Danne v. Texaco Exploration & Production Inc.

1994 OK CIV APP 138, 883 P.2d 210, 65 O.B.A.J. 3404, 1994 Okla. Civ. App. LEXIS 122, 1994 WL 568676
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 13, 1994
Docket81,658
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 1994 OK CIV APP 138 (Danne v. Texaco Exploration & Production Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Danne v. Texaco Exploration & Production Inc., 1994 OK CIV APP 138, 883 P.2d 210, 65 O.B.A.J. 3404, 1994 Okla. Civ. App. LEXIS 122, 1994 WL 568676 (Okla. Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

BOUDREAU, Presiding Judge.

Herbert J. Danne, Richard Danne, Arthur Danne, Florence Wetting, Eloise M. Flint, and William F. Lohmeyer Living Trust, Plaintiffs (lessors), brought this action to cancel oil and gas leases in section 35-17N-8W, Kingfisher County, Oklahoma, leased to Texaco, Inc., Defendant (lessee). Texaco appeals a trial court judgment in favor of all lessors terminating the leases for failure to produce in paying quantities and for failure to exercise due diligence to market the product. Four questions are presented on appeal: (1) whether a lease can expire automatically, according to its own terms, in the secondary lease term; (2) whether a lease can expire automatically for failure to pay shut-in royalties in a timely fashion; (3) whether the acceptance of shut-in royalty and royalty payments estops a lessor from asserting that a lease is terminated; and (4) whether a lessee violates the implied covenant to market by failing to produce gas for over four years from a well that is capable of production.

FACTUAL HISTORY

The facts of this ease are stipulated. The lessors own acreage that forms part of a 640-acre drilling and spacing unit, leased to Texaco. Herbert J. Danne, Richard Danne, Arthur Danne, and Florence Wetting are mineral owners of the Danne lease which was executed in 1965 without a shut-in royalty clause. William F. Lohmeyer Living Trust is the mineral owner of the Lohmeyer lease, which was executed in 1967 with a shut-in royalty clause. Eloise M. Flint is the mineral owner of the Flint lease, which was executed in 1967 with a shut-in royalty clause. The remaining one-half mineral interest in the southeast quarter of section 35 is owned by Christian, a party in a separate, but related suit against Texaco.

In 1970 the Helen Danne No. 1 well was drilled within the unit and was an oil and gas discovery. Gas produced from two formations (the Skinner and Redfork) was marketed to Oklahoma Natural Gas (ONG) through a twenty-year gas contract, executed on March 23,1971. Casinghead gas from another formation (the Mississippi) was marketed to Phillips 66 Natural Gas (Phillips) through a contract executed on March 19, 1971. When ONG prematurely discontinued its take of gas from the Helen Danne No. 1 on April 1, 1987, Texaco shut in the well. Sale of casinghead gas to Phillips was discontinued at the time the well was shut in, but Phillips did not disconnect its casinghead gas meter until June 1989.

The well remained shut in until Texaco executed a new gas contract with Phillips on December 1, 1991; Texaco resumed production from the well on December 14,1991. In the stipulated facts Texaco states, and the lessors do not disagree, that the well was capable of producing in paying quantities throughout the shut-in period: April 1, 1987 — December 14, 1991.

Texaco asserts that its failure to produce the Helen Danne No. 1 during the shut-in *213 period was the result of a mistake regarding the status of its gas contract with ONG. Texaco was involved in a contractual dispute concerning production from some ninety wells with ONG, and it was not until its dispute with ONG was resolved in June 1991 that Texaco realized that the Helen Danne No. 1 gas-purchase contract had been released in December 1988. As soon as it became aware of the mistake, Texaco asserts that it began negotiations to market the product. After resolution of the Texaeo-ONG dispute, and after a related case for lease cancellation, Christian v. Texaco, was filed on May 31, 1991, Texaco tendered shut-in royalty payments to both lessors with shut-in royalty clauses and then sought a market for the gas. Lessors Lohmeyer and Flint accepted the shut-in royalty payments and then accepted production royalty payments after the well resumed production on December 14, 1991. Texaco also tendered production royalty payments to lessor Danne, which Danne refused.

Texaco now appeals the trial court’s grant of lease termination for failure to produce in paying quantities and failure to market the product. Texaco also appeals the trial court’s pronouncement that Lohmeyer’s and Flint’s acceptance of shut-in royalties and production royalties did not have the effect of continuing the lease in full force and effect.

I

AUTOMATIC TERMINATION OF A LEASE FOR FAILURE TO SATISFY THE HABENDUM CLAUSE

Lessors assert, and the trial court agreed, that Texaco’s lease terminated automatically, according to the terms of its ha-bendum clause, for failure to produce gas in paying quantities. The question of automatic lease termination is significant in this action; if automatic termination can occur, no action of the lessors (even acceptance of royalty benefits) will have the effect of maintaining the lease in full force and effect. Since the facts relating to the terms of these leases are stipulated, the issue presented is one of law. The appellate court’s role is to define the law; therefore, it independently reviews questions of law. In re Estate of Crowl, 737 P.2d 911, 914 (Okla.1987). Contested issues of law are reviewable in all actions, suits, and proceedings by a de novo standard. Salve Regina College v. Russell, 499 U.S. 225, 111 S.Ct. 1217, 113 L.Ed.2d 190 (1991). Review of law is called “de novo,” which means no deference, not necessarily a full rehearing or new factfinding. Bose Corp. v. Consumers Union of United States, Inc., 466 U.S. 485, 104 S.Ct. 1949, 80 L.Ed.2d 502 (1984).

We first consider the habendum clauses in the Danne, Lohmeyer, and Flint leases. Each states: “It is agreed that this lease shall remain in force for a period of_ years from date (herein called primary term) and as long thereafter as oil or gas, or either of them, is produced from said land by the lessee.” (Emphasis added.) In Oklahoma, “[t]he term ‘produced,’ when used in a ‘thereafter’ provision of the habendum clause, denotes in law production in paying quantities.” Stewart v. Amerada Hess Corp., 604 P.2d 854, 857 (Okla.1979). See also Pack v. Santa Fe Minerals, A Div. of Santa Fe Int’l Corp., 869 P.2d 323, 326 (Okla.1994) (a typical ha-bendum clause which extends the lease past its primary term as long as oil or gas is produced is interpreted to mean “produced in paying quantities”).

Most jurisdictions view habendum clauses using a “thereafter” provision as “conveying an interest subject to a special limitation rather than as conveying an interest subject to a condition, power of termination or right of re-entry.” 3 Howard R. Williams, Oil and Gas Law § 604 (1991). In these jurisdictions, the habendum clause may be likened to a determinable estate, which automatically ends upon the happening of a condition, with no action required by the grantor. Oklahoma does not, however, take the view that habendum clauses are special limitations; rather, Oklahoma views the ha-bendum clause as an estate on condition subsequent creating only a right of entry in the grantor. With such an estate, the grantor must bring an action to cause forfeiture of the estate. For example, in Stewart,

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Bluebook (online)
1994 OK CIV APP 138, 883 P.2d 210, 65 O.B.A.J. 3404, 1994 Okla. Civ. App. LEXIS 122, 1994 WL 568676, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/danne-v-texaco-exploration-production-inc-oklacivapp-1994.