In Re INEOS USA Oil & Gas LLC; CNOOC Energy U.S.A., LLC; Jamestown Resources, LLC; Chesapeake Exploration, L.L.C.; And Chesapeake Operating, L.L.C. v. the State of Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 1, 2025
Docket13-25-00335-CV
StatusPublished

This text of In Re INEOS USA Oil & Gas LLC; CNOOC Energy U.S.A., LLC; Jamestown Resources, LLC; Chesapeake Exploration, L.L.C.; And Chesapeake Operating, L.L.C. v. the State of Texas (In Re INEOS USA Oil & Gas LLC; CNOOC Energy U.S.A., LLC; Jamestown Resources, LLC; Chesapeake Exploration, L.L.C.; And Chesapeake Operating, L.L.C. v. the State of Texas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re INEOS USA Oil & Gas LLC; CNOOC Energy U.S.A., LLC; Jamestown Resources, LLC; Chesapeake Exploration, L.L.C.; And Chesapeake Operating, L.L.C. v. the State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

NUMBER 13-25-00335-CV

COURT OF APPEALS

THIRTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

CORPUS CHRISTI – EDINBURG

IN RE INEOS USA OIL & GAS LLC; CNOOC ENERGY U.S.A., LLC; JAMESTOWN RESOURCES, LLC; CHESAPEAKE EXPLORATION, L.L.C.; AND CHESAPEAKE OPERATING, L.L.C.

ON PETITION FOR WRIT OF MANDAMUS

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Before Chief Justice Tijerina and Justices West and Fonseca Memorandum Opinion by Justice Fonseca

By petition for writ of mandamus, relators INEOS USA Oil & Gas LLC (INEOS);

CNOOC Energy U.S.A., LLC (CNOOC); Jamestown Resources, LLC (Jamestown);

Chesapeake Exploration, L.L.C. (Chesapeake Exploration); and Chesapeake Operating,

L.L.C. (Chesapeake Operating) assert that the trial court1 abused its discretion by

1 This original proceeding arises from trial court cause number 2025CCV-60034-1 in the County

Court at Law No. 1 of Nueces County, Texas, and the respondent is the Honorable Todd A. Robinson. See TEX. R. APP. P. 52.2. refusing to transfer venue of this oil and gas dispute from Nueces County, Texas, to La

Salle County, Texas. Relators assert that the venue selection clause in the parties’

agreement providing for suit in Nueces County is unenforceable because the agreement

does not evidence a “major transaction” and that venue in La Salle County is mandatory

because that is where the real property at issue in the lawsuit is located. See TEX. CIV.

PRAC. & REM. CODE ANN. §§ 15.020 (governing mandatory venue in suits regarding “major

transactions”), 15.011 (governing mandatory venue regarding land). We conditionally

grant the petition for writ of mandamus.

I. BACKGROUND

The underlying lawsuit concerns the assignment of fourteen oil and gas leases

covering 633.22 acres in La Salle County. To effectuate the assignment, real party in

interest Texas Lone Star Petroleum Corporation (Lone Star) and Empresa Energy, LLC

(Empresa)2 entered into two contracts: a “Purchase and Sale Agreement” (PSA) and a

“Partial Assignment of Oil, Gas, and Mineral Leases with Reservation of Overriding

Royalty Interest and Reversionary Rights” (Assignment). The Assignment contains a

venue selection clause which provides that “[v]enue for any cause of action pertaining to

this Assignment or the interests assigned or reserved by this Assignment shall lie

exclusively in Corpus Christi, Nueces County, Texas.”3

In the PSA, Lone Star agreed to assign the leases to Empresa, and Empresa

agreed to pay Lone Star $850.00 per acre for 633.22 acres for the total sum of $538,237

2 Empresa has not answered or otherwise appeared in the underlying lawsuit or this original

proceeding. 3 The PSA contains a similar venue selection clause which provides that “[v]enue for any cause of

action relating to this agreement or the documents delivered pursuant to this Agreement shall lie exclusively in Corpus Christi, Nueces County, Texas.”

2 as the purchase price. In the Assignment, Lone Star transferred its interests in the leases

to Empresa “for ten dollars ([$]10.00) and other good and valuable consideration.” The

Assignment granted Lone Star contingent reversionary rights to the leases if, for instance,

Empresa failed to drill a well according to certain specifications on lease acreage, or if

Empresa’s wells did not satisfy certain production levels. If such an instance occurred,

then Lone Star could terminate the Assignment, and Empresa was required to reassign

its interests back to Lone Star.

Thereafter, Empresa assigned seven of the fourteen leases to Chesapeake

Exploration, which conveyed some interests to CNOOC. Chesapeake Operating then

formed two pooled units that included portions of the leases and commenced drilling.

Later, Chesapeake Exploration assigned its interests in the seven leases to INEOS.

INEOS began drilling wells for itself and as operator for CNOOC, and Jamestown also

began drilling wells.

On January 7, 2025, Lone Star filed suit against relators and Empresa in Nueces

County alleging that the case involved a “major transaction,” and, thus, the venue

selection clause in the Assignment provided for mandatory venue in Nueces County. See

id. § 15.020. Lone Star alleged that some of the wells that had been drilled failed to satisfy

the production levels required by the Assignment, thereby triggering Lone Star’s right to

take over the ownership and operation of the wells and associated proration units.

Accordingly, Lone Star alleged that it possessed equitable title to the wells and acreage,

and it sought, inter alia, specific performance of the Assignment to enforce its ownership

rights.

3 Subsequently, relators filed separate motions to transfer venue arguing that the

venue selection clause was unenforceable because the PSA and Assignment did not

involve a “major transaction,” and that venue was mandatory in La Salle County where

the wells and proration units are located. Lone Star filed a response to the motions to

transfer venue, and in support of its response and position that the lawsuit involved a

major transaction, presented the amended affidavit of Jeffrey D. Cobbs, the President of

Lone Star, who testified in relevant part that:

(a) The [Assignment] was signed as part of and together with the PSA and the [Assignment] and all obligations contained in the [Assignment] are made part of the PSA. The PSA and [Assignment] were parts of a single transaction for the purchase, sale[,] and development of the Subject Leases.

(b) The PSA required Empresa to pay [Lone Star] $538,237 cash, and to agree to perform the obligations under the [Assignment], all of which are part of the consideration paid for the PSA and the [Assignment]. The dollar amount of [the consideration] paid under the PSA was not stated in the [Assignment] because the parties did not want to publicly disclose the commercial terms of the transaction in a recorded document.

(c) Article XVII of the [Assignment] contains an express obligation for the Assignee to drill wells to the depths covered by the [Assignment], that a reasonable and prudent operator would drill under the same or similar circumstances. This provision obligated the Assignee to drill one or more wells to the Eagle Ford formation. Chesapeake and INEOS, as assignees of Empresa, did actually drill multiple wells to the Eagle Ford formation, on the acreage covered by the [Assignment].

(d) The Assignee’s obligation to drill such wells was an important part of the “other good and valuable consideration” exchanged for the [Assignment], and if Assignee had failed to drill such a well before the leases terminate, the penalty was termination of Assignee’s rights and reassignment to [Lone Star]. Based on the PSA, the value of the acreage that would be lost by the Assignee for failure to drill was at least $538,474.

4 (e) On January 22, 2010, the date of the [Assignment], the cost to drill and the value of an Eagle Ford well was far in excess of $1 million. On the first well alone, the Broken Arrow Ranch Unit C LAS 2H Well, Chesapeake’s authority for expenditure was $11,311,600 . . . .

(f) In June of the year 2010, [Empresa] sold and assigned seven (7) of the Subject Leases to [Chesapeake Exploration]. Chesapeake later bought seven (7) replacement leases covering lands that had originally been part of the [Assignment]. The seven Subject Leases and the replacement leases are all covered by the [Assignment].

(g) But for the [Assignment], Chesapeake and INEOS would not have drilled the C2H Well or expended the monetary amounts they did drilling this and other wells.

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In Re INEOS USA Oil & Gas LLC; CNOOC Energy U.S.A., LLC; Jamestown Resources, LLC; Chesapeake Exploration, L.L.C.; And Chesapeake Operating, L.L.C. v. the State of Texas, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-ineos-usa-oil-gas-llc-cnooc-energy-usa-llc-jamestown-texapp-2025.