Exxon Corp. v. State

40 P.3d 786, 151 Oil & Gas Rep. 317, 2001 Alas. LEXIS 139, 2001 WL 1205328
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 12, 2001
DocketS-9164
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 40 P.3d 786 (Exxon Corp. v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Exxon Corp. v. State, 40 P.3d 786, 151 Oil & Gas Rep. 317, 2001 Alas. LEXIS 139, 2001 WL 1205328 (Ala. 2001).

Opinion

OPINION

CARPENETI, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

In 1988 Exxon discovered the Point Meln-tyre oil reservoir, a bonanza with an estimated value of $4,783,800,000. Now, Exxon and the State of Alaska dispute who will absorb $24 million in field costs associated with the reservoir based on their opposing interpretations of a contract, the Prudhoe Bay Unit Agreement. We conclude that the state has the discretion under the terms of the agreement to consider the public interest according to state law and to deny the expansion of the Prudhoe Bay Unit to include the Pt. Mclntyre reservoir. This conclusion is dis-positive of the numerous arguments raised on appeal. We therefore affirm the commissioner's decision.

*788 II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

In the late 1960's the predecessors of Exxon and Arco acquired several oil and gas leases on the Alaska North Slope. 1 Each lease had a ten-year term and provided a royalty to the state-twelve and one-half percent of all oil and gas production. These leases provided that the state could take its royalty in oil or gas products (in kind) or in equivalent dollar value (in value). If the state took its royalty in kind, the lease provided that the lessees could deduct only their cleaning and dehydration field costs. 2 The leases did not mention field cost deductions when the state took its royalty in value.

In 1977 Exxon, Arco, and the state, through the Department of Natural Resources, entered into the Prudhoe Bay Unit Agreement (PBUA). A unit agreement is a contract between the department and lessees that allows for the efficient development of a reservoir that underlies multiple leases owned by different lessees. The various lessees join together in exploration and drilling, and allocate costs and production. The PBUA was not based on the state's model unit agreement; the lessees drafted the PBUA. The state approved the PBUA effective April 1, 1977.

The PBUA unitized 111 leases, including portions of the five previously mentioned 3 Exxon and Arco leases. The Prudhoe Bay Unit (PBU) includes most of the land described by these leases. The PBUA also had expansion and contraction provisions; these provisions allowed the selective increase and decrease of the lands and natural resources controlled by the agreement.

Expansion of the unit would extend the terms of the PBUA to additional lands. Expansion was generally thought to be desirable by both the state and the lessees because it allowed efficient administration under the existing agreement and efficient shared production with existing facilities. Expansion under the PBUA required that the "geologic condition" was met-that the additional lands contained a reservoir any portion of which was within the PBU.

Contraction exeluded nonproductive lands from the unit agreement. The threat of contraction was a stimulus for the lessee to discover oil and develop production into paying quantities or to lose the lease and the opportunity to discover and produce oil. The PBUA required that all lands not included in a participating area, 4 or entitled to be included in a participating area, would be contracted out of the PBUA after ten years.

The PBUA extended the original leases until April 1, 1987. Onee production began, the terms of the PBUA would continue in force for so long as oil or gas was being produced in paying quantities.

Shortly after the PBU lessees began paying royalties based on their interpretation of the lease terms, the state sued the lessees. In State v. Amerada Hess, 5 one issue was whether the lessees could deduct field costs when the state took its royalty in value. On motions for partial summary judgment, the superior court ruled that the lessees could not. 6 " It held further that the state could *789 take its royalty in kind only if the market value of the oil or gas exceeded the royalty in value because only then would taking the royalty in kind be "in the best interests of the state and for the maximum benefit of its people."

This ruling apparently pleased neither the lessees nor the state, because soon after the ruling, the parties settled the dispute on terms that differed significantly from the court's partial summary judgment ruling. Under the 1980 Royalty Settlement Agreement, the state agreed to pay a field cost allowanee for its PBU royalty whether in value or in kind. The field cost allowance was initially set at forty-two cents per barrel but was to be adjusted annually based on the Producer Price Index. (By 1998 the cost had increased to seventy-nine cents per barrel.) The superior court approved the settlement and allowed it to supersede the court's previous ruling on the merits.

During the Amerada Hess litigation, the legislature amended AS 38.05.180(f) to make it clear that the lessees could not deduct field costs from the state's royalty share under the existing, standard-form state oil and gas leases. 7 Subsequent leases expressly disallowed all field costs deductions. In addition, all but one of all unit agreements approved after 1978 disallowed field cost deductions.

In early 1984 the director of the Division of Oil and Gas, acting for the commissioner of the Department of Natural Resources, allowed an expansion of the PBU. The director's decision was based on geological, royalty and rental, and public interest considerations. The director also conditioned the expansion on two changes to one of the affected leases.

In early 1985 the director approved an expansion of the Duck Island Unit and a corresponding contraction of the PBU. The director's decision again noted several factors: environmental costs and benefits of unitized development; geological characteristics of the reservoir; prior exploration activities; applicant's development plans; and the economic costs and benefits to the state.

In late 1985 BP acquired the oil and gas lease to the remaining portion of the yet-to-be-discovered Pt. Mclntyre reservoir. Following the amended AS 38.05.180(f), the BP lease expressly disallowed all field costs deductions.

In late 1986 Exxon and Arco applied to defer contraction of the PBU for five years. They invoked a department regulation, 11 AAC 8 as authority to defer contraction, because the PBUA had no provisions for deferral of contraction. The lessees argued that a delay was justified by both the public interest criteria of 11 AAC 83.303 9 *790 and geological considerations. In early 1987 the director granted a conditional deferral " of the PBU contraction. The parties now dispute the terms of this deferral 10 and whether the lessees met the conditions.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Alaskan Crude Corp. v. State, Department of Natural Resources
261 P.3d 412 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2011)
ALASKAN CRUDE CORP. v. State
261 P.3d 412 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2011)
Gottstein v. State, Department of Natural Resources
223 P.3d 609 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2010)
AAA Valley Gravel, Inc. v. Totaro
219 P.3d 153 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2009)
Estate of Polushkin Ex Rel. Polushkin v. Maw
170 P.3d 162 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2007)
Young v. Embley
143 P.3d 936 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2006)
ConocoPhillips v. DEPT. OF NAT. RESOURCES
109 P.3d 914 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2005)
Casey v. Semco Energy, Inc.
92 P.3d 379 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2004)
Sourdough Development Services, Inc. v. Riley
85 P.3d 463 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2004)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
40 P.3d 786, 151 Oil & Gas Rep. 317, 2001 Alas. LEXIS 139, 2001 WL 1205328, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/exxon-corp-v-state-alaska-2001.