Jordan v. Southwestern Energy Company

CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 16, 2022
Docket3:20-cv-00414
StatusUnknown

This text of Jordan v. Southwestern Energy Company (Jordan v. Southwestern Energy Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jordan v. Southwestern Energy Company, (M.D. Pa. 2022).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE MIDDLE DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA

RICHARD JORDAN, et al., : : CIV NO. 3:20-CV-414 : Plaintiffs, : (Judge Mariani) : v. : (Magistrate Judge Carlson) : SOUTHWESTERN ENERGY CO. et al., : : Defendants. :

MEMORANDUM OPINION

I. Statement of Facts and of the Case This case comes before us for consideration of the plaintiffs’ motion to compel the defendants to produce records relating to the involvement of a subsidiary company, Southwestern Energy Services (SES), in the transactions which lie at the heart of this oil and gas lease royalty dispute. (Doc. 54). The defendant corporations have resisted these requests for production asserting that they cannot produce records possessed by their subsidiary, SES, but the allegations and evidence suggest that the defendant corporations exercise sufficient control and enjoy a sufficiently symbiotic relationship that they may be compelled to require the production of these records possessed by their subsidiary. Therefore, for the reasons set forth below, we will grant this motion to compel. This close and controlling relationship between SES and the defendant corporations is set forth in detail in the plaintiffs’ amended complaint, whose allegations frame the scope of relevant discovery here. (Doc. 39).

At the outset, the amended complaint describes in relationship between the named defendants and SES. According to the amended complaint, the defendant Southwestern Energy Company, is a Delaware corporation which does business as

SWN. (Id. ¶¶ 5-8). The second corporate defendant SWN Production Company LLC, or SWN Production, is a corporate affiliate of SWN. (Id. ¶¶9-18). According to the plaintiffs SWN and SWN Production share corporate offices, personnel, and management. (Id.) Southwestern Energy Services (SES), in turn, is described as an

“SWN’s affiliated marketing company.” (Id. ¶ 30). The well-pleaded facts in the plaintiffs’ complaint, which guide our consideration of this motion indicate that on November 8, 2008, Richard and Maureen Jordan1 entered into an oil and gas lease with Alta Resources, LLC.,

relating to a property they owned in Susquehanna County, Pennsylvania. (Doc. 39, ¶¶1-2). This lease provided for the extraction of hydro-carbons resources from the plaintiffs’ property and prescribed the payment of royalties to the Jordans. (Id., ¶¶1-

4, Ex.1). On February 11, 2015, the Jordans were informed that another firm, SWN Production Company, LLC, had acquired the rights to their gas lease. (Id., ¶19).

1 Richard and Maureen Jordan are acting as their own counsel in this case, but it is represented that the Jordans are trained and schooled as attorneys. According to the complaint, SWN Production is affiliated SWN. (Id. ¶¶ 7-17). The plaintiffs allege that SWN and SWN Production share the same physical office

space, website address, have common officers, directors, managers and employees, and make no distinctions between their separate operations. (Id.) The thrust of the complaint focuses on the actions of SWN Production and a separate uncharged

entity, Southwestern Energy Services (SES), which is described as an “SWN’s affiliated marketing company.” (Id. ¶ 30). Beginning in April of 2015, SWN Production sent monthly royalty payments and statements to the Jordans. (Id., ¶¶ 20- 22). Sometime after SWN Production assumed responsibility for this lease it is

alleged that: “Plaintiffs, had learned from reading reported decisions in other royalty owner lawsuits against other companies such as SWN and SWN Production, that it was a common practice for the production company to transfer gas from the

production company to an affiliated marketing company, and to pay royalties based on an artificially created transfer price.” (Id., ¶ 27). Learning of this practice and believing that the practice violated the terms of their lease, the Jordans filed a praceipe in state court to toll any statute of limitations, (Id., ¶ 24), and began making

a series of inquiries of SWN officials “as a royalty” owner regarding the manner in which their royalties were calculated. (Id., ¶¶ 24-33). According to the plaintiffs’ complaint: 29. Plaintiffs' inquires [sic] to SWN were for the purpose of determining if SWN used a marketing company to make downstream sales of Plaintiffs' gas and if any deductions were taken.

30. [SWN’s in-house counsel] confirmed that Plaintiffs’ gas was in fact transferred to SWN's affiliated marketing company, Southwestern Energy Services (SES), for sale downstream.

31. In response to Plaintiffs’ further question as to whether in calculating Plaintiffs’ royalty any deductions were taken from the downstream sales price received by SES, [SWN’s in-house counsel] stated that the price on which Plaintiffs’ royalty was calculated included a deduction for transportation costs to where the gas was sold downstream.

32. [SNW’s in-house counsel] confirmed that the price on which the Plaintiffs’ royalty was paid was not derived from the downstream sales price received by the marketing company, without deductions.

(Id. ¶¶ 29-32).

The plaintiffs’ allege that this marketing arrangement violates paragraph 8 of the addendum to their oil and gas lease which provides as follows: Royalties shall be paid without deductions, directly or indirectly, for the costs of producing, gathering, storing, separating, treating, dehydrating, compressing, transporting, or otherwise making the oil and/or gas produced from the leased premises ready for sale or use. All oil and gas royalty shall be paid free of all cost to the point of sale and at fair market value, measured by volume at the wellhead, with the exception of Lessor's prorated share of any taxes, measured by volume on the oil and/or gas royalty. Any proceeds accruing to the Lessee pursuant to a sale under a non-arms length contract (or other disposition other than by an arms length contract) shall be at least equivalent, for Lessor's royalty purposes, to the gross proceeds derived from, or paid under comparable arms length contracts for purchases, sales or other dispositions of like quality gas in the same gas field. However under no circumstances shall the value of production for royalty purposes be less than the gross proceeds accruing to the Lessee either directly or indirectly. Royalty on production paid to Lessor shall be tendered monthly.

(Id., ¶ 36).

Viewing the alleged deduction of Southwestern Energy Services’ costs from the sales price of the gas and calculation of royalties as a violation of this provision of the lease agreement, the Jordans have brought a breach of contract claim against SWN and SWN Production. (Id. 21-22). In addition to this breach of contract claim, the Jordans appear to bring tort allegations in the nature of a fraud claim against these defendants, alleging that the monthly royalty statements provided by the defendants were intentionally false and misleading in that they did not disclose the deductions made for SES’s transportation costs when calculating monthly royalties. (Id.). On the basis of these averments, the Jordans sought an accounting from the

defendants, compensatory damages, and punitive damages for the defendants’ allegedly tortious false and misleading behavior. The amended complaint also details at length the closely interrelated nature of these corporate entities, stating that they share physical locations and staff and

noting that one court has found that these corporate affiliates conduct their business exclusively through the parent corporation SWN. (Id. ¶ 114). Thus, SES’s role in these transactions, and its intertwined relationship with the named corporate

defendants lies at the heart of this litigation.

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Jordan v. Southwestern Energy Company, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jordan-v-southwestern-energy-company-pamd-2022.