Schultheiss v. Heinrich Ents. Inc.

2016 Ohio 121
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 12, 2016
Docket15CA20
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 2016 Ohio 121 (Schultheiss v. Heinrich Ents. Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schultheiss v. Heinrich Ents. Inc., 2016 Ohio 121 (Ohio Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

[Cite as Schultheiss v. Heinrich Ents. Inc., 2016-Ohio-121.]

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT WASHINGTON COUNTY

PATRICIA J. SCHULTHEISS, : Case No. 15CA20

Plaintiff-Appellant, :

v. : DECISION AND JUDGMENT ENTRY HEINRICH ENTERPRISES, : INC., ET AL., : RELEASED: 1/12/2016 Defendants-Appellees. : APPEARANCES:

Ethan Vessels, Fields, Dehmlow & Vessels, LLC, Marietta, Ohio, for appellant.

James S. Huggins and Daniel P. Corcoran, Theisen Brock, LPA, Marietta, Ohio, for appellee. Harsha, J. {¶1} The trial court granted summary judgment to Heinrich Enterprises, Inc.

and other defendants (collectively “Heinrich defendants”) on Patricia Schultheiss’s

complaint to cancel a 1950 oil and gas lease because of lack of production and breach

of implied covenants to reasonably develop the land. The trial court declared that the

lease was valid and binding on Schultheiss’s property.

{¶2} The trial court determined that a 1963 assignment to the lessees of the

lessor’s royalty interest in return for the provision of free gas for domestic purposes

satisfied the conditions of the lease. In the alternative the trial court also determined

that the production in paying quantities from two wells located not on her property, but

on the noncontiguous property in the original leasehold, held the entire lease even

though she received no royalties from the production of those wells. The trial court also Washington App. No. 15CA20 2

rejected her second claim, determining that there was no breach of the implied

covenant to develop the land.

{¶3} Citing the lack of oil and gas production from 1977 to 1981, including a

shut-in period from 1979 through 1980 in which even domestic gas was not produced,

Schultheiss argues that the trial court erred in rejecting her claim that the lease expired

by the terms in the habendum clause. The Heinrich defendants do not deny the

underlying basis of this argument, but instead argue that this contention is barred by the

statute of limitations and laches. However, we agree with Schultheiss for several

reasons. First, the trial court did not address her argument concerning lack of

production from her well. Instead it concluded adjacent wells held the entire original

leasehold. However, this could not occur because the lease terminated before those

wells existed. Second, the Heinrich defendants waived the affirmative defenses

because they did not assert the statute of limitations and laches in their answer or seek

leave to amend their answer to include them. Third, it is questionable whether the

claimed affirmative defenses apply where the lease terminates under the express

language of the contract and revests the leased estate in the lessor by operation of law.

Because the termination of a lease by the operation of the habendum clause is

automatic, any delay in bringing suit is immaterial.

{¶4} The oil and gas lease expired in accordance with its own express

provisions when no oil or gas was produced from 1977 to 1981, including a two-year

period in which not even domestic gas was produced. We sustain her assignment of

error and reverse the judgment of the trial court. Schultheiss’s remaining contentions

are rendered moot by our ruling. Washington App. No. 15CA20 3

I. FACTS

{¶5} In November 1950 Albert and Jennie File granted an oil and gas lease to

Andrew Cline. The lease covered 112 acres in Warren and Marietta Townships,

Washington County, Ohio, including the 48 acres now owned by Schultheiss. The Files

granted Cline and his heirs or assignees “all the oil and gas” in the property for a

primary term of ten years and a secondary term “as much longer as oil or gas is found

in paying quantities thereon.” In return the Files were to receive the payment of one-

eighth of all the oil produced and one-eighth of the sale proceeds of any gas produced.

{¶6} In 1951, the Albert File Well No. 1 was drilled and completed on what is

now Schultheiss’s property. Appellee Heinrich Enterprises, Inc. is the current operator

of the well, which is the only one on the Schultheiss property. In 1963, Schultheiss’s

predecessors-in-interest, Howard and Patricia Strickler, assigned to Heinrich’s

predecessor-in-interest, Fort Harmar Oil & Gas Company, their one-eighth royalty

interest in the Albert File Well No. 1 in return for the use of gas for their dwelling on the

property. As a result of the assignment no lessee of the property has paid any royalties

since 1963 for production related to the Albert File Well No. 1.

{¶7} According to then-lessee Carl Heinrich’s own records, the well-produced

no oil or gas from January 1977 through September 1981, and the well did not produce

even domestic gas for the benefit of Schultheiss’s predecessors-in-interest in 1979 and

1980 when the well was shut-in. The lessees’ own production records additionally

reported only sporadic production of oil or gas in the succeeding years from this well,

including no gas production from 2009 through 2012 and oil production of only 2 barrels

in 2009 and no barrels from 2009 through 2012. The Heinrich defendants admit that for Washington App. No. 15CA20 4

at least the last eight years, the Albert File Well No. 1 has produced only oil or gas for

domestic use. This domestic gas has been provided to Schultheiss for the dwelling on

her property in accordance with the 1963 assignment.

{¶8} As time passed the interests in the original 1950 leasehold estate were

divided among different lessors and lessees. In 1977, W. Geoffrey Cline assigned his

interest in the lease, including the royalty interest in the Albert File Well No. 1, to Carl

Heinrich. In 1983, Heinrich assigned his interest in a 30-acre tract of land, which was

part of the original leasehold and then owned by Ralph and Patricia Lindamood, to

Bobby Anderson. The Ralph Lindamood Well No. 1 was drilled on the Lindamoods’

property in that year.

{¶9} A few months later Anderson entered into an agreement with the

Lindamoods and Howard and Grace Strahler to pool the Lindamoods’ 30-acre tract with

additional property not included in the original leasehold. The pooled land formed a

drilling unit on part of the acreage of the original leasehold, but it did not include

Schultheiss’s property. The Strahler and Lindamood Ralph Well No. 2, which was

drilled on the pooled acreage, was located on the original leasehold property. The

Ralph Lindamood Well No. 1 has produced oil and/or gas from 1988 to 2012, and the

Strahler and Lindamood Ralph Well No. 2 has produced oil and/or gas from 1988 to

2009. The lessees paid royalties to the appropriate landowners for these wells from

1997 through 2013. Schultheiss received nothing because she did not own the land that

produced the oil and gas. And her predecessor-in-interest had agreed to accept gas for

personal use in lieu of royalties. Through various assignments, appellees succeeded to

the original lessees’ interest in the lease. Washington App. No. 15CA20 5

{¶10} In October 2013 Schultheiss filed a complaint in the Washington County

Court of Common Pleas against the Heinrich defendants. In her subsequently

amended complaint, Schultheiss sought a declaration that the 1950 oil and gas lease no

longer encumbered her property because: (1) there had not been production of oil and

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2016 Ohio 121, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schultheiss-v-heinrich-ents-inc-ohioctapp-2016.