Frank Hayes Gladney v. Anglo-Dutch Energy, L.L.C.

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 21, 2016
DocketCA-0016-0468
StatusUnknown

This text of Frank Hayes Gladney v. Anglo-Dutch Energy, L.L.C. (Frank Hayes Gladney v. Anglo-Dutch Energy, L.L.C.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Frank Hayes Gladney v. Anglo-Dutch Energy, L.L.C., (La. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

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.

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