STATE OF LOUISIANA COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT
16-468
FRANK HAYES GLADNEY AND MARGARET STELLA GLADNEY GUIDROZ
VERSUS
ANGLO-DUTCH ENERGY, L.L.C. AND ANGLO-DUTCH (EVEREST) L.L.C.
********** APPEAL FROM THE THIRTY-FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT PARISH OF JEFFERSON DAVIS, DOCKET NO. C-1-14 HONORABLE STEVE GUNNELL, PRESIDING **********
SYLVIA R. COOKS JUDGE
**********
Court composed of Sylvia R. Cooks, John D. Saunders, and Shannon J. Gremillion, Judges.
REVERSED.
Larry C. Hebert William H. L. Kaufman G. Quinn Salmon Michael C. Wynne Ottinger Hebert, L.L.C. 1313 West Pinhook P.O. Drawer 52606 Lafayette, LA 70505-2606 (337) 232-2606 ATTORNEY FOR PLAINTIFF/APPELLANT Frank Hayes Gladney and Margaret Stella Gladney Guidroz
1 Stephen D. Baker Law Office of Stephen D. Baker 412 West University Avenue, Suite 101 Lafayette, LA 70506 (337) 235-8298 ATTORNEY FOR PLAINTIFF/APPELLANT Frank Hayes Gladney and Margaret Stella Gladney Guidroz
Samuel E. Masur Paul B. Simon Gordon, Arata, McCollum, Duplantis & Eagan, L.L.P. 400 E. Kaliste Saloom Road, Suite 4200 P.O. Box 81829 Lafayette, LA 70598-1829 (337) 237-0132 ATTORNEY FOR DEFENDANT/APPELLEE Anglo-Dutch Energy, L.L.C. and Anglo-Dutch (Everest), L.L.C.
2 COOKS, Judge. In this appeal involving a royalty dispute, Defendants, Anglo-Dutch Energy,
L.L.C. and Anglo-Dutch (Everest), L.L.C. (hereafter Anglo-Dutch), are oil and gas
operators, who had an Oil, Gas and Mineral Lease with Plaintiffs, Frank Hayes
Gladney and Margaret Stella Gladney Guidroz.
On August 28, 2009, Plaintiffs granted a mineral lease over its land to
Anglo-Dutch. That lease provided Plaintiffs were entitled to a one-fifth royalty on
all oil, gas or other minerals reduced to possession by Anglo-Dutch from Plaintiffs’
land. On February 14, 2012, Anglo-Dutch began a gas well on Plaintiffs’ property
which was completed on April 27, 2012. The reservoir and zone from which the
well was to be produced were under the property of multiple landowners, not just
Plaintiffs’ land. Anglo-Dutch commenced sales of production from the gas well on
May 18, 2012.
On May 11, 2012, Anglo-Dutch began proceedings to apply for a
compulsory drilling and production unit for the well in question by filing a “pre-
application notice” with the Louisiana Office of Conservation. A drilling and
production unit combines all the land over a reservoir into a single “unit” and
allocates all the production from it to the various landowners. The Commissioner
of Conservation determines the percentage of production allocated to each
landowner. Generally, the percentage corresponds to the proportion of each
owner’s land in the unit.
It is required that once proceedings to apply for a drilling and production
unit are begun, a “conditional allowable” is issued for the well. A conditional
allowable is a measure granted by the Commissioner of Conservation that
authorized the operator of the well to extract a specific volume of production from
a reservoir prior to the establishment of a unit. The conditional allowable ensures
that owners of tracts within the unit receive their equitable share of production
3 from the sale of minerals extracted. Anglo-Dutch applied for a conditional
allowable on May 15, 2012, which set forth:
All monies generated from the date of first production, the disbursement of which is contingent upon the outcome of the current proceedings before the Office of Conservation for the Frio Zone will be disbursed based upon results of those proceedings.
Anglo-Dutch’s application for the conditional allowable was granted on May 17,
2012, and Anglo-Dutch began to produce the well the following day.
On July 3, 2012, Anglo-Dutch submitted its formal application for the unit.
A public hearing was held on October 30, 2012, and Anglo-Dutch completed the
required legal publication of notice under the rules of the Commissioner of
Conservation. On January 23, 2013, Order No. 124-Y was issued establishing the
unit. The Order specifically stated it “shall be effective on and after October 30,
2012.”
In letters dated March 5, 2013 and March 18, 2013, counsel for Plaintiffs
made demand on Anglo-Dutch for the alleged non-payment of royalties due.
Plaintiffs contended despite the October 30, 2012 effective date of the
Commissioner’s Order, Anglo-Dutch refused to pay Plaintiffs their full one-fifth
Lessor’s royalty established by the Mineral Lease between the parties for
production prior to October 30, 2012. Plaintiffs reasoned, after the October 30,
2102 effective date, royalties could be paid on the “unit tract” basis, but until that
date, they were entitled to their full one-fifth Lessor’s royalty. It was admitted by
all parties that as of October 30, 2012 moving forward, each owner within the unit
was only entitled to the unit production in proportion to their surface acreage
contained within the geographic confines of the Unit, and in Plaintiffs case, that
was slightly over 78%.
Anglo-Dutch maintained Plaintiffs were not entitled to the full lease-basis
royalty for pre-Unit production because the issuance of the conditional allowable
4 required them to pay only on a unit-basis. It was their position the issuance of the
conditional allowable replaced its obligations under the Mineral Lease between the
parties to pay full lease-based royalties.
Despite the Plaintiffs’ demands, Anglo-Dutch withheld all payments until
April 2013, and at that point, they conditionally tendered “royalty payments” to
Plaintiffs on a “unit-basis” for the production extracted from the well. The royalty
checks did not contain any notation stating it was in “full payment” or in
satisfaction of Plaintiffs’ claims for lease-based royalties; however, Plaintiffs
refused to cash these checks unless Anglo-Dutch executed an agreement
specifically stating the checks were not in fact full payment. Anglo-Dutch refused.
On January 2, 2014, Plaintiffs filed suit against Anglo-Dutch for breach of
contract and requested damages for Anglo-Dutch’s failure to make timely
payments of the full lease-based royalties and unconditional payment of the
undisputed unit-basis payments owed. On November 3, 2015, Plaintiffs filed a
Motion for Summary Judgment contending because the conditional allowable did
not abrogate Anglo-Dutch’s obligation under the Mineral Lease between the
parties to pay the full lease-based royalties, they were entitled to judgment in their
favor. On January 7, 2016, Anglo-Dutch filed a Cross Motion for Summary
Judgment, arguing by virtue of its obtaining the conditional allowable, it was
required to pay only unit-based royalties to Plaintiffs. On March 8, 2016, a hearing
was held on both motions. At the close of the hearing, the trial court granted
Anglo-Dutch’s motion, and dismissed all of Plaintiffs’ claims by a judgment
rendered on March 28, 2016. The trial court ruled in Anglo-Dutch’s favor, stating
the following in its “Reasons for Ruling”:
The Court granted [Anglo-Dutch’s] motion and stated that the “allowable covers the royalty payments” because even though the unit was October 30th, it goes back to the date of production under the allowable. The Court also stated that [Plaintiffs have] not shown any other provision in the lease contract which would require them to be
5 paid more than is allowed by the commissioner under the allowable and the unitization agreement. The date of first production is the effective date. The Court also declined to include in its ruling an order that the plaintiffs be paid the unit basis on unconditional terms.
This appeal followed wherein Plaintiffs contend the trial court erred in
holding that the unit’s stated October 30, 2012 effective date was altered to the
date of first production by virtue of Anglo-Dutch requesting and obtaining a
conditional allowable prior to that date. Plaintiffs also assert the trial court erred in
holding they failed to identify any provision in the Mineral Lease between the
parties which obligated Anglo-Dutch to render payment of a sum greater than the
unit-basis royalty guaranteed by the conditional allowable.
ANALYSIS
This case poses a question of law; thus, the appropriate standard of review is
de novo. Citgo Petroleum Corp. v. Frantz, 03-88, p. 3-4 (La.App. 3 Cir. 6/4/03),
847 So.2d 734, writ denied, 03-1911 (La.10/31/03), 857 So.2d 484. Our review of
questions of law is simply to determine whether the trial court was legally correct
or legally incorrect. Id. If the trial court’s decision is based on an erroneous
interpretation or application of the law, rather than a valid exercise of discretion,
that decision is not entitled to deference by the reviewing court. Further, appellate
courts review summary judgments de novo using the same criteria that govern a
district court’s consideration of whether summary judgment is appropriate.
Schroeder v. Board of Supervisors of Louisiana State University, 591 So.2d 342
(La.1991).
The dispute in this case only concerns the amount of royalties due Plaintiffs
for the time period from May 17, 2012, the date of first production under the
conditional allowable, through October 30, 2012, which was the effective date of
the unit established by the Commissioner of Conservation’s Order. Following
6 October 30, 2012, the parties do not disagree as to the royalty amount Plaintiffs are
entitled to under the unitization order.
According to the trial court’s ruling ‘“the allowable covers the royalty
payments’ because even though [the effective date of] the unit was October 30,
2012, it goes back to the date of production under the allowable.” This ruling
essentially makes the unit effective prior to the specified effective date set forth by
the Commissioner in the Order creating the unit. Plaintiffs contend this is legal
error. We also note the trial court’s reasons for ruling state the Plaintiffs have “not
shown any other provision in the lease contract which would require them to be
paid more than is allowed by the commissioner under the allowable and the
unitization agreement.” We disagree with this statement, as the Mineral Lease
between the parties clearly provided Plaintiffs were to get lease-basis royalties on
all production from the well and that lease governed the parties’ relationship prior
to the unitization order, which was not made effective by the Commissioner until
October 30, 2012.
Title 30 of the Louisiana Revised Statutes, provides the statutory authority
for the Office of Conservation, and its head, the Commissioner, to conserve and
regulate the oil, gas and mineral resources of this state. To this end, the
Commissioner’s authority to unitize and issue allowables is an appropriate exercise
of the State’s police powers pursuant to La.R.S. 30:4(A), which vests the
Commissioner with the “authority over all persons and property necessary to
enforce effectively the provisions of this Chapter and all other laws relating to the
conservation of oil and gas.
Plaintiffs cite consistent jurisprudence of this state that “the Office of
Conservation does not attempt to interpret private mineral leases and other private
contracts, as they are beyond its jurisdiction and authority.” Yuma v. Thompson,
98-1399 (La. 3/2/99), 731 So.2d 190, 197. In Arkansas Louisiana Gas Co. v.
7 Southwest Natural Production Co., 60 So.2d 9, 11 (La. 1952), the Louisiana
Supreme Court explained that the Commissioner of Conservation, when
establishing a drilling unit, “did not intend to, and did not, in fact, abrogate the
contracts between the several lessors and their respective lessees with respect to
the nature or structure of their mineral ownership, or alter in any way the
consideration to be paid and the method of payment.” The trial court’s judgment
holding that Anglo-Dutch’s royalty obligations under the Mineral Lease were
abrogated by the terms of the conditional allowable is in direct contrast to this
longstanding rule that the Commissioner nor his office should alter private
contractual rights.
Plaintiffs also introduced the affidavit of John R. Aldridge, who was an
employee of the Office of Conservation for approximately thirty-five years and
regularly presided over unitization hearings as the chief hearing officer. Mr.
Aldridge notes he was familiar with the allegations made in the litigation between
the parties and attested “[t]he issuance of a conditional allowable is not intended to
affect in any manner the private contractual obligations of an operator or lessee on
whose land is situated a well which is the subject of a unit application.” He also
stated “[t]he Office of Conservation issues a conditional production allowable
without consideration of, and without prejudice to, any private contractual rights
between the operator and the landowner-lessee on whose lands the well is drilled.”
In support of its argument that the issuance of the conditional allowable
altered the effective date of the unit to the date of first production, Anglo-Dutch
relied on Exxon v. Thompson, 564 So.2d 387 (La.App. 1 Cir. 1990), writ denied,
568 So.2d 1054 (La. 1990). In that case, the appellate court discussed the
Commissioner’s authority to issue conditional allowables. The court in Exxon
cited with approval the Commissioner’s explanation of the purpose and effect of a
conditional allowable:
8 That upon receipt of a pre-application notice, the Commissioner of Conservation does not issue additional permits to drill to the same sand within the proposed unit. Thus, in order to protect the correlative rights of all parties affected by curtailment of their right of capture, and to prevent waste that would result from the drilling of unnecessary wells, the Commissioner of Conservation grants only conditional allowables, requiring that all funds be escrowed from the date of the pre-application notice until an order issues creating the unit(s) and requiring that thereafter the escrowed funds be dispersed (sic) in accordance with the unit order.
Plaintiffs note the above explanation by the then Commissioner of Conservation,1
does not refer to any altering of the effective date of a unit established by the
Commissioner’s order, but only states the issuance of the conditional allowable
“requir[es] that all funds be escrowed from the date of the pre-application notice
until an order issues creating the unit.” Id. at 395. The passage then provides the
escrowed funds must be dispersed based upon the percentage assigned to them by
the Commissioner’s unit order.
As Plaintiffs note, the practical effect of the decision in Exxon applied to
unleased owners. The operator in Exxon was also the actual landowner where the
producing well was located. There was no mineral lease in effect in Exxon.
Despite this, the court in Exxon stated the “owner-operator (Exxon) has a choice of
shutting the well in until a unit is created or accepting the conditional allowable.”
Id. at 396. Clearly in the facts of Exxon, the owner-operator would have no
incentive to shut-in the well. As Plaintiffs note, it can be inferred that the court in
Exxon “implicitly warns operator lessees of the precarious prospect of having to
pay their drillsite lessor contractual royalties over and above those unit-based
royalties guaranteed by the conditional allowable.” We agree with Plaintiffs, that
if there is no continuing obligation on the part of a lessee-operator to fulfill the
terms of their contract with the mineral lessor, the option to shut in the well as
articulated by the Exxon court is rendered entirely superfluous.
1 The Louisiana Commissioner of Conservation is appointed by the Governor and serves a four-year term. 9 Plaintiffs also point out the unitization order in the present case specifically
provides the unit becomes effective on October 30, 2012, not on the date of first
production as was the case in Exxon. We agree this is another material factual
distinction between the present case and Exxon. We find Anglo-Dutch’s reliance
on Exxon misplaced when examined under the particular facts of this case.
Anglo-Dutch has also argued Plaintiffs’ action in this case is an
impermissible collateral attack on the actions of the Commissioner. We disagree.
Plaintiffs have consistently maintained they do not challenge the unit order or the
conditional allowable, or the Commissioner’s authority to issue same. Rather,
Plaintiffs seek recognition of their right, and Anglo-Dutch’s corresponding
obligation, to be paid a one-fifth royalty on production before the effective date of
the Unit. Plaintiffs have maintained this position from the beginning as can be
seen from the following correspondence sent from Plaintiffs’ counsel to Anglo-
Dutch in the beginning stages of the litigation:
The lawsuit that I will be preparing will not challenge the authority of the Commissioner to issue a conditional allowable in compliance with the unit yet to be created but will focus on the simple breach of contract by Anglo-Dutch in failing to make lease based royalty payments and unit based royalty payments to the Lessors, Frank Gladney and Margaret Stella G. Guidroz based upon royalty demand made March 18, 2013, . . .against Anglo-Dutch Energy, L.L.C.
Plaintiffs cite the Louisiana Supreme Court case of Monsanto Chemical Co.
v. Southern Natural Gas Co., 102 So.2d 223 (1958). In Monsanto, the plaintiff and
defendants separately owned oil and gas leases which together covered a section
consisting of 640 acres. The parties entered into pooling agreements integrating
their interests in the section by which the plaintiff was to receive 11.15% of the
working interest in the section and the defendants 88.85%. Subsequently, the
Commissioner issued an order placing 126.4 acres covered by the defendants’
leases into a separate unit upon which production was established. The plaintiff
10 sued to establish its rights to share 11.15% of the production attributed by virtue of
the Commissioner’s unit to the 126.4 acres under lease to the defendants.
Defendant contended the agreements on which the plaintiff relied were
inconsistent with and therefore superseded by the Commissioner’s order insofar as
the underlying 126.4 acres was concerned.
The Supreme Court adopted the position taken by Monsanto and held that
the only thing involved was the judicial determination of the rights of the lessees
who were joint operators and had no effect whatsoever upon the Commissioner’s
order. Pertinent to this appeal, the Monsanto case concluded that contractual rights
not contrary to or inconsistent with the Commissioner’s order were properly
subject to judicial review in litigation between the contracting parties. It was
argued in Monsanto that the plaintiff’s suit therein was an impermissible collateral
attack because it questioned the Commissioner’s order and was filed prior to the
plaintiff exhausting his administrative remedies. The supreme court rejected the
contention that the plaintiff’s action was an impermissible collateral attack on the
Commissioner’s order, holding it was beyond the functions and powers of the
Commissioner of Conservation to say whether or not alleged contractual rights
under the conventional agreements between the lessees were recast and affected by
the order of the Commissioner, and this was a matter “that is clearly a function of
the courts.” Id. at 225.
Despite the arguments of Anglo-Dutch to the contrary, the Plaintiffs do not
dispute the Commissioner’s authority to issue the Allowable or that it should be
applied as written. Instead they seek only that their rights under the lease,
negotiated in concert with Anglo-Dutch, be acknowledged and maintained. We
find no merit in Anglo-Dutch’s contention that Plaintiffs’ suit is an impermissible
collateral attack requiring the Plaintiffs to exhaust all administrative remedies.
11 As to the merits of Plaintiffs’ suit, we find it very persuasive that after
granting the Allowable to Anglo-Dutch, the Commissioner’s Order provided that
the effective date of the Unit, which would then provide for the sharing of
production on a unit-basis, to be October 30, 2012, not the date of first production.
Clearly, the Commissioner could have made the effective date of the Unit the date
of first production had he so desired. Plaintiffs seek only to enforce the
Commissioner’s unitization order as written and enforce the lease obligations the
parties entered into.
Anglo-Dutch argues it had no choice but to produce the well in accordance
with the allowable, and that it was caught in a “catch-22” situation. It maintains
that any decision in this case to produce the well would have required it to pay
“double royalties.” We disagree.
After obtaining the allowable, Anglo-Dutch had the option to modify its
contractual obligations to Plaintiffs under the mineral lease through a royalty
escrow agreement. Plaintiffs note this is a common practice in the oil and gas
industry which would have allowed Anglo-Dutch to escrow all royalties due from
the pre-unitization production without having to pay what now amounts to “double
royalties.” Plaintiffs state they suggested just such an option to Anglo-Dutch.
Thus, any argument that Plaintiffs would have not been amenable to executing a
royalty escrow agreement and leaving Anglo-Dutch with only the option to shut in
the well, rings hollow. Anglo-Dutch did not give Plaintiffs the option of executing
a royalty escrow agreement and reached its own conclusion as to what Plaintiffs
would have done if presented with that option.
In its apparent desire to immediately produce from the well, Anglo-Dutch
chose to forego a royalty escrow agreement and produce under the allowable, and
thus incurred an obligation to pay royalties to Plaintiffs as well as the adjoining
landowners. The Commissioner’s unitization order provided its effective date to
12 be October 30, 2012, which is the date when payment of royalties on a unit-basis
was to begin. Prior to that date, we find the relationship between Anglo-Dutch and
Plaintiffs was governed by the mineral lease between the parties. Therefore,
Anglo-Dutch incurred concurrent obligations to pay lease-based royalties to
Plaintiffs and unit-based royalties to the adjacent landowners. Anglo-Dutch could
have modified the lease by entering into a royalty escrow agreement with
Plaintiffs, but chose not to of its own volition.
DECREE
For the reasons set forth above, we find the relationship between Anglo-
Dutch and Plaintiffs prior to October 30, 2012, is governed by the bargained for
lease between the two parties. Anglo-Dutch’s obligation to pay Plaintiffs a one-
fifth royalty on all production from the well is modified only upon the
Commissioner’s unitization order’s effective date, October 30, 2012. The trial
court’s finding to the contrary is erroneous and hereby reversed. All costs below
and on appeal are assessed against defendants, Anglo-Dutch Energy, L.L.C. and
Anglo-Dutch (Everest), L.L.C.