Holland v. Gas Ents., Co.

2016 Ohio 4792
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 28, 2016
Docket15CA42
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2016 Ohio 4792 (Holland v. Gas Ents., Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Holland v. Gas Ents., Co., 2016 Ohio 4792 (Ohio Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

[Cite as Holland v. Gas Ents., Co., 2016-Ohio-4792.]

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT WASHINGTON COUNTY

CHAD AND DIANIA HOLLAND, ET AL., : Case No. 15CA42

Plaintiffs-Appellees, :

v. : DECISION AND JUDGMENT ENTRY GAS ENTERPRISES, CO., ET AL., :

Defendants-Appellants. : RELEASED: 6/28/2016

APPEARANCES:

John E. Triplett, Jr., THEISEN BROCK, L.P.A., Marietta, OH, for appellant Gas Enterprises, Co.

Ethan Vessels, FIELDS DEHMLOW & VESSELS, L.L.C., Marietta, OH, for appellees Chad and Diania Holland, and Gregory and Brenda Westbrook. Harsha, J. {¶1} The trial court granted summary judgment in favor of the Hollands and

Westbrooks (“landowners”) by ordering that a mineral lease be declared void because

oil or gas had not been found in paying quantities necessary for the lease to remain in

effect. Gas Enterprises, Co. (“Gas Enterprises”), one of the successors-in-interest to

the original lessee, appealed.

{¶2} This matter is before us for a second time on the issue of the continued

viability of oil and gas lease.1

{¶3} Gas Enterprises claims that the trial court erred in granting summary

judgment because: (1) there was unrebutted evidence of production in paying

1 See Holland v. Gas Enterprises Co., 4th Dist. Washington No. 14CA35, 2015-Ohio-2527. Washington App. No. 15CA42 2

quantities by the operator and another expert; (2) the landowners’ claims were barred

by the statute of limitations; and (3) the court failed to evaluate the equitable issues and

the adequacy of a remedy at law.

{¶4} We reject Gas Enterprises’s claims. According to its own records,

including forms it filed with the Ohio Department of Natural Resources (“ODNR”) and

the Washington County Auditor’s Office, Gas Enterprises affirmatively reported that no

oil or gas was produced from the wells it operated on the landowners’ property in 2006,

2007, 2008, 2012, and 2013. The affidavit of Gas Enterprises’s manager conceded that

the company did not have any actual sales for these years, but asserted that its

bookkeeper did not report production when there were no sales. The manager stated

that the wells produce oil on a slow, but consistent basis, but did not specifically state

that any oil was produced during the years specified in its reports as having no

production; instead, he only stated that year-by-year production figures could not easily

be obtained. The affidavit of a landman for a sublessee, who had conducted a due-

diligence review on the assignment of deep rights in the land, stated in a conclusory

manner that the sublessee had examined the production history for the wells and

determined that they operated to provide sufficient and paying quantities. Neither of

these conclusory affidavits is sufficient to raise a genuine issue of material fact

precluding summary judgment in favor of the landowners. The summary-judgment

evidence established that the lease expired by its own terms when no oil or gas was

found in paying quantities for at least two years, i.e., from 2006-2008 and 2012-2013.

{¶5} Contrary to Gas Enterprises’s claims, the statute of limitations is

inapplicable because the landowners’ action was not based on an alleged breach of the Washington App. No. 15CA42 3

lease; rather the landowners sought to declare the lease had expired automatically

under its express terms. Moreover, the landowners filed their action in the underlying

case in early 2014, which was only a few months after the last two-year period in 2012

and 2013 in which no oil or gas was found in paying quantities in the wells. Therefore,

even assuming—as Gas Enterprises contends—that the R.C. 2305.041 four-year

statute of limitations applied, the statute did not bar the landowners’ claim.

{¶6} Likewise, the equitable defenses raised by Gas Enterprises are also

inapplicable because the oil and gas lease expired as a matter of law in accordance

with its own terms.

I. FACTS

{¶7} In March 2014 Chad and Diania Holland and Gregory and Brenda

Westbrook filed an amended complaint in the Washington County Court of Common

Pleas against Gas Enterprises, MNW Energy, L.L.C. (“MNW Energy”), and Triad

Hunter, L.L.C. (“Triad Hunter”). The amended complaint and admission in Gas

Enterprises’s answer establish that the Hollands and the Westbrooks (“landowners”)

own approximately 40 acres of real property located in Ludlow Township in Washington

County.

{¶8} In 1930 the predecessors-in-interest to the landowners leased the oil and

gas rights in the property to D.B. Yaw for the term of “[o]ne year from the date hereof

and as much longer as gas or oil is found in paying quantities thereon.” Four wells that

were drilled under the lease remain on the property. Washington App. No. 15CA42 4

{¶9} Gas Enterprises obtained the lessee's interest in 1996. Gas Enterprises

subleased the deep rights to oil and gas to MNW Energy in July 2013; MNW Energy in

turn assigned its interest in the sublease to Triad Hunter in December 2013.

{¶10} In their amended complaint the landowners alleged that the production

from the four wells on the property had not been sufficient to hold the lease, resulting in

its expiration under its own terms. The landowners requested a judgment declaring that

the oil and gas lease, sublease, and assignments were forfeited and void because they

expired when there was insufficient production of oil or gas. They also claimed Gas

Enterprises, MNW Energy, and Triad Hunter had breached various implied covenants.

The named defendants filed answers denying the landowners' claims.

{¶11} The landowners subsequently filed a motion for summary judgment. They

attached Gas Enterprises’s “Ohio Well Completions Reports,” which the company filed

with ODNR; these reports showed that the four wells had produced no oil or gas in

2006, 2007, 2008, 2012, and 2013. They also attached Gas Enterprises' responses to

their discovery requests, which indicated that “Gas Enterprises (lease), Upper Fifteen

Mile Investment (override) and Triad Hunter (sublease)” claimed interests in the wells.

In those responses Gas Enterprises also stated that the wells were primarily oil wells,

that there was oil in the tanks that could be sold, and that yearly comparisons of oil

sales could not be easily obtained because sales were done in lots or loads.

{¶12} Gas Enterprises and Triad Hunter filed affidavits and memoranda in

opposition to the motion for summary judgment. 2 Both filed an affidavit of James

Williams, the manager of Gas Enterprises, in which he stated: (1) the wells had been

2 The landowners voluntarily dismissed MNW Energy without prejudice because it no longer had an interest in the leased property. Washington App. No. 15CA42 5

assigned to Gas Enterprises; (2) Gas Enterprises had owned and operated the wells

since that time; (3) the wells produced oil on a slow, but consistent basis; (4) oil sales

are done in lots or loads because of irregular production and transport charges;

therefore, year-by-year production figures cannot be easily obtained; (5) there were

alleged gaps in reported production in 2006, 2007, and 2008—it did not have actual

sales in those years, so the company bookkeeper did not report production; the

manager had since instructed the bookkeeper to report production regardless of sales;

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2016 Ohio 4792, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holland-v-gas-ents-co-ohioctapp-2016.