Special Energy Corporation, Stillwater, Mississippi, LLC v. Territory Resources, LLC

2025 OK CIV APP 14
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 28, 2024
Docket121267
StatusPublished

This text of 2025 OK CIV APP 14 (Special Energy Corporation, Stillwater, Mississippi, LLC v. Territory Resources, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Special Energy Corporation, Stillwater, Mississippi, LLC v. Territory Resources, LLC, 2025 OK CIV APP 14 (Okla. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

OSCN Found Document:Special Energy Corporation, Stillwater, Mississippi, LLC et al. v Territory Resources, LLC et al.
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Special Energy Corporation, Stillwater, Mississippi, LLC et al. v Territory Resources, LLC et al.
2025 OK CIV APP 14
Case Number: 121267
Decided: 10/28/2024
Mandate Issued: 05/22/2025
THE COURT OF CIVIL APPEALS OF THE STATE OF OKLAHOMA, DIVISION II


Cite as: 2025 OK CIV APP 14, __ P.3d __


SPECIAL ENERGY CORPORATION, STILLWATER MISSISSIPPI, LLC and WOODFORD PETROLEUM, LLC, Plaintiffs/Appellants
vs.
TERRITORY RESOURCES, LLC and SUMMIT RESOURCES MANAGEMENT, LLC, Defendants/Appellees

APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF
OKLAHOMA COUNTY, OKLAHOMA

HONORABLE RICHARD OGDEN, TRIAL JUDGE

VACATED AND REMANDED FOR FURTHER PROCEEDINGS

David A. Elder, Matthew W. Brockman, Taylor K. Weder, HARTZOG CONGER CASON, LLP, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma For Plaintiffs/Appellants

Travis P. Brown, Richard L. Rose, Scott R. Verplank, Jr., Lauren M. Brown, MAHAFFEY & GORE, P.C., Oklahoma City, Oklahoma For Defendant/Appellee Territory Resources, LLC

Brian R. Matula, FELLERS, SNIDER, BLANKENSHIP, BAILEY & TIPPENS, P.C., Oklahoma City, Oklahoma For Defendant/Appellee Summit Resources Management, LLC

JOHN F. FISCHER, JUDGE:

¶1 Special Energy Corporation appeals the judgment entered in favor of Territory Resources, LLC and Summit Resources Management, LLC.

BACKGROUND

¶2 In early 2015, Devon Energy Production Company, L.P., decided to sell oil and gas assets, including oil and gas leases, it owned in Grant County, Oklahoma. The Parties refer to these assets as the Mississippi Lime Package. Prospective purchasers were required to execute a Confidentiality Agreement prior to reviewing Devon's Confidential Information concerning its Mississippi Lime Package assets, defined in the agreements as "the Properties." The Confidential Information included title and land information regarding oil and gas leases owned by Devon and related geological and geophysical information.

¶3 In February and March of 2015, respectively, Special Energy and Territory signed essentially identical Confidentiality Agreements (respectively, the Special Energy Confidentiality Agreement and the Territory Confidentiality Agreement) and were permitted access to Devon's Confidential Information regarding its Mississippi Lime Package assets. Special Energy and Territory agreed in their respective Confidentiality Agreements that they would use the Confidential Information "for the sole purpose" of making "an economic evaluation" of the assets "in order to determine whether . . . to make an offer to acquire" the Properties being offered for sale by Devon (the Transaction).

¶4 The Agreements also provided that if either "decides that it does not wish to proceed in connection with a possible Transaction, [they] shall promptly inform Devon of that decision." A party deciding not to proceed had two options: "(a) promptly deliver to Devon all Confidential Information (and all copies thereof), or (b) promptly destroy all Confidential Information without retaining any copies, summaries or extracts thereof . . . ." Finally, the Agreements provided that "Devon may, without consent of [the other party], assign all of Devon's rights under this agreement to any person with which Devon enters into a definitive Transaction with respect to the Properties."

¶5 After viewing the Confidential Information, Territory decided not to make an offer to purchase any of Devon's Mississippi Lime Package assets. Special Energy, however, decided that it was interested in purchasing the assets. Special Energy and Devon negotiated and then signed a Purchase and Sale Agreement on July 15, 2015, which specified a closing date of July 23, 2015. The Purchase Agreement provides: "however, the effective date of the purchase and sale . . . shall be June 1, 2015 at 12:01 a.m. CST (the "Effective Date")." Pursuant to the Agreement, Special Energy purchased the Mississippi Lime Package assets for $13,000,000 and an associated seismic license fee for another $2,000,000. Included among the assets that Special Energy purchased were the Parrish lease and the Chain lease. These leases were undeveloped but the term of each had not yet expired. These leases were also included in the Confidential Information reviewed by Territory pursuant to the Confidentiality Agreement it had signed with Devon.

¶6 Special Energy filed this action on December 20, 2017, asserting claims including breach of contract, misappropriation of trade secrets, unjust enrichment, constructive trust, and fraud. Special Energy named Territory and Summit as defendants. According to the allegations in Special Energy's petition, Territory did not return or destroy the Confidential Information it received after it decided not to make an offer to purchase the Mississippi Lime Package assets. Instead, Territory used Devon's Confidential Information to obtain a "top lease" of the Parrish and Chain leases in August and December of 2015. Special Energy contends that Territory also conspired with Summit's principal, a former Devon vice-president who had responsibility for the Mississippi Lime Package assets while he was at Devon. Together, according to Special Energy, Territory and Summit identified and then "cherry-picked" the Parrish/Chain leases prospect. Special Energy alleges that Territory instructed its broker to use a different broker to obtain the Parrish and Chain top leases and to not immediately record those leases to avoid public detection and conceal its breach of the Territory Confidentiality Agreement from Special Energy and Devon. After it obtained the Parrish and Chain top leases, Territory assigned an undivided interest in those leases to Summit on an unpromoted basis.

¶7 Special Energy alleges that Territory's use of the information it acquired from access to Devon's Confidential Information to obtain its Parrish and Chain leases constituted a breach of the Territory Confidentiality Agreement. Special Energy also alleges that to conceal this breach, Territory purchased a "highly unusual and almost unheard of" small area of seismic data from Devon that, because of its "very limited scope" would "normally [have] no utility." Special Energy alleges these top leases prevented it from extending or preserving its interest in the Parrish and Chain leases it purchased from Devon. As a result of the interest Territory acquired in the two leases, Special Energy alleges that Territory was able to propose and subsequently drill a successful oil and gas well, the Kylie 1-28, to the harm and detriment of Special Energy.

¶8 The defendants filed answers and counterclaims which sought to quiet their title to the Parrish and Chain leases, arguing that Special Energy's Parrish and Chain leases had expired by their own terms and that the defendants were the rightful owners of the leases. Both defendants subsequently filed motions to dismiss Special Energy's petition.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2025 OK CIV APP 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/special-energy-corporation-stillwater-mississippi-llc-v-territory-oklacivapp-2024.