Pennsylvania Environmental Defense Foundation v. Commonwealth

108 A.3d 140, 45 Envtl. L. Rep. (Envtl. Law Inst.) 20006, 2015 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 9
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 7, 2015
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 108 A.3d 140 (Pennsylvania Environmental Defense Foundation v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pennsylvania Environmental Defense Foundation v. Commonwealth, 108 A.3d 140, 45 Envtl. L. Rep. (Envtl. Law Inst.) 20006, 2015 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 9 (Pa. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinions

OPINION BY

Judge BROBSON.

I. INTRODUCTION

Before the Court for disposition are cross-applications .for summary relief in this original jurisdiction matter. Petitioner Pennsylvania Environmental Defense Foundation (PEDF) seeks relief under the Declaratory Judgments Act1 with respect to (a) the past and future leasing of State land for oil and natural gas development and (b) the use of monies in the Oil and Gas Lease Fund. 'Respondents are the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania and its Governor, in his official capacity (Commonwealth Respondents).

II. BACKGROUND

This lawsuit, originally filed on March 19, 2012, relates to actions by the legislative and executive branches of the Commonwealth to address lean budget years through revenue generated from the leasing of State lands to private parties for natural gas development. Though the leasing of State lands for oil and gas development is not a recent practice, the demand by private parties to access natural gas reserves under State lands has increased exponentially in recent years due to improved technologies for extraction of natural gas in what has been known for more than seventy-five years as the Mar-cellus Shale Formation.2

A. DCNR

In 1995, through passage of the Conservation and Natural Resources Act (CNRA),3 the Department of Environmental Resources (DER) was renamed the Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) and a new agency, DCNR, was born. According to the legislative findings in the CNRA, the General Assembly believed that the structure of the former DER did not allow enough attention, financial and otherwise, to be afforded to the protection of our State forest and park lands, warranting the creation of a new cabinet-level agency to advocate for those interests. Section 101(a) of the CNRA. In those same findings, the General Assembly expressly recognized Article I, Section 27 of the Pennsylvania Constitution, also known as the Environmental Rights Amendment: “Pennsylvania’s public natural resources are to be conserved and maintained for the use and benefit of all its citizens as guaranteed by section 27 of Article I of the Constitution of Pennsylvania.” Id.

[143]*143The primary mission of DCNR, as set forth in the authorizing legislation, is as follows:

The primary mission of [DCNR] will be to maintain, improve and preserve State parks, to manage State forest lands to assure their long-term health, sustainability and economic use, to provide information on Pennsylvania’s ecological and geological resources and to administer grant and technical assistance programs that will benefit rivers conservation, trails and greenways, local recreation, regional heritage conservation and environmental education programs across Pennsylvania.

Section 101(b)(1) of the CNRA. Among the powers conferred on DCNR is the authority

to make and execute contracts or leases in the name of the Commonwealth for the mining or removal of any valuable minerals that may be found in State forests ... whenever it shall appear to the satisfaction of the department that it would be for the best interests of this Commonwealth to make such disposition of those minerals.

Section 302(a)(6) of the CNRA (emphasis added).4

B. The Lease Fund

Under a 1955 law known as the Oil and Gas Lease Fund Act (Lease Fund Act),5 all “rents and royalties” from gas leases on Commonwealth land are to be deposited into a fund called the Oil and Gas Lease Fund (Lease Fund). The Lease Fund is to be “exclusively used for conservation, recreation, dams, or flood control or to match any Federal grants which may be made for any of the aforementioned purposes.” Section 1 of the Lease Fund Act. The Lease Fund Act places the determination of “the need for and the location of any project authorized” by the Lease Fund Act within the discretion of DCNR. Section 2 of the Lease Fund Act. The Lease Fund Act expressly appropriates “[a]ll the moneys from time to time paid into” the Lease Fund to DCNR to carry out the purposes of the Lease Fund Act. Section 3 of the Lease Fund Act.

According to the testimony of Dr. James Grace (Dr. Grace),6 who served in various leadership capacities within DCNR and DER from 1987 through 2010, DCNR (and its predecessor the Department of Forests and Waters within DER) has continuously leased State land for natural gas extraction since 1947. Prior to 2008, total revenue from those leasing activities to the Commonwealth was approximately $150 million dollars.

C. The 2008 Lease Sale

In 2008,7 DCNR conducted its first lease sale of State land for natural gas development during the Mareellus Shale era (2008 Lease Sale).8 In all, DCNR leased 17 [144]*144tracts, comprising 74,000 acres, and generated roughly $163 million in one-time “bonus payments” from those transactions. In one month, then, DCNR’s leasing activities generated more revenue than the pri- or sixty years of leasing activity combined.

The lease terms provide for two types of payments to DCNR. The first is an annual rental payment. The first rental payment due was the up-front “bonus payment” upon delivery of the lease to the lessee. These bonus payments were in the millions of dollars. Thereafter, annual rental payments were calculated on a dollars-per-acre basis. In the example lease in the record of the preliminary injunction hearing in this matter (Prelim. Inj. Hr’g Ex. R-l), the rental payment started at $20 per acre for the second through fourth years of the lease and increased to $35 per acre for every year thereafter. (Id. Ex. R-l, § 3.) At its highest, excluding the first year bonus payment, the annual rental on the example lease for 3,603 acres would be $126,105.00. By comparison, the bonus payment in the example lease was $4,147,053.00. The second payment due DCNR under the lease was a gas royalty, payable monthly, which was assessed based on the amount of marketable gas extracted by the lessee. (Id. § 4.)

Following the 2008 Lease Sale, DCNR and its Bureau of Forestry decided not to enter into further leases for natural gas extraction on State lands pending study of the “Marcellus play” and development within the 660,000 acres of land already leased within the Marcellus Shale region (including State and private lands).9 Dr. Grace explained this decision in his hearing testimony:

A ... Now the problem that resulted from the Marcellus development was that we had leased 74,000 acres, but there was previously leased acreages of about 250,000 acres. And then . there was another 290,000 acres which we did not own the mineral rights. And Marcellus activity began on all of those acreages.
So while we had just done a 74,000-acre lease, we realized that there was going to be Marcellus development on all of the lease holdings in the entire system, which totalled almost — well, it totalled at that point about 650,000 acres.
Q When you realized that, what action did you take?
A At that point, we were starting to get pressure to lease additional acreages.

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Bluebook (online)
108 A.3d 140, 45 Envtl. L. Rep. (Envtl. Law Inst.) 20006, 2015 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pennsylvania-environmental-defense-foundation-v-commonwealth-pacommwct-2015.