Questar Exploration & Production Co. v. Woodard Villa, Inc.

123 So. 3d 734, 2013 WL 4009032, 2013 La. App. LEXIS 1594
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 7, 2013
DocketNo. 48,401-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 123 So. 3d 734 (Questar Exploration & Production Co. v. Woodard Villa, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Questar Exploration & Production Co. v. Woodard Villa, Inc., 123 So. 3d 734, 2013 WL 4009032, 2013 La. App. LEXIS 1594 (La. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinions

MOORE, J.

|TThe lessors, Woodard Villa Inc. and its principal, Ernest Scott Woodard (collectively, “Woodard”), appeal a summary judgment declaring that the entirety of their mineral lease was maintained, at Haynesville Shale depth, by a well drilled by the working interest owner, Questar Exploration & Production (“QEP”), when the well was drilled off the lease premises and on land not unitized with the lease premises, but the well’s horizontal shaft entered the Haynesville Shale formation under the lease premises. For the reasons expressed, we affirm.

Factual and Procedural Background

On August 5, 2004, Woodard granted a mineral lease to Cowgill & Associates affecting a tract of 1,480.3 acres in Sections 22, 23, 26, 27 and 35, T 15 N, R 9 W, in Bienville Parish.1 The lease had a primary term of three years, but in July 2007 [736]*736Woodard and Cowgill executed an extension of one year, meaning the primary term would end August 5, 2008. The body of the lease contains a lease agreement from which the adjacent lands clause has been scratched out (¶ l),2 and the appendix of the lease includes a Pugh clause (¶ 11),3 a depth limitation after primary term clause (also called a | ¡/‘horizontal Pugh clause,” ¶ 6)4 and a declared units clause (¶ 19).5 At some point, QEP acquired all of Cowgill’s rights as a working interest owner. Prior to August 5, 2008, QEP or its predecessors drilled and completed at least one well into the Cotton Valley formation on each of the five units encompassing the entirety of the lease premises. However, there were no wells into the Haynesville Shale formation.

In May 2009, QEP began drilling the Jimmy Woodard 34 H No. 1 well (“JW # 1”) on a surface location in Section 34, not part of the lease premises and not in a unit containing any of the lease premises. However, by virtue of horizontal drilling, this well turned north and reached into the Haynesville Shale unit lying under lease premises in Section 27. The parties agreed that JW # 1 entered this Haynes-ville Shale unit on July 16, 2009, about three weeks before the horizontal Pugh clause would take effect. JW # 1 was completed on November 23, 2009, after the horizontal Pugh clause took effect, and reached a maximum depth of 12,456 feet in the Section 27 Haynesville Shale unit.

Meanwhile, in August and September 2009, Woodard’s counsel [..¡notified QEP that in Woodard’s view, the lease had expired as of August 5, 2009, as to all depths below the Cotton Valley formation, notwithstanding JW #1; it offered to discuss leasing its Haynesville Shale rights to QEP. In October, Woodard demanded a partial release of the lease in exchange for [737]*737dropping any claims for damages. In December 2009, QEP responded by tendering to Woodard a partial release as to depths below the Haynesville Shale formation, 12,556 feet. Woodard declined to sign this, as it would have blocked Woodard from leasing its nearly 1,500 acres in the Haynesville Shale.

QEP filed this suit in February 2010 seeking a declaratory judgment that the lease was maintained to a depth of 12,556 feet, by virtue of JW # 1, over the whole lease premises.

Woodard answered that prior to August 5. 2008, the deepest well affecting the lease was in the Cotton Valley formation; at the end of the primary term, the lease was divided into five individual units, pursuant to the Pugh clause; during the additional year before the horizontal Pugh clause took effect, QEP drilled no wells that would maintain the lease below the Cotton Valley formation. Woodard also reconvened for damages, bonus money and higher royalties it would have received from leasing its Haynesville Shale rights.

The parties ultimately stipulated to all the facts outlined above. QEP filed the instant motion for summary judgment, seeking a declaration that the entire lease had been maintained to a depth of 12,556 feet (Haynesville Shale formation). Woodard filed a motion for partial summary judgment, ^seeking a declaration that JW # 1 did not serve to maintain the lease to any depth below Cotton Valley, or if it did, only to that portion of the lease lying in the Haynesville Shale Section 27 unit. The parties briefed their positions extensively but agreed that the legal issue was novel: can a well drilled off-lease, but reaching horizontally into a formation under the lease, maintain operations as to all, or at least part, of the lease?

At a hearing in October 2012, the parties argued their positions and submitted the stipulations previously entered. Ruling from the bench, the court initially stated that JW # 1 “was drilled apparently in Section 27, then that should be the only area that the depth limitation should apply[,]” but then concluded, “I don’t think I have a choice but to interpret it that the depth limitation applies to all of it, the leased premises if that’s what the lease says.” The court therefore granted QEP’s motion and denied Woodard’s.

Woodard has appealed, designating four assignments of error and advancing them as three issues.6

Discussion: Effect of Pugh Clause

By its second assignment of error, Woodard urges that the court erred in finding that the Pugh clause did not act to separate the maintenance requirements of the lease, so that each of the separate units created by the Office of Conservation that contains lease property is maintained separately. Woodard quotes the Pugh clause, specifically, “as to that portion of the leased premises embraced in such unit[,]” and argues that once this is | (¡triggered, a well producing from one unit “will only apply to satisfy the maintenance requirement of that unit.” In support, Woodard cites various Louisiana cases,7 [738]*738federal cases,8 out-of-state cases9 and reference books,10 as refuting QEP’s claim that “as long as a well is producing from one unit, that one well will serve to maintain all 1,480.3 acres of leased property located in any and all units, regardless of whether the activities within each separate unit may support its own maintenance.” Woodard argues that by QEP’s reasoning, a lessee need only get the entire lease premises unitized into different units, drill a well in one unit, and thereby maintain the whole lease; this would negate the purpose of the Pugh clause and create a loophole that any lessee may use to maintain acreage outside a given unit. Woodard provides several color diagrams to illustrate various situations, and argues that the declared units clause (¶ 19) forced QEP to unitize the entire lease. Woodard concludes that the Pugh clause was intended to require action by the lessee in order to maintain the lease.

QEP responds that a mineral lease is presumptively indivisible11 and lfithat even though a Pugh clause may provide for the subdivision of a lease, as occurred in Rose-berry and Peironnet, the instant Pugh clause makes no such provision. In fact, the reference to maintenance of “this lease as to that portion of the leased premises embraced in such unit or units” shows an intent not to subdivide the lease. QEP also submits that all of the lease premises are located within producing units, and hence the entire lease has been maintained.

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Bluebook (online)
123 So. 3d 734, 2013 WL 4009032, 2013 La. App. LEXIS 1594, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/questar-exploration-production-co-v-woodard-villa-inc-lactapp-2013.