Ricks Exploration, Inc. v. Cross Timbers Oil Co.

25 F. App'x 690
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedOctober 9, 2001
Docket00-6075, 99-6370
StatusUnpublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 25 F. App'x 690 (Ricks Exploration, Inc. v. Cross Timbers Oil Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ricks Exploration, Inc. v. Cross Timbers Oil Co., 25 F. App'x 690 (10th Cir. 2001).

Opinion

ORDER AND JUDGMENT *

MURPHY, Circuit Judge.

I. INTRODUCTION

Ricks Exploration, Inc. (“Ricks”) brought suit against Cross Timbers Oil Co. (“Cross Timbers”) in district court asserting, inter alia, various claims sounding in both contract and tort. The district court granted summary judgment in favor of Cross Timbers on each of the contract and tort claims and also awarded it costs as the prevailing party under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 54(d)(1). Ricks appeals both orders. This court exercises jurisdiction over these appeals pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291 and Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 54(b) 1 and affirms.

II. BACKGROUND

A. Factual Background

Those facts necessary to provide context to this appeal, stated in the manner most favorable to Ricks as the nonmoving party, are as follows. This litigation centers upon the meaning of an Exploration Agreement entered into between Ricks and Southland Royalty Co. (“Southland”). At the time of the execution of the Exploration Agreement, Southland owned unproven oil and gas leasehold interests covering large tracts of land in Texas County, Oklahoma. Upon learning of Southland’s interests in the leaseholds, Ricks approached Southland about the possibility of establishing a drilling program whereby Ricks would drill for gas or oil and, if successful, earn the rights to certain acreage within Southland’s leaseholds. In return, depending on whether Southland chose to participate in the drilling of any particular well and the extent of its participation, Southland would retain a twenty percent overriding royalty interest, a fifty percent interest in the well itself, or something in between. After lengthy negotiations and the exchange of numerous drafts, Ricks and Southland reached the agreement embodied in the Exploration Agreement.

The Exploration Agreement identified six different prospect areas, denominated Prospect A through F, within which Ricks could initiate drilling operations. The dispute in this case relates to the rights Ricks acquired based upon its drilling operations *693 in Prospect A. 2 Prospect A is comprised of sections 22, 26, 27, 34, and 35. 3 Under the Exploration Agreement, Ricks was to drill an Initial Test 4 in section 27. 5 If the Initial Test were capable of producing oil or gas in commercial quantities and South-land did not participate in the drilling, Ricks would earn a full interest in section 27 and an assignment of fifty percent of Southland’s rights in eight adjacent spacing units. The Exploration Agreement provided that the parties were to reach “mutual consent” as to which eight adjacent spacing units Ricks would earn.

As contemplated by the Exploration Agreement, Ricks ultimately drilled its Initial Test on Prospect A in section 27. Because the Initial Test produced gas in commercial quantities and because Southland had not participated in the drilling of the initial test, Ricks earned 100% of South-land’s rights in section 27. In addition, Ricks earned a fifty percent interest in the following eight 160-acre quarter-sections (i.e. gas well spacing units): the southwestern and southeastern quarter-sections of section 22, the northwestern and southwestern quarter-sections of section 26, the northwestern and northeastern quarter-sections of section 34, and the northwestern and northeastern quarter-sections of section 35. 6

The Exploration Agreement also contemplated that Ricks could earn additional acreage by drilling Development Wells on land it earned through the drilling of the Initial Test. 7 Under the provisions of the Exploration Agreement relating to Development Wells, for every Development Well drilled which produces the requisite amount of oil or gas, Ricks “shall have the right ... to extend the field beyond the limits of the acreage earned by the drilling of a particular Initial Test, one drilling and spacing unit at a time (whether within or outside the boundaries of a Prospect).” In 1997, after Cross Timbers succeeded to Southland’s position in the Exploration Agreement, Ricks drilled or participated in the drilling of conforming Development Wells in the northern half of Section 34 and the southern half of section 22. 8 Accordingly, pursuant to the terms of the Exploration Agreement, Cross Timbers *694 conveyed to Ricks a fifty percent interest in the northern half of section 22 and the southern half of section 34. 9

The trouble at the heart of this dispute began when Ricks asserted the right to drill wells on section 3. Section 3 is outside of Prospect A, lying directly south of Section 34. During a series of discussions in the fall of 1998, representatives of Cross Timbers asserted that the Exploration Agreement prohibited the drilling of wells on section 3 because any such well would not qualify as either a Development Well or a Extension Well. 10 Cross Timbers further indicated that it intended to drill its own well on section 3. For its part, Ricks asserted that paragraph 12 of the Exploration Agreement, the paragraph relating to Extension and Development Wells, gave it the absolute right to extend to the field to spacing units both inside and outside of Prospect A as necessary to fully develop any gas or oil field discovered through its drilling operations. 11

B. Procedural Background

On October 20, 1998, Ricks filed a complaint in district court seeking the following two forms of declaratory relief: (1) a declaration that the Exploration Agreement gave it the right to drill a well on section 3; and (2) a declaration that Cross Timbers had elected not to participate in the drilling of the well in section 3 proposed by Ricks. Two days later, Ricks filed a motion for a preliminary injunction, asking the district court to enjoin Cross Timbers from drilling its own proposed well in section 3. After the district court denied Ricks’ request for a preliminary injunction, Ricks filed an amended complaint asserting, inter alia, two contract claims and four tort claims. 12 In its contract-based causes of action, Ricks asserted as follows: (1) Cross Timbers had *695

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25 F. App'x 690, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ricks-exploration-inc-v-cross-timbers-oil-co-ca10-2001.