Petro-Hunt v. Tank

2024 ND 46
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 18, 2024
Docket20230015
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 2024 ND 46 (Petro-Hunt v. Tank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Petro-Hunt v. Tank, 2024 ND 46 (N.D. 2024).

Opinion

FILED IN THE OFFICE OF THE CLERK OF SUPREME COURT MARCH 18, 2024 STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA

IN THE SUPREME COURT STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA

2024 ND 46

Petro-Hunt, L.L.C., Plaintiff and Appellee v. Greggory G. Tank, individually, Greggory G. Tank, Trustee, or his successors in trust, under the Greggory G. Tank Revocable Living Trust dated February 19, 2020, Defendants and Appellants and Ron J. Voller, A.M. Fruh, Steven D. Fruh, Pal Properties, Inc., Jo Marie S. Nelson, as Trustee UDT dated 4/2/2005, a/k/a the Donald L. Laber Family Trust, Robert A. Erickson and Daniel M. Erickson, as Co-Trustees of the Erickson Family Trust UDT dated December 11, 2001, Western Energy Corporation, Bishop of Bismarck Diocese, Defendants and Appellees and Tommie S. Tank, Karen Buffington, as Trustee of the Karen Buffington Family Mineral Trust, created under a declaration of trust dated December 8, 2011, James Ellis Metheny, Kevin Metheny, Ellen Thompson, Dakota West Energy LLC, Avalon North LLC, Ralph Christensen, Jr., Erick C. Christensen, as Trustee of the Erick C. Christensen GST Trust dated August 21, 2004, Andrea Phipps Saunders Banning, Julia Whitman Phipps Baker, Centennial Resources, Inc., Arthur J. Jared, Barbara Steele, Steele Resources LLC, Terry S. Mclvor, Trustee, or his successors in trust, of the Mclvor Family Energy Trust dated August 28, 2019, Western Energy Corporation, 4M Minerals, LLLP, Eleanor Keating and Larry K. Keating, as Trustees of the Roy Keating Residuary Trust, The Dublin Company, Kent M. Lynch, Joseph G. Lynch, Carl A. Nelson, A.C. Harke and Phil W. Starkle, Defendants

No. 20230015

Appeal from the District Court of McKenzie County, Northwest Judicial District, the Honorable Robin A. Schmidt, Judge.

AFFIRMED.

Opinion of the Court by Bahr, Justice.

Wade C. Mann (argued) and Zachary Eiken (appeared), Bismarck, ND, for plaintiff and appellee Petro-Hunt, L.L.C.

Paul Neilan (argued), Highland Park, IL, Fintan L. Dooley (appeared), Bismarck, ND, and Lynn Boughey (appeared), Mandan, ND, for defendants and appellants Greggory G. Tank, individually, Greggory G. Tank, Trustee, or his successors in trust, under the Greggory G. Tank Revocable Living Trust dated February 19, 2020.

Charles M. Carvell, Bismarck, ND, for defendant and appellee Ron J. Voller; submitted on brief.

Jon Bogner, Dickinson, ND, for defendants and appellees A.M. Fruh, Steven D. Fruh, and Pal Properties, Inc.; submitted on brief. Benjamin W. Keup, Bismarck, ND, for defendants and appellees Jo Marie S. Nelson, as Trustee UDT dated 4/2/2005, a/k/a the Donald L. Laber Family Trust, Robert A. Erickson and Daniel M. Erickson, as Co-Trustees of the Erickson Family Trust UDT dated December 11, 2001, and Western Energy Corporation; submitted on brief.

Thomas B. Bair, Mandan, ND, for defendant and appellee Bishop of Bismarck Diocese; submitted on brief. Petro-Hunt v. Tank No. 20230015

Bahr, Justice.

[¶1] Greggory Tank, individually and as Trustee, or his successors in trust, of the Greggory G. Tank Revocable Living Trust dated February 19, 2020, appeals the district court’s order granting summary judgment and disposing of pending motions. We conclude the court properly determined five 1937 assignments burdened Tank’s southwest quarter mineral interest in the subject property. We further conclude the court did not err in holding Tank was not entitled to an accounting under N.D.C.C. § 38-08-09.4(3) and failed to establish Petro- Hunt was a fiduciary. We affirm.

I

[¶2] This matter involves the ownership of mineral royalty interests in land in McKenzie County, North Dakota. Tank owns unleased mineral interests in and under certain lands located in McKenzie County (“Subject Lands”). Petro- Hunt operates numerous oil and gas wells on pooled spacing units, which includes Tank’s property. Petro-Hunt operates seven oil and gas wells on two pooled spacing units inclusive of the Subject Lands. Before this litigation, Tank alleged Petro-Hunt had wrongly distributed less than the full well revenues due to Tank and the other defendants based on five assignments executed in April 1937 (“1937 Assignments”). The 1937 Assignments concern the southwest quarter of the Subject Lands (“Southwest Quarter”).

[¶3] In April 2021, Petro-Hunt commenced this action for interpleader and quiet title seeking, in part, to quiet title to the interest in the oil, gas, and other minerals in the Subject Lands, including the 10% non-participating fractional royalty interest that burdens this interest. Petro-Hunt alleged it was unable to determine ownership in the Subject Lands’ mineral interests because Tank had created “issues and uncertainties” by challenging the validity of the outstanding fractional non-participating royalty interests and asserting the outstanding royalty does not burden his mineral interest. Tank and other defendants subsequently answered.

1 [¶4] Tank filed his answer to the complaint in June 2021 and subsequently filed a separate counterclaim against Petro-Hunt, alleging claims for conversion, unjust enrichment, and for an accounting. Among other things, Tank alleged Petro-Hunt improperly assessed him with a proportionate 100% share of costs for drilling and operating the wells at issue. Petro-Hunt answered the counterclaims and denied Tank’s allegations.

[¶5] In January 2022, Petro-Hunt moved for partial summary judgment on the legal effect of the 1937 Assignments, and moved for default judgment against the parties who had not answered or otherwise appeared. The district court granted Petro-Hunt’s motions in its favor in April 2022. In June 2022, the court entered a partial summary judgment and default judgment against the parties who had not answered or otherwise appeared.

[¶6] Petro-Hunt moved the district court for summary judgment on Tank’s counterclaims in August 2022. Over a month after Tank filed his response to Petro-Hunt’s motion, Tank filed a request to present and argue three Oklahoma cases. In November 2022, the court granted Petro-Hunt summary judgment on the counterclaims and denied Tank’s remaining motions. The court entered an order for judgment and judgment of dismissal with prejudice in December 2022. Tank appealed.

[¶7] In his notice of appeal, Tank appealed the district court’s order on motion for summary judgment and pending motions entered on November 8, 2022, and the notice of entry of judgment entered on December 6, 2022. Tank did not specifically appeal from the final judgment of dismissal with prejudice entered on December 5, 2022. We treat the notice of appeal as an appeal from the subsequent, consistent final judgment entered after the district court granted summary judgment to Petro-Hunt on its quiet title claim and dismissed Tank’s counterclaims against Petro-Hunt with prejudice. See Sadek v. Weber, 2020 ND 194, ¶ 10, 948 N.W.2d 820 (“[A]n attempted appeal from the order granting summary judgment will . . . be treated as an appeal from a subsequently entered consistent judgment, if one exists.”). Other defendants have joined Petro-Hunt’s briefing on appeal as appellees.

2 II

[¶8] This Court’s standard for reviewing a district court’s summary judgment decision is well established:

A party moving for summary judgment has the burden of showing there are no genuine issues of material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. In determining whether summary judgment was appropriately granted, we must view the evidence in the light most favorable to the party opposing the motion, and that party will be given the benefit of all favorable inferences which can reasonably be drawn from the record.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2024 ND 46, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/petro-hunt-v-tank-nd-2024.