Sotrana-Texas Corp. v. Mogen

551 F. Supp. 433
CourtDistrict Court, D. North Dakota
DecidedJanuary 7, 1983
Docket4:00-k-00005
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 551 F. Supp. 433 (Sotrana-Texas Corp. v. Mogen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. North Dakota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sotrana-Texas Corp. v. Mogen, 551 F. Supp. 433 (D.N.D. 1983).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

VAN SICKLE, District Judge.

In this diversity action, plaintiff seeks judgment declaring that the Mogen federal oil production unit is valid. Defendants resist, arguing that the unit is invalid because it was formed in bad faith.

I. Background

On February 18, 1976, the Mogens executed three oil and gas leases, and on April 23, 1976, a fourth lease, all to Agri-Empire for five year terms. William Champion, an agent for Agri-Empire, negotiated the leases with Clinton Mogen, the Mogen family member that handled the leasing of family property. Apparently, on the day that the first three leases were signed, Champion and Mogen went over the leases together, discussing the clauses in the leases, including the clause that allowed the lessee to form an oil production unit of the leased land. The unit clause provided:

[Ljessee shall have the right to unitize, pool, or combine all or any part of the above described lands as to one or more of the formations thereunder with other lands in the same general area by entering into a cooperative or unit plan of development or operation approved by any governmental authority and, from time to time, with like approval, to modify, change or terminate any such plan or agreement and, in such event, the terms, conditions and provisions of this lease shall be deemed modified to conform to the terms, conditions, and provisions of such approved cooperative unit of development or operation . . . and this lease shall .not terminate or expire during the life of such plan or agreement.

On September 27, 1976, Agri-Empire assigned its interest in the Mogen lease to Bridger Petroleum Corporation, but reserved an overriding royalty of 5% of %ths. Effective January 1, 1980, Bridger Petroleum was merged into Home Petroleum Corporation (hereafter Home). In April 1980, Home decided to drill a well in the section adjacent to the areas covered by the Mogen lease. Drilling commenced on October 26, 1980, but Home later abandoned the well as unproductive.

*435 On February 2, 1980, Mogen top-leased 1 the land covered under the original four leases to Yockim, retaining for himself a Vsth royalty. Yockim then conveyed his top-lease interest to the defendants Fayette Oil & Gas Corporation and Ferguson Oil and Gas Company, Incorporated.

In November 1980, Home began considering the formation of a federal unit on the leased land in order to extend the leases beyond their five year term. Home’s geological section indicated that this land would be a likely spot to form a federal unit and Home’s management initiated preparation for such a unit.

An oil production unit is a pooling of lands covering a common oil reservoir for the purpose of extracting that oil in the most efficient manner. The unit increases efficiency in oil recovery because it eliminates the drilling of unnecessary wells and thereby conserves resources by eliminating the underground waste and loss of oil that would result from unnecessary wells. Once a unit is formed the life of the primary lease is extended until the unit is no longer operative and during this time the profits from the oil recovered are distributed among mineral and leasehold owners according to a complicated formula that takes into account surface acreage among other factors.

On December 3,1980, Home submitted its application for a federal unit to the United States Geological Survey (USGS). 2 Home claims that it mailed a copy of the unit plan to the Mogens for tHeir ratification about December 5, 1980. The Mogen family refused to ratify the unit plan, apparently after talking to Yockim. In accordance with the power granted to the lessee under the Mogen leases, Agri-Empire and Home committed the Mogen’s interest in the leased land to the Mogen unit. On December 23, the USGS approved the Mogen unit.

On October 5, 1981, Agri-Empire and Home assigned their interests in the Mogen leases to Sotrana-Texas Corp., the plaintiff in this action. The USGS has extended the term of the Mogen federal unit to January 30, 1983.

II. Discussion

The plaintiff lessee asks this court to declare valid the federal unit formed on the leased premises. This declaration would have the effect of extending the primary lease, which provides that “this lease shall not terminate or expire during the life of the (unit) plan or agreement.”

The controlling law concerning the validity of oil production units stems from two Tenth Circuit cases decided in 1954, Boone v. Kerr-McGee Oil Industries, 217 F.2d 63, and Phillips Petro. Co. v. Peterson, 218 F.2d 926. The first case, Boone raised the issue whether a unitization agreement made by the lessees would be valid against the lessors who object to the formation of that unit. The court held that the test for the validity of the unit was whether the lessees exercised “good faith” in forming the unit. 217 F.2d at 65. The court stated that good faith “simply means that what is done must be done honestly to effectuate the object and purpose the parties had in mind in providing for the exercise of such power (to unitize).” Since the purpose of forming a unit is to develop the oil and gas resources with greatest efficiency, the court then must determine whether the lessee’s intention in forming the unit was to increase the efficiency of recovery.

The Boone court, however, applied this principle in a very restrictive manner. After stating that the law presumes good faith and that the lessor must affirmatively establish bad faith, 217 F.2d at 65, the court went on to examine the evidence which suggested that unitization would be an efficient method of oil recovery. From this evidence, the court apparently, without *436 stating as much, inferred that the lessee’s intention was to increase the efficiency of gas recovery. The court did not attribute much, if any, significance to the fact that the unit was formed just prior to the termination of the lease, nor did it discuss whether the unit would work to the lessee’s economic advantage at the expense of the lessor. In sum, the reality behind the court’s words appears to be that the unit would be upheld if the geology indicated that the normal advantages of unitization would result under these circumstances. Since, in Boone the geology supported the unit, the court upheld it.

At first blush, the court in Phillips appears to make a significant change in the Boone analysis when it states that in addition to the requirement that the lessee act in good faith, the lessee must act with due regard for the interests of the lessor:

A lessee is bound by implied covenants in the lease ... in the case of unitization, to act fairly and in good faith, with due regard for the lessor’s interests, and to provide for a fair apportionment of the oil produced.

218 F.2d at 964 (footnotes omitted).

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Bluebook (online)
551 F. Supp. 433, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sotrana-texas-corp-v-mogen-ndd-1983.