HS Resources Inc v. Wingate

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedApril 29, 2003
Docket02-40165
StatusPublished

This text of HS Resources Inc v. Wingate (HS Resources Inc v. Wingate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
HS Resources Inc v. Wingate, (5th Cir. 2003).

Opinion

United States Court of Appeals Fifth Circuit F I L E D REVISED APRIL 29, 2003 April 8, 2003 UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS Charles R. Fulbruge III For the Fifth Circuit Clerk

No. 02-40165

HS RESOURCES, INC.,

Plaintiff-Appellant-Cross-Appellee,

VERSUS

JIM R. WINGATE,

Defendant-Appellee-Cross-Appellant.

Appeals from the United States District Court For the Eastern District of Texas

Before BENAVIDES and DENNIS, Circuit Judges, and WALTER*, District Judge.

DENNIS, Circuit Judge.

This declaratory judgment action concerns a dispute over

royalty payments on a highly profitable natural gas well located on

* Senior District Judge of the Western District of Louisiana, sitting by designation.

1 property owned by Jim Wingate and subleased to HS Resources, Inc.

(“HSR”).1 Following a hearing on opposing dispositive motions, the

district court entered final judgment. It denied Wingate’s motion

to dismiss and granted HSR’s motion for partial summary judgment,

declaring that HSR could pool Wingate’s leased land with

neighboring acreage and pay Wingate royalties on a pooled basis.

Acting sua sponte, the court also held that HSR’s past payments to

Wingate calculated on a non-pooled basis had been made voluntarily

and therefore could not be recaptured. It subsequently denied

HSR’s motions to amend the judgment and award attorney fees. Both

parties appealed. We now AFFIRM the district court’s final

judgment in part, REVERSE it in part, and VACATE it in part. We

further VACATE the court’s denial of HSR’s motion for attorney

fees. Finally, we REMAND for further proceedings consistent with

this opinion.

I.

Jim Wingate owns property in Jefferson County, Texas. On May

29, 1998, he leased his undivided oil, gas, and mineral interests

in six tracts of land encompassing 728.02 acres to Interstate Oil

Company (“Interstate”). Under the terms of the lease (“Lease”),

Wingate is entitled to receive as a royalty 25% of the market value

of the natural gas produced on the leased property. The Lease

1 Since the inception of this lawsuit, HSR was purchased by the Kerr-McGee Corporation. It is now known as the Kerr-McGee Rocky Mountain Corporation. For the purposes of this opinion, however, we will refer to the corporation as HSR.

2 grants Interstate (or its assigns) control of the remaining 75%.

On July 17, 1998, Interstate assigned 50% of its interest under the

Lease to HSR, 37.5% to Aspect Resources, LLC (“Aspect”), and 12.5%

to Esenjay Exploration, Inc. (“Esenjay”). HSR operates the

drilling operations on the leased property.

A.

Among other terms, Paragraph 12 of the Lease expressly grants

the lessee the right to pool the leased land with adjacent tracts

to form “one or more drilling or production units”:2

Subject to the limitations hereinafter set forth, Lessee is hereby given the power and right, . . . without Lessor’s joinder or further consent, to at any time . . . pool and unitize the leasehold estate . . . with the rights of the third parties, if any, in all of the land described herein and with any other land . . . whether owned by Lessee or some other person, firm or corporation, so as to create by such pooling and unitization one or more drilling or production units, when to do so would, in the sole judgment of the Lessee, promote the conservation of oil, gas or other liquid hydrocarbons.

This right to pool is subject to a requirement that the lessee pool

2 In the oil and gas lease context, “pooling” refers to the aggregation of various tracts of land for the purpose of creating a larger tract that will allow for drilling in accordance with spacing regulations and “prevent the physical and economic waste that accompanies the drilling of unnecessary wells.” 6 Patrick H. Martin & Bruce M. Kramer, 6 Williams & Meyers Oil & Gas Law § 901 at 1, 3 (2001). Parties with land included in a pooled unit typically each obtain an undivided ownership interest in the royalties earned from the unit, and royalties are distributed in proportion to each parties’ contributed acreage. See Southeastern Pipe Line Co. v. Tichacek, 997 S.W.2d 166, 170 (Tex. 1999) (“The primary legal consequence of pooling is that production and operations anywhere on the pooled unit are treated as if they have taken place on each tract within the unit.”).

3 all leased land:

Lessee shall not be granted the right to pool any of the leased premises for the drilling of or production from any well located on the leased premises which is anticipated to be classified, or ultimately classified, as a “gas” well by the governmental entity having jurisdiction over same unless all of the leased premises is located either within the pooled unit for such well or within a unit for another gas well producing in commercially paying quantities from the same formation.

This paragraph also limits pooled units to 176 acres in size:

Each such drilling or production unit shall not exceed . . . one hundred sixty (160) acres, plus an acreage tolerance not to exceed ten percent (10%) of one hundred sixty (160) acres, when created for the purposes of drilling for or producing gas from wells drilled to a depth of 10,000 feet or less.

Paragraph 5 of the Lease allows the lessee to release those

portions of the leased land not included in producing units:

[D]uring the primary term only, and after the discovery and production of oil, gas or other liquid hydrocarbons in paying quantities on the leased premises, Lessee shall either (1) develop the acreage retained hereunder by the drilling of additional wells at one hundred eighty (180) day intervals as hereinafter provided, (2) release those portions of the land covered hereby not included in a producing unit or units, or (3) Lessee may in lieu of such drilling or release maintain this lease in force and effect during the primary term as to any land covered hereby which is not included in a producing unit (either oil or gas) by the payment of the proportionate part of the delay rentals provided herein as to the acreage not then included in a producing unit or units.

Finally, Paragraph 9 of the Lease allows the lessor to

terminate the Lease upon thirty days notice of the lessee’s failure

to pay royalties “for any reason other than a good faith attack or

adverse claim against the title or interest of Lessor.”

B.

4 On March 5, 2000, HSR completed drilling a 9,925-foot well

(the “Wingate No. 1 Well”) on Wingate’s property. On March 22,

2000, HSR filed a unit declaration creating a pooled area described

as the “HS Resources-Wingate et al Unit” (“HSR-Wingate Unit”) for

the purpose of gas production from the Wingate No. 1 Well.3 The

HSR-Wingate Unit consists of five tracts of land encompassing 176

acres. The declaration shows that the five tracts consist of

87.09, .89, 70.25, 16.84, and .93 acres. The record evidence shows

that Wingate owns 100% of the gas rights in the 87.09- and .89-acre

tracts; 20% of the gas rights in the 70.25-acre tract (i.e., 14.05

net acres); 40% of the gas rights in the 16.84-acre tract (i.e.,

6.74 net acres); and 0% of the .93-acre tract. Thus, although he

owns 175.07 acres of the land included in the HSR-Wingate Unit, his

contribution to the unit amounts to only 108.77 net acres when his

gas rights in those 175.07 acres are considered. In other words,

Wingate controls only 61.8% of the gas produced by the unit.4

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