Hoover Tree Farm, L.L.C. v. Goodrich Petroleum Co.

63 So. 3d 159, 177 Oil & Gas Rep. 145, 2011 La. App. LEXIS 345, 2011 WL 1005122
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 23, 2011
DocketNo. 46,153-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 63 So. 3d 159 (Hoover Tree Farm, L.L.C. v. Goodrich Petroleum Co.) 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
Hoover Tree Farm, L.L.C. v. Goodrich Petroleum Co., 63 So. 3d 159, 177 Oil & Gas Rep. 145, 2011 La. App. LEXIS 345, 2011 WL 1005122 (La. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinions

CARAWAY, J.

LThe trial court determined that a $7.6 million payment and a higher lease royalty were owed to the plaintiffAessor under a mineral lease because of the operation of a so-called most favored nations clause in the lease. The clause required a bonus-related payment and higher royalty for the lessor in the event that the original lessee or its “successors and assigns” acquired other nearby leases for a higher bonus or royalty. The defendani/lessee transferred an undivided one-half interest in the lease pertaining to the deeper zones of production, and its transferee thereafter acquired third party mineral leases for higher per acre bonus payments and greater royalties. Plaintiff sued to enforce the most favored nations clause, and the trial court found that the most favored nations clause required the original lessee to make the higher bonus-related payment and increase the lessor’s royalty to 30%. The original lessee appeals the adverse ruling, and the plaintiffAessor also appeals seeking amendment of the judgment to require payment of the $7.6 million judgment from [161]*161both the original lessee and its transferee. We affirm the trial court’s judgment against the original lessee and amend the judgment to make both co-owners of the lease responsible for the money judgment.

Facts

Hoover Tree Farm, L.L.C. (“Hoover”)1 owns approximately 317 acres of land in Caddo Parish, located in Section 4, Township 18 North, Range 15 |2West and Sections 32 and 33, Township 19 North, Range 15 West. In early April of 2008, a representative of Petróleo Properties, LLC (“Petróleo”) contacted Hoover regarding the extension of an on oil, gas and mineral lease on the property which was to expire in November of 2008. Petróleo acted as broker for Goodrich Petroleum Company, L.L.C. (“Goodrich”) which owned the existing lease.2 After preliminary negotiations, Hoover declined to extend the lease. Thereafter, representatives of Petróleo contacted Jeffrey Pou, senior landman for Goodrich, for assistance in negotiating the lease. Pou then offered on behalf of Goodrich a new lease for a $1,000 per acre bonus and a 25% royalty, which was an increase over the 20% royalty of the existing lease. Although Pou reported that Hoover voiced no concerns about competing lease bonus and royalty amounts, Pou offered Hoover a most favored nations clause which would secure for Hoover a similar bonus and royalty that others were receiving at the time.

On April 29, 2008, Pou sent a “Letter Agreement” to Josephine Doll Hoover “to allay the Plaintiffs concern about Goodrich paying another lessor a higher bonus or higher royalty percentage,”3 including an initial draft version of a most favored nations clause (hereinafter the “MFN Draft”):

2. The Lessee’s (sic)(Goodrich, Sendero and Caddo Resources) guarantees (sic) that no Lessor shall receive a higher royalty and/or bonus than the Lessor shown above. Should any Lessor receive such higher bonus and/or royalty, the above Lessor’s bonus and/or royalty shall automatically be increased to that higher |samount. This clause will remain in full force and effect until Lessee’s (sic) drill on any Section mentioned in the above lease which at that time this clause will become null and void. This clause covers every section in the following Township-Ranges: (19N-16W), (19N-15W), (18N-16W), (18N-15W).

Upon receipt of the Letter Agreement, Hoover secured the services of attorney Jeffrey Weiss for representation regarding the proposed lease and its provisions. It is undisputed that Weiss modified Pou’s version of the most favored nations clause. Weiss stated that he was “trying to broaden” Pou’s MFN Draft when he revised the clause which ultimately was included in the new lease.

After the completion of these negotiations on May 1, 2008, Hoover entered into a two-year oil, gas and mineral lease (“the Lease”) with Petróleo, as Goodrich’s broker,4 granting Hoover a 25% royalty and a [162]*162$1,000 per acre lease bonus. Paragraph 30, which was included as a special provision added to the printed form Lease, contained the following language:

30. Lessee and Goodrich Petroleum Company, L.L.C., which joins herein, each guarantee that no lessor of either Lessee or Goodrich Petroleum or then-successors and assigns shall receive a higher royalty and/or bonus than the Lessor under this Lease. Should any lessor receive such higher bonus and/or royalty, the Lessor under this Lease shall receive from Goodrich Petroleum Company, L.L.C. the difference between the higher bonus and the bonus paid to Lessor at the inception of this Lease, and the difference between the higher royalty and the royalty paid to Lessor under this Lease. This clause will remain in effect separately with respect to each Section covered by this Lease, and with respect to each such Section, this clause will remain in full force and effect until the end of the Primary Term of this Lease. This clause covers every lease which may be made by Lessee, Goodrich Petroleum Company, L.L.C., Sendero Resources | ¿Incorporated and/or Caddo Resources LP, as Lessee, and their respective successors and assigns, in any section in any of the following townships and ranges in Caddo Parish, Louisiana: (19N-16W), (19N-15W), (18N-16W), and (18N-15W).

This most favored nations clause (the “MFN clause”) is the source of the present litigation.

Effective on June 6, 2008, Goodrich and Chesapeake Louisiana, LP (hereinafter “Chesapeake”) entered into an “Assignment, Conveyance and Bill of Sale” (hereinafter “the Transfer”) “for and in consideration of the sum of Ten and No/100 dollars ($10.00), cash in hand paid, and other good and valuable consideration,” by which Goodrich “Granted, Sold, Assigned, Conveyed and Delivered,” to Chesapeake an undivided 50% interest in the Lease and various other leases as to all depths below the Cotton Valley formation. The Transfer contained no provisions for payment to Goodrich in the nature of an overriding royalty.

After its agreement with Goodrich, Chesapeake obtained oil and gas leases (hereinafter the “third party leases”) which paid a $25,000 per acre lease bonus to the lessor and a 30% lease royalty on property located within the area5 established by the MFN clause.6 Claiming that the payment of the higher lease bonus and royalties for the third party leases triggered the | sapplication of the MFN clause, Hoover instituted suit against Petróleo,7 [163]*163Goodrich and Chesapeake. Specifically, Hoover alleges that “by virtue of the Assignment, Defendant Chesapeake is a ‘successor’ and an ‘assign’ of Defendant Goodrich” which “entered into other mineral leases in the townships and ranges covered by the Most Favored Nation Clause of the Lease, pursuant to which Defendant Chesapeake paid lessors a higher bonus than Defendant Goodrich/Defendant Petróleo paid to Hoover under the Lease.” Thus, Hoover claims its entitlement to “the difference between the highest lease bonus” paid for a third party lease and the bonus it received under the Lease and an increase in its royalty amount.

On September 28, 2009, Hoover filed a motion for summary judgment on the grounds that “as a matter of contract, Chesapeake is a ‘successor’ and ‘an assign’ of Goodrich with respect to rights in the lease.” Hoover also argued that the provisions of La. R.S.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
63 So. 3d 159, 177 Oil & Gas Rep. 145, 2011 La. App. LEXIS 345, 2011 WL 1005122, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoover-tree-farm-llc-v-goodrich-petroleum-co-lactapp-2011.