
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 17, 2025
DocketS-24-0185
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2025 WY 29 (Contango Resources, Llc v. Fremont County, Wyoming) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Contango Resources, Llc v. Fremont County, Wyoming, 2025 WY 29 (Wyo. 2025).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT, STATE OF WYOMING

2025 WY 29

OCTOBER TERM, A.D. 2024

March 17, 2025

CONTANGO RESOURCES, LLC,

Appellant (Petitioner),

v. S-24-0185

FREMONT COUNTY, WYOMING,

Appellee (Respondent).

Appeal from the District Court of Fremont County The Honorable Kate G. McKay, Judge

Representing Appellant: Matthew J. Micheli and Kasey June Schlueter, Holland & Hart LLP, Cheyenne, Wyoming. Argument by Ms. Schlueter.

Representing Appellee: Amanda Ferguson Esch and Catherine Maegan Young, Davis & Cannon, LLP, Cheyenne, Wyoming. Argument by Ms. Young.

Before FOX, C.J., and BOOMGAARDEN, GRAY, FENN, and JAROSH, JJ.

NOTICE: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in Pacific Reporter Third. Readers are requested to notify the Clerk of the Supreme Court, Supreme Court Building, Cheyenne, Wyoming 82002, of any typographical or other formal errors so that correction may be made before final publication in the permanent volume. BOOMGAARDEN, Justice.

[¶1] In 2021, Contango Resources, LLC purchased oil and gas production and processing facilities located in Fremont and Sweetwater Counties, and in 2022, the Fremont County Assessor assessed the taxable value of the property located in Fremont County. Contango appealed the assessment to the Fremont County Board of Equalization claiming the County Assessor and her expert consultant failed to properly use the purchase price of the property in making their valuations and used improper trending and depreciation factors. The County Board upheld the valuation, and the State Board of Equalization and district court affirmed. We likewise affirm.

ISSUES

[¶2] This appeal presents two issues:

1. Was the County Board’s decision upholding the County Assessor’s rejection of the property’s purchase price as a starting point for valuation supported by substantial evidence and in accordance with law?

2. Was the County Board’s decision upholding the County Assessor’s application of trending and depreciation factors in the valuation in accordance with law?

FACTS

[¶3] In 2021, Contango acquired property and oil and gas reserves from ConocoPhillips pursuant to a Purchase and Sale Agreement (PSA) for $67 million. The PSA transferred property that was located in both Fremont County, Wyoming, and Sweetwater County, Wyoming. The property included the Lost Cabin Gas Plant (Plant) and Lost Creek Gathering Lines, and eight wells that feed directly to the Plant (referred to herein as the more complex property). The property also included oil and gas equipment associated with wells that did not feed directly to the Plant, residential improvements, commercial land and improvements, and an amine plant (referred to herein as the less complex property).

The PSA

[¶4] The PSA resulted from a closed bidding process conducted through an investment company. ConocoPhillips told Contango there were multiple bidders, but Contango had no information concerning who the other bidders were, how many bids there were, the dollar amount of the other bids, or whether the other bidders engaged in negotiations with ConocoPhillips.

1 [¶5] The PSA contained an “Allocated Value Schedule” that showed how the $67 million purchase price was allocated among certain categories of assets acquired in the purchase. Although the purchase involved thousands of pieces of equipment, the Allocated Value Schedule set forth only fifteen general categories and did not identify a value for any particular piece of equipment acquired in the purchase. The schedule did not differentiate between Fremont and Sweetwater County assets, and it did not assign a value to the oil and gas reserves.

The Assessments

[¶6] Contango’s purchase did not make it a full owner of the property. Instead, because ConocoPhillips had been an owner of only a percentage of the property, Contango acquired only that interest. Nonetheless, as the operator, Contango was responsible for the tax assessment of the full market value of the property, not just the percentage it owned. 1

[¶7] In valuing the property, the County Assessor divided the property into two portions, each of which, when Contango appealed the eventual assessments, the County Board of Equalization docketed separately but consolidated for hearing. 2 Docket 2022-01 concerned the valuation of the more complex oil and gas equipment associated with the Lost Cabin Gas Plant and the Lost Creek Gathering Lines. Because of the complexity of this portion of the property and its valuation, the County Assessor retained an outside expert, TY Pickett, to appraise the property.

[¶8] Docket No. 2022-02 concerned the valuation of the less complex property. The County Assessor and her staff appraised this portion of the property.

[¶9] Before valuing either the more or less complex property, the County Assessor provided Contango with detailed itemized renditions listing cost information for and the age and condition of the Fremont County property to be valued, based on information reported by the taxpayer the previous year. Contango had the opportunity to update the list and make changes to the information provided for each item, but it returned the completed renditions without changes. Each rendition was accompanied by a sworn affidavit affirming that the information provided was complete and accurate. The total value reflected in the renditions was higher than the $67 million that Contango paid for the property.

Valuation of the More Complex Property

1 Because Contango was responsible for the tax assessment on the full value of the property, its expert calculated a “grossed up” or “trued up” price, or a theoretical price paid for all assets, assuming terms similar to the PSA. Contango’s expert posited that had Contango purchased 100% of all reserves, land, facilities, and equipment, it would have paid $122.3 million for the property. 2 The assessed property did not include the oil and gas reserves, and so the County Assessor did not include them in her valuation. 2 [¶10] Robert Lehn of TY Pickett appraised the more complex property. Mr. Lehn had extensive experience in valuing complex oil and gas properties, including the Lost Cabin Gas Plant, which he had assisted in appraising since its inception in late 1994 or early 1995.

[¶11] Mr. Lehn’s appraisal began with a site tour and meetings with Plant personnel to update information he had from prior appraisals concerning the Plant and its ongoing projects. He also received and reviewed Contango’s renditions, and he considered the Plant’s history and operational challenges.

[¶12] Mr. Lehn used a “cost approach” to value the property. 3 In performing his cost approach analysis, Mr. Lehn first calculated a replacement cost new by applying a trending factor to the originally reported cost of the property in 1994. 4 To determine replacement cost new, appraisers also apply economic or functional obsolescence if justified by the known information about the property. In performing this analysis, Mr. Lehn used trending, depreciation, and obsolescence factors developed from a variety of sources, including TY Pickett developed data, examination of oil and gas industry practices, Marshall & Swift data, and various studies. 5

[¶13] Mr. Lehn did not use Contango’s purchase price as a starting point in his cost approach analysis. He instead used the purchase price as a single data point in adjusting for “economic obsolescence,” based on the actual use and condition of the property. 6 He explained:

I felt that ConocoPhillips probably wouldn’t have sold the facility to Contango without due consideration being given to what Contango might do with it.

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Related

Contango Resources, Llc v. Fremont County, Wyoming
2025 WY 29 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 2025)

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