McWreath v. Maiorca

2015 Ohio 4319
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 19, 2015
Docket2014-T-0075
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 2015 Ohio 4319 (McWreath v. Maiorca) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McWreath v. Maiorca, 2015 Ohio 4319 (Ohio Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

[Cite as McWreath v. Maiorca, 2015-Ohio-4319.]

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS

ELEVENTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

TRUMBULL COUNTY, OHIO

LARRY MCWREATH, : OPINION

Plaintiff-Appellant, : CASE NO. 2014-T-0075 - vs - :

ROCCO J. MAIORCA, et al., :

Defendants-Appellees. :

Civil Appeal from the Trumbull County Court of Common Pleas, Case No. 2012 CV 1929.

Judgment: Affirmed.

L. Bryan Carr, Carr, Feneli & Carbone Co., L.P.A., 1392 S.O.M. Center Road, Mayfield Heights, OH 44124 (For Plaintiff-Appellant).

Daniel P. Daniluk and Cherry Lynne Poteet, 1129 Niles-Cortland Road, S.E., Warren, OH 44484(For Defendants-Appellees).

THOMAS R. WRIGHT, J.

{¶1} This accelerated-calendar appeal is from a final judgment in a civil action

before the Trumbull County Court of Common Pleas. As part of that judgment, the trial

court found that appellees, Rocco J. Maiorca and Annarock Petroleum, LLC, had been

properly assigned the rights of the lessee under an oil and gas lease in regard to ninety

acres of land in Vienna Township, Ohio. Appellant, Larry J. McWreath, argues that the

trial court erred in not holding that the assignment of the lease was fraudulent and noncompliant with governing statutory law. For the following reasons, the decision

upholding the assignment is affirmed.

{¶2} As of April 6, 1981, the ninety acres were owned by Frank Kopervac and

his sister, Elizabeth. On that date, the Kopervacs executed an oil and gas lease in favor

of Eastern Petroleum Services as to the entire tract. The lease’s first paragraph stated,

in pertinent part:

{¶3} “1. That the Lessor, for and in consideration of One Dollar ($1.00) and

other valuable consideration in hand paid by the Lessee, the receipt of which is hereby

acknowledged and the covenants and agreements hereinafter contained, does hereby

Lease and let exclusively unto the Lessee for the purposes of drilling, operating for,

producing and removing oil and gas and all the constituents thereof, and in transport,

across and through said lands, oil, gas and their constituents from the subject and other

lands and of injecting, storing and holding in storage and removing gas of any kind, * * *

including gas lying thereunder, by pumping through wells and other means, into, in and

from and sands, strata or formations lying thereunder, regardless of the sources of such

gas or the location of the wells or other means of doing so, and of placing tanks,

equipment and structures thereon to procure and operate for the said products and of

laying pipe lines thereon to transport the same and for gas storage purposes on other

lands, all that certain tract of land * * * being all the property owned by Lessor in

Section/Lot 44 in Vienna Township, containing 90 acres, more or less.”

{¶4} The term of the lease was for three years. However, if a producing well

was operating on the land prior to the conclusion of the initial three years, the lease

would remain in effect as long as oil or gas was produced “in paying quantities.” The

lease also provides that all terms of the agreement are binding upon the parties’ heirs

2 and successors. Additionally, as to the assignment of the lease, the fifteenth paragraph

granted the “Lessee” the ability to transfer its rights under the lease without providing

any notice to the “Lessor.”

{¶5} During the first year of the lease, Eastern Petroleum Services drilled two

wells which have continued to produce oil or gas during the entire time frame pertinent

to this litigation. Therefore, once Frank Kopervac became the sole lessor following his

sister’s death, he continued to receive monthly royalty payments from the operators of

the wells until his own death in 2008.

{¶6} After establishing the two wells in early 1982, Eastern Petroleum Services

assigned its entire interest in the Kopervac lease to Ohio Oil & Gas. Within twenty days

of becoming the lessee, Ohio Oil & Gas assigned a partial interest in the subject lease

to Exploration Management. Inc. The partial interest covered forty acres of the land and

one of the wells. Approximately twenty months later, in July 1984, Ohio Oil & Gas sold

its remaining interest under the lease, covering the last fifty acres and the second well,

to Exploration Management.

{¶7} Exploration Management was incorporated under Ohio law in 1979, and

has remained in good standing throughout the entire period relevant to this litigation. Its

articles of incorporation state that its principal office is on Niles-Cortland Road in

Cortland, Ohio. After obtaining the remaining interest in the Kopervac lease in 1984,

Exploration Management was the sole lessee under the lease until March 2012.

{¶8} At approximately the same time as Exploration Management became the

sole lessee, a second entity, Exploration Energy, Inc., was incorporated under Ohio law.

Like Exploration Management, Exploration Energy’s articles of incorporation listed 2202

Niles-Cortland Road in Cortland as the location of its principal office.

3 {¶9} At some point after its incorporation, Exploration Energy became the sole

owner of the two wells on the Kopervac property. However, Exploration Energy did not

acquire an interest in the Kopervac oil and gas lease. As the owner of the wells, the

company was responsible for the production of the oil and gas, and the maintenance of

all equipment on the property.

{¶10} In March 2001, Exploration Energy sold its ownership of the two Kopervac

wells, as well as its ownership of numerous other oil and gas wells in northeastern Ohio,

to Annarock Petroleum. As part of this transaction, Exploration Energy and Annarock

Petroleum had to submit a “change of ownership” notice with the Ohio Department of

Natural Resources. Immediately after the sale of the wells, Exploration Energy ceased

operations on an on-going business.

{¶11} Rocco J. Maiorca is a part-owner and the managing member of Annarock

Petroleum. Over the next eleven years, Annarock Petroleum continued to operate and

maintain the two Kopervac wells. The company also continued to send monthly royalty

payments to Kopervac.

{¶12} Kopervac died in March 2008. His will named Larry McWreath as his sole

heir. As a result, McWreath became the sole lessor under the oil and gas lease. Over

the next three years, there were no problems regarding the operations of the wells, and

McWreath continued to receive the monthly royalty payments. However, in early 2012,

McWreath began to claim that either Exploration Management or Annarock Petroleum

had violated various terms of the oil and gas lease. McWreath further claimed that the

lease did not give Exploration Management all of the oil and gas rights in the property;

according to him, the lease did not cover deep well drilling rights.

{¶13} Each well on the ninety acres had its own access road which had a gate

4 across it. In the past, the two gates never had locks, which made it easy for Annarock

Petroleum to access the wells. When McWreath began to question whether the terms

of the lease had been violated, he placed a lock on each of the two gates. Furthermore,

when Annarock Petroleum requested the combinations for the locks, McWreath refused

to cooperate. Believing that Annarock Petroleum still retained the right to access the

well, an employee of the company drove around the gates onto the land. In response,

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