New Dominion, LLC v. H&P Investments, LLC

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 4, 2024
Docket4:20-cv-00592
StatusUnknown

This text of New Dominion, LLC v. H&P Investments, LLC (New Dominion, LLC v. H&P Investments, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
New Dominion, LLC v. H&P Investments, LLC, (N.D. Okla. 2024).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF OKLAHOMA NEW DOMINION, LLC, ) ) Plaintiff/Consolidated ) Defendant, ) ) v. ) Case No. 20-CV-0592-CVE-CDL ) BASE FILE ) ) H&P INVESTMENTS, LLC, ) Consolidated with: ) Case No. 21-CV-0504-CVE-CDL Defendant/Consolidated ) Plaintiff. ) OPINION AND ORDER Before the Court are plaintiff/consolidated defendant New Dominion, LLC’s (NDL) motion for partial summary judgment on the propriety of the Oklahoma Production Revenue Standards Act (PRSA)1 fees it charged defendant (Dkt. # 80), defendant/consolidated plaintiff H&P Investments, LLC’s (H&P) response and cross motion for partial summary judgment on the impropriety of the PRSA fees it was charged (Dkt. # 85), and NDL’s reply (Dkt. # 88). NDL requests that the Court enter judgment in its favor declaring that it may charge H&P under the PRSA for maintenance fees it incurred. H&P requests that the Court declare that it is under no contractual or statutory obligation to pay PRSA fees because the fees were assumed by private agreement. For the reasons set forth below, the Court denies plaintiff’s motion for partial summary judgment, grants defendant’s cross- motion for partial summary judgment, and declares that NDL may not charge H&P maintenance fees under the PRSA based on the unambiguous terms of the parties’ contracts. 1 The PRSA is codified at Okla. Stat. Ann. tit. 52, § 570.1, et seq. (West 1992). I. The following facts are undisputed in the summary judgment record:2 A. Statutory language of the PRSA The PRSA regulates the marketing, sale, and production of oil and gas in the state of

Oklahoma. Dkt. # 85, at 21; Okla. Stat. Ann. tit. 52, § 570.1, et seq. (West 1992). The PRSA creates mechanisms for timely royalty accounting and remittance, and prevents operators from neglecting to pay timely proceeds to royalty owners when taking advantage of high interest rates. Okla. Stat. Ann. tit. 52, § 570.1, et seq. (West 1992). In exchange for managing royalty remittance, the operator of wells can offset administrative costs by assessing fees to working interest owners. Subsection 13 of the PRSA provides that: The Corporation Commission shall promulgate rules, as needed, in furtherance of the purposes of the Production Revenue Standards Act, including but not limited to a schedule of equitable fees and expense reimbursements from working interest owners sufficient to cover the actual costs incurred by the operator to perform duties required by the Production Revenue Standards Act not assumed by private agreement. Okla. Stat. Ann. tit. 52, § 570.13 (West 1992) (emphasis added). B. NDL’s charged PRSA fees and overhead rate 2 The Court has already outlined the parties’ relationship in its prior opinion (Dkt. # 90): NDL is an Oklahoma limited liability company that operates oil and gas wells in the state. H&P is an Alabama limited liability company and a working interest owner in five NDL oil and gas well development projects. H&P acquired its interest in the five agreements and underlying oil and gas wells from New Source Energy Partners, LP and New Source Energy GP, LLC, (collectively, “New Source”), on April 1, 2017, pursuant to a bankruptcy court sale order. The five agreements were not amended, nor were new contracts executed, to reflect the change in working interest ownership. Dkt. # 90, at 2. 2 Since April 2018, NDL has charged H&P for “PRSA Mtnc Fees” on wells in the contract area subject to the parties’ agreements. Dkt. #85, at 15; Dkt. # 88, at3. NDL claims it has authority to charge PRSA maintenance fees under the PRSA, Okla. Stat. Ann. tit. 52, § 570.13 (West 1992), and Okla. Admin. Code § 165:10-27-10 promulgated thereunder, the latter of which “prescribes fees which may be charged [to working interest owners] by the operator of a gas producing well [] for administrative expenses generated by the [PRSA].” Okla. Admin. Code § 165:10-27-10. NDL contends that the PRSA requires NDL to perform revenue accounting and royalty disbursement services for its working interest owners. Dkt. # 80, at 14-15, 17. NDL alleges that, because it incurs administrative costs for performing these services, it may charge H&P a maintenance fee in accordance with the PRSA statutory fee schedule.’ Id. at 11. NDL alleges that “revenue accounting and royalty disbursement aspects of NDL’s services are such that a single, full-time employee, [La Donna Peacock], dedicates her entire position to the task and two additional employees have to assist her in the job. Id. NDL allegedly charges H&P these PRSA maintenance fees in accordance with the statutory fee schedule, which permits an annual maintenance charge of $450 per well. See Okla. Admin. Code § 165:10-27-10, Appendix G. NDL’s corporate representative estimates that among its five contracts,

3 Okla. Admin. Code § 165:10-27-10(e) provides that: [a]n annual maintenance fee shall cover any cost associated with record keeping, issuance of gas balancing statements and any election ofa producing owner regarding separate distribution of royalty proceeds. Maintenance fees shall be calculated on an annual basis using the first day of May as the anniversary date. Such fees may be prorated and billed on a monthly basis at the well operator's discretion. ‘ NDL’s corporate representative has classified Peacock’s duties as “administrative” and admits that revenue accounting is an administrative service. Dkt. # 85-2, at 11, 13.

H&P is a working interest owner in approximately 320 to 330 wells. Dkt. # 85-2, at 4. The summary judgment record is silent as to the total amount of “PRSA Mtnc Fees” NDL has actually charged to H&P, but H&P disputes the propriety of NDL charging fees in accordance with the fee schedule, Dkt. # 85, at 11, as well as NDL’s calculations under the fee schedule, even if it were applicable. In addition to charging H&P for PRSA maintenance fees, NDL charges overhead fees on a fixed rate basis pursuant to the parties’ contracts, as set forth below. See infra Part I.C. H&P argues that the parties’ contracts preclude NDL from charging PRSA maintenance fees, because the contracts’ overhead provisions account for the administrative costs associated with revenue disbursement. Dkt. #85, at 23. H&P contends that the PRSA was not intended to supplant private agreements that assume duties associated with royalty remittance, and asserts that NDL has breached the parties’ contracts by charging for both overhead and PRSA maintenance fees. Id. at 24. NDL counters that the overhead provisions in the parties’ contracts do not account for administrative costs associated with revenue disbursement, and that it is permitted to charge PRSA maintenance fees pursuant to the aforementioned statutory provisions. Dkt. # 88, at 5-6. The summary judgment record 1s silent as to the total amount of overhead NDL has charged to H&P. See, e.g., Dkt. # 85-9, at 1.

C. Relevant contractual agreements The five participation agreements and their respectively attached and incorporated joint operating agreements (JOAs) govern the parties’ relationship and obligations to each other.5 The respective agreements are summarized and restated, in relevant parts, as follows:

1.

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Bluebook (online)
New Dominion, LLC v. H&P Investments, LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-dominion-llc-v-hp-investments-llc-oknd-2024.