Furie Petroleum Co. v. SWEPI, LP

152 So. 3d 255, 2014 La. App. LEXIS 2781, 2014 WL 6464552
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 19, 2014
DocketNos. 49,462-CA, 49,463-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 152 So. 3d 255 (Furie Petroleum Co. v. SWEPI, LP) 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
Furie Petroleum Co. v. SWEPI, LP, 152 So. 3d 255, 2014 La. App. LEXIS 2781, 2014 WL 6464552 (La. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

CARAWAY, J.

|,The State of Louisiana (“State”) appeals a ruling denying its right to intervene into these consolidated actions for declaratory judgment regarding the mineral ownership of a large tract of land. The State claims that a navigable waterway which it owns divides the tract into two parts. If established, this fact concerning the State’s waterway would directly bear upon the underlying dispute over the maintenance of a mineral servitude over the large tract which is subject to the claim of prescription of nonuse. From our review of the pleadings and the positions of all sides, we find that the State’s joinder is required for a complete adjudication of the controversy and the State’s intervention should be allowed.

Facts and Procedural History

The procedural issue before the court arises from consolidated suits filed in 2009 concerning the validity of a 1967 mineral servitude burdening a 1,154-acre tract known as “Sunrise Place Plantation” in DeSoto Parish. The owners of the disputed mineral servitude are the Succession of Eugene Copeland, Karen Ann Ochsenbein Lanier, Annie Laurie Lanier Samuels, Harvey H. Samuels Jr., and Briarwood Finance Co., LLC, and their mineral lessees are Furie Oil & Gas, LLC, Silver Spur Royalty Co., LLC, and Jamma Energy, LLC (hereinafter the “Mineral Servitude Group”). The surface owners of the property are Cloyce C. Clark Jr. and Martha Chamberlain Clark, and their mineral lessees are SWEPI LP and Encana Oil and Gas, Inc. (hereinafter the “Landowners Group”). Originally, both sides sought declaratory judgments as to the validity of the disputed mineral 12servitude. The competing oil and gas leases were executed in 2008 and 2009. The underlying dispute concerned prescription of nonuse and whether the servitude is still in effect. At issue was whether a well that had produced minimal quantities had sufficiently interrupted prescription.

The Mineral Servitude Group alleged that their rights were maintained by continuous production from the servitude from its creation in 1967 until July 9,1998. They further alleged that a well was commenced on the property on June 80, 2008, and prescription of nonuse was again interrupted. That well is currently shut in.

By 2012, as the original parties approached trial, the Landowners Group revealed in a discovery disclosure that they would assert that Dolet Bayou, which crossed the 1,154-aere tract, was a navigable waterway. This new issue raised the possibility of ownership1 of the State of a part of the 1,154-acre tract (the “waterway”), and such ownership, if established, would divide the tract into two noncontiguous tracts of land. The Mineral Code requires that the creation of a single mineral servitude extend over a continuous body of land and a grant of rights over noncontiguous tracts creates multiple ser-[258]*258vitudes. La. R.S. 31:63 and 64. Thus, by-raising the Dolet Bayou matter, the Landowners Group sought to compound the burden of the Mineral Servitude Group to show that the interruption of prescription had occurred on two mineral servitudes created by the 1967 mineral reservation.

|aThe Mineral Servitude Group responded to the Dolet Bayou matter by filing a motion in limine to prohibit such evidence and with an exception of res judicata. The res judicata defense rests upon two rulings of the Louisiana Supreme Court, Wemple v. Eastham, 150 La. 247, 90 So. 637 (1922) (“Wemple No. 1 ”), and Wemple v. Albritton, 154 La. 359, 97 So. 489 (1923) (“Wemple No. 2”), involving the predecessor-in-title to all of the parties in the consolidated actions, B.Y. Wemple. Wemple had successfully defended his ownership of the land in those suits against party defendants who claimed rights granted by the State pertaining to Dolet Bayou. The Mineral Servitude Group, therefore, argued that as successor to Wemple’s ownership of the 1,154-acre tract, the Landowners Group was precluded from asserting a position contrary to the Wemple rulings.

The motion in limine and an exception of res judicata were heard on December 5, 2012. Although there was no judgment, the trial court gave oral reasons indicating that the issue of Bayou Dolet’s navigability was res judicata as between the original parties, but that the court’s ruling was subject to withdrawal at any time and also subject to the Landowners Group’s motion for reconsideration.

On the heels of this action, the State moved to intervene in the suit, and its petition for intervention was granted on December 14, 2012. On January 8, 2013, the Landowners Group filed a motion for reconsideration of the court’s oral ruling on the peremptory exception of res judica-ta regarding the navigability of Bayou Do-let. Thereafter, on January 23, 2013, the Mineral Servitude Group filed several exceptions to the State’s petition 14for intervention, including peremptory exceptions of no cause of action and no right of action.

The trial court held a hearing on April 4, 2013, to consider the Mineral Servitude Group’s exceptions of no right of action, no cause of action, and res judicata. On July 24, 2013, the court withdrew its prior oral ruling on the issue of res judicata regarding the navigability of Bayou Dolet, and denied that exception. Further, the trial court ruled that the Mineral Servitude Group’s “Peremptory Exception of No Right of Action to State of Louisiana’s Petition for Intervention be and is hereby deferred to trial on the merits on the state of Louisiana’s claim of ownership of Bayou Dolet.” However, on June 9, 2014, the trial court reversed its course again and issued a judgment against the State on the exception of no right of action, finding the Mineral Servitude Group’s exception to be “well-founded for the reasons stated” in their brief. The trial court held that the State had no interest in the pending declaratory judgment action involving the mineral dispute between the parties. The State of Louisiana appeals the dismissal of its interventional claims.

Discussion

The Mineral Servitude Group primarily asserts that their declaratory judgment action fixed as the sole object of the suit the issue of whether their mineral servitude created in 1967 lapsed by the prescription of nonuse. In filing their petition in the consolidated actions, the Mineral Servitude Group necessarily admits that the Landowners Group is the owner of the 1,154-acre tract of land. Therefore, expressed from the Landowners Group’s |r,opposing perspective, the object of the suit is whether the Landowners Group owns the complete and unencumbered rights in the land, [259]*259including the landowner’s right to the minerals. The issue of the ownership to the production of oil and gas is also incidental to these claims for declaratory judgment, requiring the inclusion in the action of the various mineral lessees.

From this overview of the action, whether burdened by the 1967 mineral servitude or not, the Landowners Group’s ownership of the land was never in question in this declaratory judgment action before the State’s arrival in the case. The State’s claim in intervention, however, challenges the Landowners Group’s ownership of a part of the 1,154-acre tract (the “waterway”) and any mineral rights of the Mineral Servitude Group encumbering the waterway. The Mineral Servitude Group therefore argues that the State has injected into this declaratory judgment action a wholly unrelated issue, justifying the trial court’s peremptory ruling.

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152 So. 3d 255, 2014 La. App. LEXIS 2781, 2014 WL 6464552, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/furie-petroleum-co-v-swepi-lp-lactapp-2014.