PYR Energy Corp. v. Samson Resources Co.

456 F. Supp. 2d 786, 164 Oil & Gas Rep. 19, 2006 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 66416, 2006 WL 2664450
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Texas
DecidedSeptember 15, 2006
Docket1:05-CV-530
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 456 F. Supp. 2d 786 (PYR Energy Corp. v. Samson Resources Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
PYR Energy Corp. v. Samson Resources Co., 456 F. Supp. 2d 786, 164 Oil & Gas Rep. 19, 2006 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 66416, 2006 WL 2664450 (E.D. Tex. 2006).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION ON MOTIONS FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT

HINES, United States Magistrate Judge.

This opinion states reasons and rationale for the court’s decision on competing motions for summary judgment, 1 specifically, *788 a “Motion for Summary Judgment of Samson Lone Star Limited Partnership and Samson Resources Company” and “Plaintiffs Motion for Partial Summary Judgment.” Docket Nos. 30 and 95, respectively-

I. PARTIES; NATURE OP SUIT

Plaintiff, PYR Energy Corporation (PYR), is a publicly traded company organized and registered under laws of Maryland, with headquarters and principal place of business in Denver, Colorado. Defendants are Samson Resources Company and Samson Lone Star Limited Partnership. Samson Resources Company is an Oklahoma corporation and a wholly-owned subsidiary of Samson Investment Company, a general partner of defendant Samson Lone Star Limited Partnership. Samson Lone Star Limited Partnership is a Texas limited partnership also owned by Samson Investment Company. For present purposes, both defendants are referred to collectively as “Samson.”

PYR and Samson each own mineral fee interests and oil and gas leases in an area called the “Nome Prospect” in Jefferson County, Texas. A successful gas well was completed on a particular 122.57 acre tract within that area in June, 2004. The well is operated by Samson as part of a 704 acre unit.

PYR asserts that Samson has underpaid royalty and working interest amounts due PYR under a written agreement entered in 2003 by Samson and PYR’s predecessor. PYR asserts that Samson pooled PYR’s interests without authority and thereby breached the agreement by failing to pay overriding royalties and income attributable to its working interests based on PYR’s full interest in the well production. 2 Alternatively, and based on mutual mistake and scrivener’s error, PYR seeks reformation of the contract to reflect that an “area of mutual interest” is as depicted on a plat allegedly circulated between the contracting parties on May 23, 2003, and represented on June 11, 2003, to be the intended plat. Further in the alternative, PYR asserts a common law tort claim alleging that Samson breached its fiduciary duty by including non-productive acreage and properties in the above-referenced unit.

Samson denies these allegations and asserts, first, that it properly calculated and paid PYR’s overriding royalties and working interests; the challenged 704 acre unit was duly authorized and formed pursuant to the contract; and all necessary consents were obtained. Alternatively, Samson asserts that PYR ratified the unit formed by Samson and thereby waived and is es-topped from asserting a claim to payment for unpooled interests; PYR does not own the cause of action now asserted; the contract should be reformed — based on mutual mistake or fraud — to provide that Samson was authorized to pool or unitize all “Leases,” as the term is used in the contract, including oil and gas leases and fee mineral interests reserved by PYR’s predecessor; and Samson should recover *789 from PYR overpayments of working interest revenues after project payout for lands located outside a contractually defined area of mutual interest.

II. Motions for Summary Judgment

Both parties seek contract reformation and assert various alternative claims. That circumstance alone makes it almost self evident that neither side is supremely confident in the strength of its legal position. Nevertheless, the parties — represented by able and experienced counsel— both seek tactical advantage by going on offense. That bilateral strategy manifests itself in competing motions for summary judgment arguing that undisputed facts so clearly favor the respective movants that the court may summarily dispose of the case without trial.

Samson got out of the gate first, moving for summary judgment on all claims asserted by PYR. PYR countered with a motion for partial summary judgment attacking Samson’s allegedly unlawful pooling of PYR’s interests, Samson’s alleged failure to provide information pertaining to the development or operation of the properties, and Samson’s alleged failure to make a “complete assignment” of a rever-sionary working interest upon project payout. PYR’s motion initially appears to be a narrower, surgical strike. However, its potential effect is virtually as broad as Samson’s motion because if PYR’s motion is granted, it will receive complete relief thereby mooting alternative claims.

The core issue is whether Samson was authorized to pool PYR’s interests in the tract where the gas well is located. That pivotal question must be examined in light of principles governing determinations of motions for summary judgment. 3 The court’s analysis is aided by a court-appointed subject-matter expert, Ernest E. Smith, Esq., 4 who through written reports and direct consultations ably and objectively advised the court on essential topics at issue in this litigation. Professor Smith’s appointment followed a protocol conceived by “Court Appointed Scientific Experts (CASE),” a project of the American Association for the Advancement of *790 Science (Science magazine publisher). The protocol is recommended by the Federal Judicial Center. 5

III. Procedural and Factual Background

The central transaction in this case is a 2003 Purchase and Sale Agreement (PSA) between Venus Exploration, Inc. (Venus) and Samson. Venus sold to Samson its 50% interest in mineral fee and leasehold interests in various tracts of land in the Nome Field in Jefferson County, Texas. It reserved two interests in the properties. One was a royalty (referred to in the agreement as an overriding royalty interest (ORRI)) reserved to the extent that existing royalties burdening the properties did not exceed a specified size. The other, termed a “reversionary working interest,” was to be assigned to Venus after project payout, i.e., the point at which Samson recovered certain defined investment expenses from a specified amount of gross proceeds.

Properties covered by the PSA included the 122.57 acre tract mentioned earlier. The parties now refer to it as “Tract 3” and also as “Sun Mineral Fee tract.” This tract, like other mineral fees and leaseholds covered by the PSA, was owned originally by Sun Oil Company (Sun). In 1993 Sun entered into a farmout agreement and a Joint Operating Agreement (JOA) with Anadarko. The following year it executed a term mineral deed conveying a 60% interest in the Sun Mineral Fee tract and other tracts to Anadarko. In 1994 a gas well was drilled on one of the mineral fee tracts subject to the Anadarko farmout, and a pooled unit (the Sun Fee No. 1 Gas Unit) was formed.

In 1996 Sun conveyed all of its remaining interest in these properties, except for certain rights in the existing gas well, to Anadarko.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
456 F. Supp. 2d 786, 164 Oil & Gas Rep. 19, 2006 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 66416, 2006 WL 2664450, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pyr-energy-corp-v-samson-resources-co-txed-2006.