Samson Exploration, LLC (Formerly Samson Lone Star, L.P.) v. T.S. Reed Properties, Inc.

521 S.W.3d 766, 60 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 1413, 2017 WL 2713047, 2017 Tex. LEXIS 599
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJune 23, 2017
Docket15-0886
StatusPublished
Cited by96 cases

This text of 521 S.W.3d 766 (Samson Exploration, LLC (Formerly Samson Lone Star, L.P.) v. T.S. Reed Properties, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Samson Exploration, LLC (Formerly Samson Lone Star, L.P.) v. T.S. Reed Properties, Inc., 521 S.W.3d 766, 60 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 1413, 2017 WL 2713047, 2017 Tex. LEXIS 599 (Tex. 2017).

Opinion

Justice Guzman

delivered the opinion of the Court.

In this dispute involving mineral interests pooled for natural gas production, lessors and other stakeholders allege the lessee underpaid royalties owed to them under their mineral leases and pooling agreements. 1 One group of stakeholders asserts claims arising from the amendment of a pooled-unit designation that changed the unit’s boundaries and withdrew a producing well from that unit (the Unpooling Stakeholders). Another group seeks to enforce a contractual obligation to pay royalties on a pooled unit that indisputably encompasses two producing wells, but -one of those wells had already been included within the boundaries of another pooled unit (the Overlapping Unit Stakeholders).

The issues presented largely center on the lessee’s efforts to avoid a contractual obligation to pay royalties to the Overlapping Unit Stakeholders for production from a zone shared by the two pooled units. The lessee’s main contract-avoidance theory is that (1) pooling necessarily effects a cross-conveyance of title; (2) a pooled unit is not valid unless title is cross-conveyed; (3) the production zone for the disputed well was previously committed to another pooled unit; (4) title cannot be conveyed twice; and (5) as a result, the subsequently pooled unit is invalid for purposes of the agreement to pay royalties. The Overlapping Unit Stakeholders dispute that cross-conveyance of title between lessors in a pooled unit is required to form a valid unit, but argue that any such requirement is limited to pooling effected by joint or community leases. The Overlapping Unit Stakeholders further argue, in the alternative, that cross-conveyance of title is merely a theory of implied or presumed contractual intent that can be—and was in this case—expressly disclaimed. As their primary argument, however, the Overlapping Unit Stakeholders assert that ineffective conveyance of title is not a valid defense to a breach-of-contract action.

The lower courts held the agreement to pay royalties is enforceable, and we agree. Ineffective conveyance of title does not preclude the lessee’s liability under a contract theory. With respect to the other issues raised in the cross-petitions for review, we hold:

• the lessee’s quasi-estoppel and scrivener’s error defenses to contract enforcement fail as a matter of law;
• the lessee is not entitled to recoup royalty payments from stakeholders in another pooled unit;
• our decision in Hooks v, Samson *771 Lone Star, Ltd. Partnership 2 , precludes the Unpooling Stakeholders’ claims; and
• the court of appeals properly construed a proportionate-reduction clause to award royalties owed to the Overlapping Unit Stakeholders in accordance with their- 50% mineral-interest ownership.

Accordingly, we affirm the court of appeals’ judgment.

I. Factual and Procedural Background

Samson Exploration, LLC (formerly Samson Lone Star, L.P.) is the lessee under adjacent East Texas mineral leases unilaterally pooled for natural gas development. The litigation over royalties owed under the mineral leases involves multiple stakeholders, three gas wells, and two pooled units. Samson was authorized to pool the leases, and the pooled units conform to the terms of the pooling provisions in the underlying leases, 3 but Samson’s execution, of the pooling unit designations generated a, dispute about the production attributable to each pooled unit. The material facts are, for the most part, undisputed.

A. Unpooling Claims

In mid-2001, Samson created the Black Stone Minerals A No. 1 Gas Unit (Black Stone Minerals Unit), which had boundaries of 6,000 to 13,800 feet subsurface. Samson obtained production from two wells within the pooled unit’s boundaries. The first well, which produced from 12,304 feet to 12,332 feet subsurface, was located on property leased by Black Stone Minerals Co. The second well was on the Joyce DuJay lease and produced from 13,150 to 13,176 feet subsurface. After obtaining production from both wells - in the unit, Samson unilaterally amended ■ the unit’s boundaries, reducing the surface acreage committed to the unit and changing the pool’s depths to 12,400 feet and below. The amended unit was renamed the Joyce Du-Jay No. 1 Gas Unit (DuJayl/Amended Unit). Altering .the pooling unit’s boundaries had the effect of excluding the first well from the amended and renamed unit. Samson amended .the unit in this manner because,, despite, a co-tenant’,s consent to pooling, Black Stone Minerals exercised a contractual right against pooling its mineral interests.

After amendment and renaming, Samson did not attribute any production from the first well to the DuJayl/Amended Unit. Asserting breach-of-contract claims, stakeholders in the DuJayl/Amended Unit (the Unpooling Stakeholders) contend the amendment was improper and Samson therefore owes them royalties based on production from the first well. However, in a recent case involving the same circumstances, Hooks v. Samson Lone Star, Ltd. Partnership, we held the unpooling claims of similarly situated stakeholders were not viable because they had ratified the amendment altering the Black Stone Minerals Unit’s boundaries and renaming it the DuJayl/Amended Unit. 4 Our holding, we said, was based “solely on the facts that [the stakeholders] received [from Samson] notice of an amendment to the unit desig *772 nation, accepted royalties from the amended unit, and [did] not challenge the amended unit.” 5

B. Overlapping Units Claims

After establishing the DuJayl/Amended Unit, Samson drilled a third well, which, like the second well, was located on the Joyce DuJay lease. About ten months later, Samson retroactively designated a new unit covering the depth at which the third well was producing—12,197 to 12,342 feet. The new unit was named the Joyce DuJay A No. 1 Gas Unit (DuJay-A Unit or Overlapping Unit) and largely included the same surface area as the DuJayl/Amended Unit plus additional acreage from the T.S. Reed Properties lease (Reed lease). Though the third well produced above the DuJayl/Amended Unit’s subsurface boundaries, the DuJay-A Unit’s boundaries extend to “production occur[ing] below a depth of 12,000 feet,” thus encompassing subsurface depths that overlap the depths in the DuJayl/Amended Unit. Under the express terms of the pooling instrument, the second well is included in both the DuJayl/Amended Unit and the later-formed DuJay-A Unit. Samson has paid royalties on the second well only to the DuJayl/Amended Unit stakeholders (Unpooling Stakeholders) and not the Du-Jay-A Unit stakeholders (Overlapping Unit Stakeholders). The Overlapping Unit Stakeholders contend Samson breached its obligations under the mineral lease and pooling unit designation by failing to pay royalties on production from the second well. 6

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521 S.W.3d 766, 60 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 1413, 2017 WL 2713047, 2017 Tex. LEXIS 599, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/samson-exploration-llc-formerly-samson-lone-star-lp-v-ts-reed-tex-2017.