Eisenbarth v. Reusser

2014 Ohio 3792
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 28, 2014
Docket13 MO 10
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 2014 Ohio 3792 (Eisenbarth v. Reusser) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eisenbarth v. Reusser, 2014 Ohio 3792 (Ohio Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

[Cite as Eisenbarth v. Reusser, 2014-Ohio-3792.]

STATE OF OHIO, MONROE COUNTY

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS

SEVENTH DISTRICT

LELAND EISENBARTH, et al., ) ) CASE NO. 13 MO 10 PLAINTIFFS-APPELLANTS/ ) CROSS-APPELLEES, ) ) VS. ) OPINION ) DEAN REUSSER, et al., ) ) DEFENDANTS-APPELLEES/ ) CROSS-APPELLANTS. )

CHARACTER OF PROCEEDINGS: Civil Appeal from Common Pleas Court, Case No. 2012-292.

JUDGMENT: Affirmed; Cross-Appeal Dismissed.

APPEARANCES: For Plaintiffs-Appellants/ Attorney Craig Sweeney Cross-Appellees: Attorney Richard Yoss 122 North Main Street Woodsfield, Ohio 43793

For Defendants-Appellees/ Attorney Andrew Lycans Cross-Appellants: Attorney Patrick Noser 225 North Market Street P.O. Box 599 Wooster, Ohio 44691

JUDGES: Hon. Joseph J. Vukovich Hon. Gene Donofrio Hon. Mary DeGenaro

Dated: August 28, 2014 [Cite as Eisenbarth v. Reusser, 2014-Ohio-3792.] VUKOVICH, J.

{¶1} The Eisenbarth plaintiffs appeal the summary judgment granted by the Monroe County Common Pleas Court in favor of the Reusser defendants. The Reussers cross-appeal in the event this court agrees with the Eisenbarths’ argument that the trial court erred in finding a savings event. The trial court found that the Reussers’ one-half mineral interest in the minerals under the Eisenbarths’ land was not abandoned under the 1989 Dormant Mineral Act and that a bonus paid under an oil and gas lease must be evenly split between the Eisenbarths and the Reussers. {¶2} The Eisenbarths first argue that an oil and gas lease is not a title transaction and thus not a savings event or that their own act of signing the lease cannot save the Reussers’ minerals from abandonment. We disagree and conclude that a recorded oil and gas lease of all of the minerals can be a statutory savings event. {¶3} The Eisenbarths then argue that the 1974 recorded lease ceased to be a savings event in 1994, urging that the statute uses a rolling twenty-year look-back period rather than a fixed period. We uphold the trial court’s application of a fixed look-back period and thus agree there was no abandonment under the 1989 DMA. {¶4} Lastly, the Eisenbarths urge that the Reussers are not entitled to half of the bonus under the lease because the grant of the exclusive right to lease to the Eisenbarths should necessarily include the right to all bonus money. We disagree and conclude that the court properly split the bonus in half just as the mineral interest in split in half. For the following reasons, the Eisenbarths’ arguments are overruled, the Reussers’ cross-appeal is dismissed, and the trial court’s judgment is affirmed. STATEMENT OF THE CASE {¶5} In 1954, William Eisenbarth transferred two tracts of land covering approximately 153 acres in Monroe County to Paul and Ida Eisenbarth. The deed reserved for William one-half of all minerals underlying the lands and all rights to develop and remove those minerals. The right to lease the minerals, however, was expressly given to Paul and Ida. William then transferred by royalty deed his half of the mineral estate to his other child, Mildred Reusser. Paul and Ida entered various -2-

oil and gas leases in the years thereafter, the last being signed in 1973 and recorded on January 23, 1974. {¶6} In 1989, they transferred nearly 27 acres (tract II) to their son Keith in a deed stating that it was subject to all reservations of record. When Paul died, his interest in tract I was conveyed to Ida by a certificate of transfer filed in 1990, which included the 1954 deed’s language on the mineral reservation and the right to lease. When Ida died, a 1998 certificate of transfer was filed, which transferred tract I to her three sons, Keith, Leland, and Michael (hereinafter the Eisenbarths) and included the language from the 1954 deed. The Eisenbarths executed a joint and survivorship deed for themselves, again repeating the aforementioned language. {¶7} Mildred Reusser died in 2002, leaving her estate to the defendants herein: Dean Reusser, Marilyn Ice, Wilda Fetty, Martha Maag (who then died leaving her interest to her husband Robert Maag), Vernon Reusser, Paul Reusser, Davis Reusser, and Dennis Reusser (hereinafter collectively referred to as the Reussers). {¶8} In 2008, the Eisenbarths signed an oil and gas lease. In 2009, they published a notice of abandonment of Mildred Reusser’s one-half interest in the minerals, and the Reussers responded with a claim to preserve. In 2012, the Eisenbarths signed an oil and gas lease with another company and received a $766,250 signing bonus, half of which is being held in escrow. {¶9} The Eisenbarths then filed the within lawsuit against the Reussers seeking in pertinent part a declaration that the 1954 deed did not reserve the right to bonus money and that the Reussers’ mineral interest is deemed abandoned under the 1989 Dormant Mineral Act. The Reussers counterclaimed seeking in pertinent part quiet title to their one-half mineral interest and half of the bonus money paid under the 2012 lease. The parties filed cross motions for summary judgment.1

1 Below, the Eisenbarths argued abandonment under both the 1989 DMA and the 2006 DMA. The Reussers initially contested the Eisenbarths’ ability to proceed under the 1989 DMA but make no arguments on appeal that the 1989 DMA cannot be applied. Their final submission below suggested they no longer contested the Eisenbarths’ position that any abandonment under the 1989 DMA was self-executing and that the court could use that version to determine if the mineral interest was abandoned. See Defendant’s Apr. 29, 2013 Reply at 11 (“Defendants have never argued that the Dormant Mineral Act of 1989 was not a self-executing statute. Defendants have also never argued -3-

{¶10} On June 6, 2013, the trial court granted judgment to the Reussers, quieting title to their one-half mineral interest underlying the two tracts and awarding them half of the bonus money. The trial court found that the Reussers’ mineral interest had not been abandoned as oil and gas lease over all of the minerals recorded in 1974 was a savings event. The court stated that an oil and gas lease conveys a determinable fee interest in the minerals that is subject to reverter in the event there is no production or the lease expires, citing Bender v. Morgan, Columbiana C.P. No. 2012-CV-378 (Mar. 20, 2013). The court also held that a grant of the right to lease does not implicitly convey away the right to receive bonuses on the minerals retained. {¶11} The Eisenbarths filed a timely appeal. The Reussers cross-appealed contesting the trial court’s initial conclusion that various surface deeds in the Eisenbarths’ chain of title were not savings events because they merely repeated the original reservation. STATUTORY OVERVIEW {¶12} Pursuant to former R.C. 5301.56(B)(1), a mineral interest held by a person other than the surface owner of the land subject to the interest shall be deemed abandoned and vested in the owner of the surface unless (a) the mineral interest deals with coal, (b) the mineral interest is held by the government, or (c) a savings event occurred within the preceding twenty years. {¶13} The six savings events are as follows: (i) the mineral interest has been the subject of a title transaction that has been filed or recorded in the recorder’s office; (ii) there has been actual production or withdrawal by the holder; (iii) the holder used the mineral interest for underground gas storage; (iv) a mining permit has been

that the Court could not consider whether the mineral interest could be deemed abandoned under the 1989 version of the Act.”), after conducting a case review of Texaco, Inc. v. Short, 454 U.S. 516, 533- 534, 102 S.Ct.

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Bluebook (online)
2014 Ohio 3792, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eisenbarth-v-reusser-ohioctapp-2014.