Rippy Interests, LLC v. William L. Nash, John D. Nash, Charles Nash and US KingKing, LLC

475 S.W.3d 353, 2014 Tex. App. LEXIS 9276, 2014 WL 4114328
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 21, 2014
Docket10-12-00233-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 475 S.W.3d 353 (Rippy Interests, LLC v. William L. Nash, John D. Nash, Charles Nash and US KingKing, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rippy Interests, LLC v. William L. Nash, John D. Nash, Charles Nash and US KingKing, LLC, 475 S.W.3d 353, 2014 Tex. App. LEXIS 9276, 2014 WL 4114328 (Tex. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

*355 OPINION

REX D. DAVIS, Justice.

This .is a summary judgment appeal. The trial court granted the amended motion for summary judgment of Appellee U.S. KingKing, LLC (KingKing) and denied the cross-motion for summary judgment of Appellant Rippy Interests, LLC (Rippy). 1 Rippy appeals, complaining that the trial court erred in granting KingK-ing’s amended motion and in denying Rip-py’s cross-motion. We agree; we will reverse the summary judgment in favor of KingKing (and the Nashes), render judgment in part for Rippy, and remand the. case in part for further proceedings.

Factual Background

On January 18, 2006, William L. Nash, John Donald Nash, and Charles Nash granted Range Production I, L.P. an .oil, gas, and mineral lease (the Range Lease) on approximately 1,888 acres of land in Leon County. The Range Lease had a primary term of three years with an option to extend the term for two years. The option was exercised.

The Range Lease provides in pertinent part: •

2. Unless sooner terminated or longer kept in force under other provisions hereof, this lease shall remain in force for a term of three (8) years from the date hereof, hereinafter called “primary term,” and as long thereafter as operations, as hereinafter defined, are conducted upon said land with no cessation for more than ninety (90) consecutive days. '
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6. Whenever used in this lease the word “operations” shall mean operations for and any of the following drilling, testing, completing, reworking, re-completing, deepening, plugging back or repairing of a well in search for or in an endeavor to obtain production of.oil, gas, sulphur or other minerals, excavating a mine, production of oil, gas, sulphur or other mineral, whether or not in paying quantities. [Emphases added.]

In September 2009,.Range Production assigned the Range Lease to Rippy, and in September 2010, Rippy received a drilling permit for a well on the Range Lease. Also in September 2010, the Nashes granted a “top lease” 2 to KingKing (the KingK-ing lease) on the 1,888 acres. The KingK-ing lease was expressly subordinate to the Range Lease and was to become effective only upon the expiration of the Range Lease. The payment terms of the KingK-ing Lease were $325 per acre, with $25 per acre payable at signing and $300 per acre payable if the Range Lease expiréd and the KingKing Lease took effect, plus a 25% royalty. '

In his deposition, Charles Nash said that in “probably” October 2010, he spoke with who he thought was Rippy’s landman, who told Charles that a surveying crew would be on the lease to survey for a well site. Charles was aware of Rippy’s drilling permit and spoke with Diane of KingKing about the two leases “coming together” *356 “close to the time frame issue on January 18.”

Around January 1, 2011, Charles called KingKing to tell them that Rippy was starting to work. He told Diane: “Hey, you know, we might have a problem here; they’re starting to work here, and I don’t know who’s right or wrong here.” ' Charles knew that if the Range Lease expired and the KingKing Lease became effective, the Nashes would be paid $300 per acre.

On January 7, Charles signed a damage release and acknowledged payment for wellsite-pad construction and access road use. The surface-damage payment later made by Rippy was $28,650. Rippy points to the' release and payment documents to show that' it was constructing a 2.88-acre well site and a 2.92-acre road to the well sité.

As for the construction that Charles ob-seryed in early January, he testified that it was:

Just general construction of the building of an oil well pad, the road construction, pad preparation, hauling of clay to the road and pad, eventually rocking it, their water wells, setting the conductor pipe, moving the rig in.

Charles said that, by January 17, the pad was started, but nothing was complete. He testified that the conductor pipe had been installed on either January 12 or 13. Charles assumed that Rippy was “going to eventually drill a well there if they were doing the dirt work to prepare the pad site.”

On January 18, Charles placed a lock on the gate to the site. His explanation for doing that was that he wanted Rippy and KingKing to communicate because he did not know which lease was valid. He had spoken with KingKing, and Diane told him that she did not think that “starting a road site, well site, was valid to hold the lease beyond the expiration of the term.” Also, around January 18, Charles spoke with Nick McDonough, a lawyer for KingKing, and he told Charles that he did not think that “starting preparation of the road or well pad was sufficient to hold the lease.”

After Rippy’s workers cut the lock and entered the property, Charles called the police. His explanation for doing so was “to have some documented proof that they entered the property when they may not have had a valid lease.” When the deputy arrived, Charles told him that there was a dispute between two oil companies and that the Nashes were in the middle of it. The deputy concluded that it was a civil dispute, and no arrests were made.

In his affidavit, Charles Rippy, the managing partner of Rippy Interests, stated:

In January 20111 hired Wayne Davis to serve as general contractor for the drilling of the Nash 1H well on the premises of the Nash lease.
I received bids and hired Fluid Disposal Specialties, Inc., Zoch Construction, Inc., and Pipe Maintenance, Inc. to prepare a well pad, construct an access road, and to install conductor pipe at the well location for the Nash 1H lease. The work commenced on January 7, 2011 and continued up to and after January 18,2011.
On January 10, 2011 I called Energy Drilling Company to solicit a bid for a drilling rig to be provided to the Nash 1H well site.' I received a bid for a drilling rig on January 18, 2011.
On January 18, 2011, the gate constructed on the site was locked by the owner Charles Nash. Our contractors gained access to the site and continued construction. On January 19, 2011, the police had been called to arrest our contractors for criminal trespass. No arrest occurred and our contractors then continued working.
*357 On February 12, 2011 I signed a contract with Energy Drilling Services' for the provision of a drilling rig and drilling of a well. The rig was provided.'and drilling commenced between February 25, 2011 and March 1, 2011.
As of March of 2011, Rippy Interests had expended $849,404.00 in pursuit- of drilling the Nash 1H well.

Mr. Rippy testified that they drilled a vertical well to 7,900 feet as a pilot hole.

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475 S.W.3d 353, 2014 Tex. App. LEXIS 9276, 2014 WL 4114328, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rippy-interests-llc-v-william-l-nash-john-d-nash-charles-nash-and-us-texapp-2014.