Shale Royalty LLC v. MMGJ Arkansas Upstream LLC

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Arkansas
DecidedJuly 23, 2020
Docket4:18-cv-00621
StatusUnknown

This text of Shale Royalty LLC v. MMGJ Arkansas Upstream LLC (Shale Royalty LLC v. MMGJ Arkansas Upstream LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shale Royalty LLC v. MMGJ Arkansas Upstream LLC, (E.D. Ark. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF ARKANSAS CENTRAL DIVISION

SHALE ROYALTY, LLC * PLAINTIFF * * V. * * CASE NO. 4:18CV00621 SWW MMGJ ARKANSAS, LLC * (originally named as BHP Billiton * Petroleum (Fayetteville) LLC) and * FLYWHEEL ENERGY * PRODUCTION, LLC (originally * named as SWN Production (Arkansas) * LLC, formerly known as SEECO, Inc * doing business as SEECO) * DEFENDANTS *

OPINION and ORDER

Plaintiff Shale Royalty, LLC (“Shale”) brings this action pursuant to the Court’s diversity jurisdiction, seeking overriding royalty payments from Defendants/Cross-Claimants Flywheel Energy Production, LLC (“Flywheel”)1 and MMGJ Arkansas Upstream, LLC (“MMGJ”).2 Before the Court are (1) Shale’s motion for partial summary judgment against Flywheel for breach of contract [ECF Nos. 78, 79, 80], Flywheel’s response in opposition [ECF No. 101], and Shale’s

1Flywheel initially appeared in this case under the name SWN Production (Arkansas) LLC, a company formerly known as SEECO, Inc. 2MMGJ initially appeared in this case under the name BHP Billiton Petroleum (Fayetteville) LLC. reply [ECF No. 124]; (2) Shale’s motion to exclude the opinion of Tom Daily [ECF Nos. 82, 83] and Flywheel’s response opposition [ECF No. 102]; (3) Shale’s

motion for partial summary judgment against MMGJ [ECF Nos. 84, 85, 86], MMGJ’s response in opposition [ECF No. 116], and Shale’s reply [ECF NO. 125]; (4) MMGJ’s motion for partial judgment against Flywheel [ECF Nos. 87, 88, 89],

Flywheel’s response in opposition [ECF No. 113], and MMGJ’s reply [ECF No. 126]; (5) MMGJ’s motion to exclude the opinion of Thomas A. Daily [ECF Nos. 90, 91], Flywheel’s responses in opposition [ECF Nos. 102, 110]; (6) Flywheel’s motion for summary judgment [ECF Nos. 92, 93, 94], Shale’s response in

opposition [ECF Nos. 111, 112], MMGJ’s response in opposition [ECF No. 116]; and (7) Flywheel’s replies [ECF Nos. 127, 128]; and (8) Shale’s motion for partial summary judgment against Flywheel [ECF No. 95, 96, 97], Flywheel’s responses

in opposition [ECF Nos. 101, 114], and Shale’s reply [ECF NO. 123]. After careful consideration, and for reasons that follow Shale’s motion for partial summary judgment against Flywheel for breach of contract [ECF No. 78] is denied, MMGJ’s motion for partial summary judgment against Flywheel for

breach of contract [ECF No. 87] is denied, Shale’s motions for partial summary judgment against MMGJ and Flywheel on statutory claims [ECF Nos. 84, 95] are denied, Flywheel’s motion for summary judgment [ECF No. 92] is granted in part and denied in part as provided in this opinion, and Shale’s and MMGJ’s motions to exclude the testimony of Thomas A, Daily [ECF Nos. 82, 90] are denied as moot.

I. Shale holds overriding royalty interests (the “ORRIs”) in 60 productive oil wells (the “Wells”), MMGJ holds a working interest in the underlying oil and gas leases (the “Leases”),3 and Flywheel operates the Wells pursuant to joint operating

agreements (the “JOAs”) entered by parties including Flywheel and MMGJ. Shale issued several written demands to MMGJ and Flywheel seeking payment for Shale’s share of production. After MMGJ and Flywheel denied the demands for

payment, Shale filed this lawsuit seeking relief under several theories. As to Flywheel, Shale claims breach of the JOAs, failure to pay under Ark. Code Ann. §§ 15-74-604 and 15-74-601, and unjust enrichment. As to MMGJ, Shale claims

breach of leases and assignments and failure to pay under Ark. Code Ann. §§ 15- 74-604 and 15-74-601. Flywheel and MMGJ filed crossclaims, each charging the other with the responsibility to pay Shale under the JOAs. By way of background, in late 2007, Stephens Production Company

(“Stephens”) assigned the Leases to Chesapeake Exploration, LLC

3“An overriding royalty interest is generally carved out of, and constitutes a part of, the working interest created by an oil and gas lease.” 3 Summers Oil and Gas § 29:13 (3d ed.). “A ‘working interest’ is an operating interest under an oil and gas lease that provides its owner with the exclusive right to drill, produce, and exploit the minerals. Id. (“Chesapeake”). MMGJ is the successor-in-interest to BHP Billiton Petroleum (Fayetteville) LLC, which acquired the Leases from Chesapeake. The lease

assignments conveyed “a 76% net revenue interest, reserving 24% overriding royalty interest inclusive of all existing burdens, proportionately reduced.”4 Stephens then assigned the reserved ORRIs to Shale, and those assignments

provide that the ORRIs “shall be free of all cost and expense, other than a proportionate share of all production taxes, severance taxes, windfall profit taxes and other similar taxes levied and assessed on the oil, gas and other minerals produced from the land covered by the Leases . . . . ” 5

Stephens’s assignments to Chesapeake and Shale were recorded in the relevant property records in December 2007 and January 2008. Subsequently, the JOAs, which utilize the American Association of Petroleum Landmen Form 610-

1982 Revised, were executed and incorporated into integration orders issued by the Arkansas Oil and Gas Commission. Although the JOAs were entered at different times and govern drilling operations on different portions of land, the terms of the agreements are identical, and each JOA designates Flywheel as the

operator.

4ECF Nos. 87-5, at 5; 87-6, at 2. 5ECF Nos. 87-3, 87-4. The JOAs allow a party to opt out of participation in proposed drilling operations. In the event that a party elects non-consent status, the consenting

parties take on the costs and risk of production in proportions that they elect to accept.6 In return, non-consenting parties temporarily relinquish all interest in the well and related share of production up to the point that the costs equal 100% of

the non-consenting party’s share, plus a “non-consent penalty” equal to 400% of that share.7 This penalty/recovery period is designed to compensate the consenting parties for the assumption of greater risk and obligations. It is undisputed that MMGJ elected non-consent status on each of the Wells, except

one: Hurst 8-13 7-5H32.8 The JOAs contain interrelated provisions that allocate costs and production among the parties. Article III.B provides:

Unless changed by other provisions, all costs and liabilities incurred in operations under this agreement shall be borne and paid . . . by the parties as their interests are set forth in Exhibit “A.” In the same manner, the parties shall also own all production of oil and gas from the Contract Area subject to the payment of royalties to the extent of one- eighth (1/8th) which shall be borne as hereinafter set forth.9

6ECF No. 78-15, at 7 (JOA Art. VI.B). 7Id.; ECF No. 78-19, at 3 (Integration Order 8.B.2). 8ECF No. 8, at 2 n.2. 9ECF No. 78-15, at 4 (JOA Art. III.B). It is undisputed that Exhibit A to the JOAs provides no information about overriding royalty interests10 and that absent a contract provision to the contrary,

the ORRIs burden MMGJ’s working interest. Article III.C states this default rule: Unless changed by other provisions, if the interest of any party in any lease covered hereby is subject to any royalty, overriding royalty, production payment or other burden on production in excess of the amount stipulated in Article III.B.,11 such party so burdened shall assume and alone bear all such excess obligations and shall indemnify and hold the other parties hereto harmless from any and all claims and demands for payment asserted by owners of such excess burden.12

Article VI.B.2.b provides an exception to the default rule:

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