Interstate Petroleum Co. v. Young

2013 Ohio 1943
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 13, 2013
Docket2011-T-0090
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

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Bluebook
Interstate Petroleum Co. v. Young, 2013 Ohio 1943 (Ohio Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

[Cite as Interstate Petroleum Co. v. Young, 2013-Ohio-1943.]

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS

ELEVENTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

TRUMBULL COUNTY, OHIO

INTERSTATE PETROLEUM COMPANY, : OPINION

Plaintiff-Appellant, : CASE NO. 2011-T-0090 - vs - :

MAURICE YOUNG, et al., :

Defendants-Appellees. :

Civil Appeal from the Trumbull County Court of Common Pleas, Case No. 09 CV 682.

Judgment: Affirmed in part; reversed in part and remanded.

Kyle B. Smith, 36 W. Jefferson Street, Jefferson, OH 44047; John K. Keller, Voys, Sater, Seymour & Pease, LLP, 52 East Gay Street, Columbus, OH 43216; and James A. Sennett, Cowden & Humphrey Co., L.P.A., 4600 Euclid Avenue, Suite 400, Cleveland, OH 44103 (For Plaintiff-Appellant).

Bruce E. Smith, Geiger, Teeple, Smith & Hahn, P.L.L., 1844 West State Street, Suite A, Alliance, OH 44601-2415 (For Defendant-Appellees).

THOMAS R. WRIGHT, J.

{¶1} This appeal is from a final order of the Trumbull County Court of Common

Pleas. Judgment was entered in favor of appellees, Maurice Young, Mary Lou Young,

and Brian Armour, in accordance with a jury verdict. As to the primary claims of the

respective parties, the jury essentially found that an oil and gas lease agreement was

no longer enforceable against all three appellees. Appellant, Interstate Petroleum

Company, challenges various rulings. {¶2} As of April 1978, Edward and Jean Shones were the owners of 123 acres

of real property in Bristol Township, Trumbull County, Ohio. This property was divided

into two tracts, one containing 63 acres and the other containing sixty acres. The larger

tract was being used as a public campground, while the smaller tract consisted primarily

of woods.

{¶3} To increase their income from the entire property, the Shones executed

two oil and gas lease agreements with R.P. Gas & Oil Ventures. As to the sixty-acre

tract, the agreement gave R.P. Gas the contractual right to extract any oil and gas

located beneath the land. For consideration, the Shones were entitled to receive a

yearly royalty of one-eighth of the gross proceeds from the oil and gas production. In

addition, the agreement provided that if no well had been started on the tract by a

particular date, the lease would automatically terminate unless R.P. Gas paid a sum of

$60 as a rental. Finally, the term of the lease was for one year, but the agreement also

stated that it would “extend as long thereafter as oil and gas, or either of them, is

produced by lessee from said land * * *.”

{¶4} The Shones also executed a similar lease agreement in regard to the

“campground” tract. However, the subject matter of the underlying case relates solely

to the lease agreement for the wooded sixty-acre tract.

{¶5} Approximately one year later, R.P. Gas assigned its rights under the lease

agreements to Interstate Petroleum Company, a sole proprietorship owned by Kenneth

Adams. Over the next five years, Adams drilled four separate wells at various locations

in the 123 acres. Although two of the first three wells produced a small amount of gas

and oil, each of these particular wells were capped within a short period. However, the

2 fourth well, drilled in 1984, continued to be productive for approximately fifteen years.

{¶6} The fourth well was situated on the wooded sixty-acre tract. On the

eastern boundary of that tract was a railroad right-of-way which had previously been

abandoned and stripped of its rails. Once the fourth well had become productive,

Adams built a gravel roadway running from the railroad right-of-way into the woods.

This new roadway was the sole path by which Adams accessed the site of the fourth

well. In addition to having the trees cleared for the roadway, Adams employed a

specific type of gravel to ensure that the road could withstand the large trucks used in

transporting the oil. He also installed a gate at the entrance of the roadway so that no

one else would access the well from the railroad right-of-way.

{¶7} At the site of the fourth well, Adams installed a number of items to

facilitate the production of the oil and gas. Connected to the main pipe from the well

was a device called a separator, used to separate the oil from the gas. The separator

was housed in a structure Adams built. The gas was then propelled into a distinct

underground pipe that went across the property and eventually connected to a local

natural gas supplier. The oil was transferred to two outdoor tanks where it was held

until it was placed in oil trucks for shipment to a local refinery.

{¶8} In 1990, the Shones sold both tracts of land, including the campground, to

Maurice and Mary Lou Young. Approximately one year later, Mr. Young entered into a

written supplemental gas agreement with Interstate Petroleum Company, allowing him

to take up to 200,000 cubic feet of gas from company wells each year at no costs. The

gas was to be used to heat buildings associated with the campground. The

supplemental gas agreement further provided that if the Youngs used more than

3 200,000 cubic feet in a given year, they would be charged the “wellhead price” and any

reasonable costs the company incurred in producing the gas. The agreement also

stated that if the Youngs failed to pay for any excess gas, the debt could be deducted

from the Youngs’ future royalty payments.

{¶9} At the end of the 1994 fiscal year, Adams informed the Youngs that they

had used approximately 810,000 cubic feet of gas during the preceding twelve months.

According to Adams, when he told Mr. Young that he was liable for nearly $3,800 under

the supplemental agreement, Young told him to deduct it from the royalties under the

lease. Therefore, Adams did not send the Youngs any royalties over the ensuing years.

{¶10} As part of his company’s production of oil from the fourth well, Adams

always had the oil transported to an oil refinery in a neighboring state. However, in

1999, that refinery ceased operations. Thus, when Adams was unable to locate a new

refinery for his business, he shut down the fourth well, and no new oil or gas was

produced from the well thereafter.

{¶11} One year later, the state of Ohio obtained title to the abandoned railroad

right-of-way through eminent domain, and constructed a bike trail along the path of the

right-of-way. Since the trucks used for transporting the oil were not allowed on the bike

trail, Adams no longer had access to the roadway he built from the right-of-way to the

fourth well.

{¶12} Over the next eight years, the status quo remained the same. According

to Adams, he twice asked Mr. Young whether he could construct a new roadway to the

fourth well from an existing street, but Young always told him to contact the state about

using the bike trail. According to the Youngs, they did not see Adams on the sixty-acre

4 tract over the entire eight-year period.

{¶13} Starting in November 2008, Adams went onto the sixty-acre tract on foot

for the stated purpose of inspecting the equipment to ensure that it was still in a safe

condition and operable. Each time Adams walked in the area of the well, he was

confronted by the Youngs’ grandson, Brian Armour, who ordered Adams off the

property on the basis that he was trespassing.

{¶14} During this same time frame, the Youngs built a new roadway across part

of the sixty-acre tract. When Adams went on the property in late 2008, he noticed that

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Related

Interstate Petroleum Co. v. Young
999 N.E.2d 698 (Ohio Supreme Court, 2013)

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