HNG Fossil Fuels Co. v. Roach

715 P.2d 66, 103 N.M. 793
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 25, 1986
DocketNo. 15709
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 715 P.2d 66 (HNG Fossil Fuels Co. v. Roach) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
HNG Fossil Fuels Co. v. Roach, 715 P.2d 66, 103 N.M. 793 (N.M. 1986).

Opinion

OPINION

SOSA, Senior Justice.

This case raises the issues of whether the trial court exceeded the scope of its mandate from this Court and of what remains of the law of the case, after both parties have reversed the positions they had maintained at trial and on appeal. We hold that the second trial court did exceed its jurisdiction and remand again for a proper and final disposition of the matter, which will include an equitable tolling of the terms of the oil and gas leases in dispute.

HNG Fossil Fuels Company (HNG)-first filed this action in August, 1980, seeking an order of interpleader and a declaratory judgment determining entitlement to delay rentals paid under two oil and gas leases in Colfax County. Defendants T.L. Roach et. al. (Roaches) were owners of the surface estates and executors of the leases. The leases contained non-warranty clauses which required HNG, as lessee, to bear the burden of determining title or interests in the land or minerals. Defendants Thomsons owned a 50% “non-participating mineral interest” in the property.

At the first trial, the district court determined that the Thomsons had no interest in the delay rentals. The trial court also ruled that the leases were cancelled because HNG had breached the non-warranty clauses by interpleading Roaches. Judgment was entered on June 15, 1981. On appeal, this Court affirmed as to the Thomsons’ interests, but reversed on the issue of cancellation. The case was then remanded for a determination of “the amount of damages and costs” incurred by the Roaches. HNG Fossil Fuels Co. v. Roach, 99 N.M. 216, 221, 656 P.2d 879, 884 (1982) (HNG I). Unfortunately, by the time the opinion of this Court was filed (December 29, 1982), the primary lease had expired by its own terms on September 1, 1982.

On the remand (filed on January 1, 1983) a different judge determined that HNG was entitled to a refund of its deposit into the court registry of the delay rentals for the year 1980-1981, the sum of $82,172.35. While the first appeal was pending, HNG had made a tender of the rentals covering the 1981-82 lease period to the Roaches’ depository bank. Roaches rejected the tender. That sum was likewise awarded to HNG by the district court.

The issue before us now is whether the district court exceeded the bounds of its mandate by denying Roaches’ claims to the delay rentals and the tender.

Roaches argue that the second trial court ignored the law of the case by refunding the deposited rentals. The original leases simply called for HNG to pay the rentals directly to Roaches. When Thomsons advised HNG that they claimed a 50% interest in the rentals, HNG sought to protect itself from possible termination of the lease by filing the interpleader action. HNG I at 218, 656 P.2d 879. At that time, HNG did not contend that the rentals should not be paid, only that HNG was in doubt as to the proper recipient. That question was litigated and answered by the trial court in favor of the Roaches. This Court affirmed that answer.

Nevertheless, on remand HNG contended that Roaches were no longer entitled to the rental payments, even though the next year’s rental had also been tendered. HNG’s revised theory is that Roaches may not claim the rentals because Roaches had argued for cancellation based on breach of the non-warranty clauses. HNG contends that its title to the leases was so seriously undermined by Roaches’ litigation position that the leases had become worthless to a prudent operator. Both parties have essentially reversed their prior positions, with HNG now claiming that Roaches breached the lease agreements, while Roaches respond that the leases have always been in full force with rentals payable to Roaches.

Roaches assert that they manifested no action which would have prevented HNG from continuing to explore under the leases, a right secured by the deposits of delay rentals with the court. In fact, say Roaches, HNG now wants to get out of the leases because the entire area, of which the leases cover a portion, consists of “dry holes” which lack sufficient mineralization to be worth developing. Furthermore, HNG no longer needs the leases because it has since severed its subsidiary which had hoped to develop the mineral interests.

HNG replies instead that a “cloud of cancellation” hovered over the leases until this court dispelled it on December 29, 1982. But by that time, the leases had expired by their own terms.

The trial court, on remand, did award damages and costs to Roaches for defending the declaratory judgment and inter-pleader actions, but not for the cost of pursuing the counterclaim of cancellation.1 The second trial court determined, however, that HNG should get back the consideration it had paid in, since it had lost its bargained-for right to explore. The court found that circumstances had changed since the mandate, such that HNG can no longer obtain any benefit from the leases, even if they were still in effect. The court concluded as a matter of law that the concept of tolling of the leases could not be considered because it was beyond the mandate. Finally, the district court awarded the refund to HNG under a theory of unjust enrichment, ruling that, “[i]n connection with delay rentals, every equity in this case is wholly in favor of the plaintiff HNG and wholly against the defendants Roach”.

This case is simpler than counsel would lead this Court to believe. HNG paid into the court registry the delay rentals because it believed the leases to be in effect and wanted to preserve its exploration rights. Even after the trial court had determined that the leases were cancelled, HNG tendered payment for the succeeding year to protect its options. If the primary lease had not expired by its own terms prior to the filing of this Court’s opinion, then there is no question that the leases would still be valid and that Roaches would be entitled to the delay rentals. Or, if HNG had not pursued the interpleader action, but instead had simply continued to pay the rentals to Roaches and had defended directly against Thomsons, the entire problem would not have arisen. If, as HNG contends, its decision not to explore was owing solely to considerations of prudence brought about by the cloud created by Roaches’ claim of cancellation, then that decision could have been reversed when this Court held that the leases were still in effect. But by that time, the leases had expired by their own terms. Hence, HNG argues, it has lost its bargained-for benefit. HNG sought relief from the equitable powers of the trial court, urging that the distribution of the delay rentals was merely a “housekeeping chore” to clean up a matter not expressly addressed on appeal.

What this Court held in HNG I was that the leases were still in effect and that the Thomsons had no claim to any of them. We now make explicit the logical conclusion that the rentals therefore must have been owed at all times to the Roaches. HNG made a tender to Roaches on August 28, 1981 of the delay rentals for 1981-82 because (on the advice of counsel) it correctly anticipated the decision of this Court and wished to preserve its option to continue exploration.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
715 P.2d 66, 103 N.M. 793, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hng-fossil-fuels-co-v-roach-nm-1986.