Statoil USA E&P Inc. v. U.S. Dep't of the Interior
This text of 352 F. Supp. 3d 748 (Statoil USA E&P Inc. v. U.S. Dep't of the Interior) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
NANCY F. ATLAS, SENIOR UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE
Pending before the Court are Plaintiff Statoil USA E&P Inc.'s ("Statoil") Motion for Summary Judgment ("Statoil's Motion") [Doc. # 27], and an "Opposition Response and Cross-Motion for Summary Judgment" ("Government's Cross-Motion") [Doc. # 34] filed by Defendants United States Department of the Interior ("Interior"); Ryan Zinke, in his official capacity as Secretary of Interior; Office of Natural Resources Revenue ("ONRR"); and Gregory Gould, in his official capacity as Director of ONRR (collectively, the "Government"). Statoil responded to the Government's Cross-Motion and both sides filed replies.1 Statoil also filed a sur-reply.2 The American Petroleum Institute ("API") filed an amicus brief in support of Statoil's Motion.3 The Court held oral argument on the motions,4 and the motions are ripe for decision. Having considered the briefing, oral argument, applicable legal authorities, and all pertinent matters of record, the Court concludes Statoil's Motion should be denied and the Government's Cross-Motion should be granted .
I. INTRODUCTION
Every month, holders of active federal oil or gas leases, like Statoil, must submit a report and pay the United States Government through ONRR a royalty based on the report filed. Each report must state the volume of oil or gas sold, those sales' values, and what royalties are owed based on the disclosed data. Under the Federal Oil and Gas Royalty Management Act ("FOGRMA"), an entity with an obligation to report who "knowingly or willfully prepares, maintains, or submits false, inaccurate, or misleading reports" faces potentially stiff civil penalties. See
This case is an Administrative Procedure Act ("APA") challenge to an administrative penalty imposed under Section 1719(d)(1). The relevant facts are not in dispute. Over a 21-month period from April 2006 to December 2007, Statoil's predecessor-in-interest underreported the *752amount of gas it sold, resulting in a net royalty underpayment to the Government of more than $370,000. Statoil stipulated during the administrative proceeding giving rise to this case that Statoil, in January 2011, "knew the data" in its reports "w[ere] incorrect."5 For more than a year after January 2011, Statoil made several unfulfilled promises to correct its inaccurate reports. The Government informed Statoil in August 2011 that it could be penalized "for knowing or willful failure to maintain accurate information."6
In February 2012, because Statoil had not fulfilled its repeated commitments to correct the reports Statoil conceded were in error, ONRR assessed civil penalties of $406,350 against Statoil. The Government alleged that Statoil, by declining, without explanation or justification, to correct its admittedly erroneous reports on file with the Government for more than twelve months since January 2011, knowingly or willfully maintained inaccurate reports in violation of Section 1719(d)(1).
Statoil now seeks a judicial ruling invalidating the Government's interpretation of Section 1719(d)(1) and the penalty. Statoil does not challenge the $370,000 underpayment claimed by the Government.
The Court concludes that penalties under Section 1719(d)(1) were statutorily authorized and properly imposed. Consequently, the Court rejects Statoil's APA challenge.
II. BACKGROUND
A. Statutory and Regulatory Background
To develop oil and gas reserves on federal lands and the Outer Continental Shelf, the Government competitively issues oil and gas leases. When the Government issues a lease, it retains a royalty interest based on the value of oil or gas produced by the lessee. This lease and royalty system have been administered by Interior since 1920. See Mineral Leasing Act of 1920, Pub. L. No. 66-146, §§ 17-18,
Before 1983, "the system of accounting with respect to royalties" for federal oil and gas leases was "archaic and inadequate."
Congress responded by enacting FOGRMA. See Pub. L. No. 97-451,
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
NANCY F. ATLAS, SENIOR UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE
Pending before the Court are Plaintiff Statoil USA E&P Inc.'s ("Statoil") Motion for Summary Judgment ("Statoil's Motion") [Doc. # 27], and an "Opposition Response and Cross-Motion for Summary Judgment" ("Government's Cross-Motion") [Doc. # 34] filed by Defendants United States Department of the Interior ("Interior"); Ryan Zinke, in his official capacity as Secretary of Interior; Office of Natural Resources Revenue ("ONRR"); and Gregory Gould, in his official capacity as Director of ONRR (collectively, the "Government"). Statoil responded to the Government's Cross-Motion and both sides filed replies.1 Statoil also filed a sur-reply.2 The American Petroleum Institute ("API") filed an amicus brief in support of Statoil's Motion.3 The Court held oral argument on the motions,4 and the motions are ripe for decision. Having considered the briefing, oral argument, applicable legal authorities, and all pertinent matters of record, the Court concludes Statoil's Motion should be denied and the Government's Cross-Motion should be granted .
I. INTRODUCTION
Every month, holders of active federal oil or gas leases, like Statoil, must submit a report and pay the United States Government through ONRR a royalty based on the report filed. Each report must state the volume of oil or gas sold, those sales' values, and what royalties are owed based on the disclosed data. Under the Federal Oil and Gas Royalty Management Act ("FOGRMA"), an entity with an obligation to report who "knowingly or willfully prepares, maintains, or submits false, inaccurate, or misleading reports" faces potentially stiff civil penalties. See
This case is an Administrative Procedure Act ("APA") challenge to an administrative penalty imposed under Section 1719(d)(1). The relevant facts are not in dispute. Over a 21-month period from April 2006 to December 2007, Statoil's predecessor-in-interest underreported the *752amount of gas it sold, resulting in a net royalty underpayment to the Government of more than $370,000. Statoil stipulated during the administrative proceeding giving rise to this case that Statoil, in January 2011, "knew the data" in its reports "w[ere] incorrect."5 For more than a year after January 2011, Statoil made several unfulfilled promises to correct its inaccurate reports. The Government informed Statoil in August 2011 that it could be penalized "for knowing or willful failure to maintain accurate information."6
In February 2012, because Statoil had not fulfilled its repeated commitments to correct the reports Statoil conceded were in error, ONRR assessed civil penalties of $406,350 against Statoil. The Government alleged that Statoil, by declining, without explanation or justification, to correct its admittedly erroneous reports on file with the Government for more than twelve months since January 2011, knowingly or willfully maintained inaccurate reports in violation of Section 1719(d)(1).
Statoil now seeks a judicial ruling invalidating the Government's interpretation of Section 1719(d)(1) and the penalty. Statoil does not challenge the $370,000 underpayment claimed by the Government.
The Court concludes that penalties under Section 1719(d)(1) were statutorily authorized and properly imposed. Consequently, the Court rejects Statoil's APA challenge.
II. BACKGROUND
A. Statutory and Regulatory Background
To develop oil and gas reserves on federal lands and the Outer Continental Shelf, the Government competitively issues oil and gas leases. When the Government issues a lease, it retains a royalty interest based on the value of oil or gas produced by the lessee. This lease and royalty system have been administered by Interior since 1920. See Mineral Leasing Act of 1920, Pub. L. No. 66-146, §§ 17-18,
Before 1983, "the system of accounting with respect to royalties" for federal oil and gas leases was "archaic and inadequate."
Congress responded by enacting FOGRMA. See Pub. L. No. 97-451,
Pursuant to FOGRMA's grant of rulemaking authority, the Secretary of Interior has prescribed various recordkeeping and reporting rules. Any entity that must pay a royalty must send a monthly report along with its royalty payment to ONRR,
Reporting to ONRR is currently done electronically via a Form ONRR-2014, Report of Sales and Royalty Remittance ("Form ONRR-2014").
To enforce FOGRMA and its associated regulations, Congress crafted a tiered penalty scheme. See
The next tier penalizes regulated entities up to $10,000 per day (with no notice or grace period) if they knowingly or willfully fail to make a timely royalty payment; refuse to permit entry, inspection, or audit; or knowingly or willfully fail to notify Interior of the commencement or resumption of production.
The highest penalty tier, which contains the provision at issue in this case, penalizes entities up to $25,000 per day (again, with no notice or grace period) for each day one of three violations continues. See
*754
B. Factual Background
Statoil is a Texas-based oil and gas exploration and production company.9 Through its predecessor-in-interest Hydro Gulf of Mexico, LCC ("Hydro"), Statoil is the holder of Federal Lease Number 054-024160-0 (the "Green Canyon 199 Lease"), a lease located on the Outer Continental Shelf in the Gulf of Mexico.10
On August 18, 2010, ONRR's predecessor, the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Regulation, and Enforcement ("BOEMRE"),11 sent Hydro an Order to Report ("Order").12 The Order asserted that Hydro's reports from April 2006 through December 2007 for the Green Canyon 199 Lease stated incorrect gas volumes. BOEMRE based its assertion on its discovery of inconsistencies between Hydro's reported volumes and information provided by Hydro's plant operators. The Order specified the nature of the inaccuracies and attached tables documenting the discrepancies between expected and reported volume. BOEMRE directed Hydro to correct its reports within 30 days and advised Hydro of regulatory guidance and handbooks on reporting. BOEMRE further advised Hydro of its right to appeal the Order within 30 days and warned Hydro that a failure to comply could result in penalties under Section 1719 and "
On February 17, 2012, some eighteen months after BOEMRE first notified Hydro of the underreporting, ONRR's Office of Enforcement sent Hydro a Notice of Civil Penalty ("Notice of Penalty").14 The Notice of Penalty asserted that beginning on January 26, 2011, ONRR's Audit and Compliance Management ("ACM") office made numerous requests to correct reporting inaccuracies identified in the August 2010 Order. According to the Notice of Penalty, "[e]ach time Hydro was contacted, it made an unfulfilled promise to correct the inaccurate [reports] or did not respond."15 The Notice of Penalty asserted that Hydro had a "discussion" with ACM on January 26, 2011, after which "it became indisputable that [Hydro ] knew the data" in its reports "w[ere] inaccurate."16 The Notice of Penalty further explained that after the January 26 discussion, the matter was referred to ONRR's Office of Enforcement, who contacted Hydro on *755May 23, 2011, about the status of corrections. Hydro, ONRR alleged, "acknowledged the information was incorrect" and "agreed to make the corrections in one week" but "none were made."17 The Notice of Penalty further asserted that, on August 22, 2011, Hydro again "acknowledged" that "there were discrepancies in the [gas] volumes."18 The Notice of Penalty added that in an email on September 5, 2011, Hydro admitted that its reports needed correction, but Hydro continued to maintain the inaccurate information on ONRR's database.19
The Notice of Penalty assessed civil penalties under
On March 23, 2012, Statoil paid all accrued penalties under protest.22 Statoil did not fully correct all its reports until July 2012, almost two years after the August 2010 Order.23
C. Procedural Background
On March 28, 2012, Statoil requested a hearing to challenge ONRR's penalty.24 Statoil's request was referred to an Administrative Law Judge ("ALJ") within Interior.
Without any discovery, both ONRR and Statoil moved for summary judgment before the ALJ.25 Each requested resolution of threshold legal issues.26 ONRR sought summary judgment that a reporter "maintains" inaccurate information by not correcting its information on file with ONRR.27 ONRR also sought summary judgment that Statoil's conduct was "knowing or willful."28 Statoil moved for summary judgment that: (1) regulated entities only "maintain" documents they retain internally; (2) reporters may be penalized exclusively under Sections 1719(a) and (b), not Section 1719(d), for failures to correct violations after notice from ONRR; and (3) Section 1719(d)(1) penalties may only be imposed on reporters that intend to defraud the Government.29
The ALJ granted summary judgment in part for ONRR and denied summary judgment for Statoil.30 Siding with ONRR, the ALJ ruled that "maintains" encompasses keeping information on file with ONRR
*756without necessary correction.31 The ALJ, however, sided with Statoil that it was premature to rule on whether Statoil acted "knowingly or willfully" as the parties had not conducted discovery and there was a genuine factual dispute over the issue.32
After the ALJ ruled, Statoil requested leave to file an interlocutory appeal.33 According to Statoil, the controlling question of law for appeal was whether under
The Interior Board of Land Appeals ("IBLA"), an administrative appeals board within Interior, granted leave to file the interlocutory appeal.35 The ALJ suspended proceedings below pending the IBLA's decision.36
On April 29, 2015, the IBLA affirmed the ALJ's decision "to the extent" he ruled that ONRR was entitled under Section 1719(d)(1)"to assess civil penalties for knowingly or willfully failing to correct inaccuracies in its royalty reporting." Statoil USA E&P, Inc. , 185 I.B.L.A. 302, 319 (2015). The IBLA did not rule on "whether Statoil knowingly or willfully 'maintain[ed]' inaccurate information in its royalty reporting."
After the IBLA ruled, Statoil filed suit in the Southern District of Texas challenging the IBLA's interlocutory decision. Complaint, Statoil USA E & P Inc., v. U.S. Dep't of the Interior , No. 4:16-cv-00860 (S.D. Tex. Mar. 31, 2016) [Doc. # 1].
While this federal suit was pending, Statoil requested the ALJ issue an order affirming ONRR's penalty and concluding administrative proceedings.38 Statoil "expressly waive[d] all other defenses or arguments ..., other than the controlling legal question surrounding ONRR's interpretation of [ Section] 1719(d)."39 Statoil further "stipulat[ed] to the facts as alleged by ONRR in its Notice of Civil Penalty and the administrative record."40
On April 10, 2017, the ALJ accepted Statoil's waiver, affirmed ONRR's penalty based on the IBLA's resolution of the interlocutory appeal against Statoil, and deemed the administrative matter concluded.41 Statoil then appealed to the IBLA, reaffirming its express waiver and requesting the IBLA affirm the ALJ's order.
*75742 On September 29, 2017, the IBLA dismissed Statoil's appeal for failure to allege error in the ALJ's April 2017 order.43 The same day, the district court dismissed Statoil's case for failure to challenge a final agency action. See Statoil USA E & P Inc. v. U.S. Dep't of the Interior , No. 4:16-cv-00860,
On December 1, 2017, Statoil filed this lawsuit.44 Statoil challenges the ALJ's decision under the APA as "arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with law" and "in excess of statutory jurisdiction, authority, or limitations, or short of statutory right."45 See
Both parties move for summary judgment.47 Statoil moves for summary judgment that the Government's interpretation of Section 1719(d)(1) is contrary to FOGRMA and seeks vacatur of ONRR's penalty.48 The Government moves for summary judgment that its interpretation and ONRR's penalty are legally valid.49 Both sides agree that the administrative record constitutes the universe of relevant facts and that there are no disputes of material fact.
III. LEGAL STANDARDS
A. Summary Judgment
Under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 56, "[a] party may move for summary judgment, identifying each claim or defense-or the part of each claim or defense-on which summary judgment is sought." FED. R. CIV. P. 56(a). Summary judgment on a claim or part of a claim is appropriate "if the movant shows that there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law." Seacor Holdings, Inc. v. Commonwealth Ins. Co. ,
B. Administrative Procedure Act
Under the APA, courts shall "hold unlawful and set aside agency actions, findings, and conclusions found to be ... arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with law," or "in excess of statutory jurisdiction, authority, or limitations, or short of statutory right."
C. The Chevron Framework
Chevron, U.S.A., Inc. v. Nat'l Res. Def. Council, Inc. ,
IV. DISCUSSION
Statoil's briefing does not neatly distinguish among the various grounds for its challenge. Statoil appears to offer four distinct arguments. First, Statoil contends that "maintains" in Section 1719(d)(1) refers only to regulated entities' internally kept records, not external reports that reporters have filed with ONRR. Second, Statoil argues that Section 1719(d)(1) covers only criminally punishable conduct and thus requires proof that the regulated entity intended to defraud the Government. Third, Statoil contends the Government's theory amounts to penalizing a reporter's failure to correct after notice from ONRR of errors in reports, supplanting the statutory role reserved for Sections 1719(a) and (b). Fourth, Statoil argues that it lacked "fair notice" that it could be penalized under Section 1719(d)(1) for maintaining inaccurate reports with ONRR.
None of these arguments avail Statoil. In short, its first and second theories ignore Section 1719(d)(1)'s plain language and FOGRMA's manifest purposes. The third argument is not properly before the Court because of Statoil's factual concessions. Statoil's fourth argument is waived and lacks merit. Accordingly, Statoil's Motion will be denied and the Government's Cross-Motion will be granted .
A. "Maintains" in Section 1719(d)(1) Encompasses Previously Submitted Reports Left on File with ONRR Without Amendment
The seminal issue is whether, under Section 1719(d)(1), a reporter "maintains" reports it submits and leaves on file with ONRR for a prolonged period without amendment. Statoil contends that throughout FOGRMA "maintains" refers only to an entity's retention of its internal records. The Government contests this reading, arguing that the term "maintains" in Section 1719(d)(1) encompasses reports previously submitted to ONRR and left on file without amendment. The Court agrees with the Government.
Initially, the parties dispute the level of deference owed to the Government's interpretation. The Government insists its interpretation should receive deference *759under the Chevron framework. Statoil counters that greater scrutiny is required. First, Statoil contends that the Government's utilization of authority broader than previously exercised under a mature statute like FOGRMA is suspect. Second, Statoil argues that it makes an ultra vires challenge that should be reviewed without deference to the Government's interpretation. Third, Statoil argues that Section 1719(d)(1) is a hybrid statute, i.e. , a statute with both civil and criminal applications, WILLIAM N. ESKRIDGE JR., INTERPRETING LAW 334 (2016), that should be strictly construed.50
The Court concludes, for the reasons stated below, that Section 1719(d)(1) is clear and covers Statoil's relevant conduct. Because the statute is unambiguous, its "plain meaning" applies, See Adkins ,
The ordinary meaning of Section 1719(d)(1) confirms the Government's reading. FOGRMA leaves "maintain" undefined, so the Court gives the term its ordinary, plain meaning. See Taniguchi v. Kan Pac. Saipan, Ltd. ,
Statoil contests this interpretation. It urges that ONRR, not reporters, hosts the servers where reports are housed. So, according to Statoil, ONRR is in fact the entity that "maintains" submitted reports. This literal interpretation is unpersuasive. It stands to reason that two entities can "maintain" the same database in different respects. In any event, ONRR's hosting an electronic filing system does not establish that ONRR "maintains" reporters' reports on that system. A student "maintains" stellar grades, even though it is her school that stores the physical or electronic records of her grades. A teenager might "maintain" his car, even though his parents maintain the garage where it is parked. Similarly, a reporter that files with ONRR "maintains," within the ordinary sense of the term, the reports, data, and other written information on ONRR's system that the reporter submits, even though ONRR hosts the system. Notably, *760Statoil cites no provision indicating that ONRR has authority to alter sales and royalty reports submitted under FOGRMA, and the Court's review has disclosed no authority granted to ONRR to do so.
Beyond the text of Section 1719(d)(1), FOGRMA offers strong contextual support for the Government's interpretation. "[M]aintains" in Section 1719(d)(1) refers to "reports , notices, affidavits , records, data, or other written information." See
By contrast, when "maintain" is used outside of Section 1719(d)(1) to impose duties upon regulated entities, the term almost exclusively refers to internally kept "records" or "documents."51 FOGRMA directs that regulated entities "shall establish and maintain any records" reasonably required by Interior.
FOGRMA also uses "maintain" to specify the duties and authority of Interior. For instance, Interior must "implement and maintain a royalty management system,"
This variation across FOGRMA demonstrates that Congress used "maintain" in various contexts but knew how to limit the term with regard to a regulated entity and its internal documents when it chose to do so. In contrast, Congress chose in Section 1719(d)(1) to list various externally-kept documents, i.e. , affidavits, reports, among the grounds for a potential penalty. This choice is strong evidence favoring the Government's interpretation that "maintains" in that provision includes a reporter's reports submitted to ONRR.
Statoil alternatively asks the Court to read into the verb sequence of "prepares, maintains, and submits" in Section 1719(d)(1). According to Statoil, because "maintains" is wedged between "prepares" and "submits," "maintains" covers internal retention after preparation and before submission. This argument is unconvincing. Statoil cites no "sequence" canon and the Court has found none in its research. In everyday speech and writing, some verb sequences imply a strict order (e.g. , shake and (then) bake; stop, drop, and (then) roll). But many do not (e.g. , preserve, protect, and defend; "form a more perfect Union, establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defence, *761promote the general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity"52 ). Given the context surrounding the verb sequence, a non-sequential reading is appropriate.
Statoil's interpretation of "maintains" does not comport with FOGRMA's manifest purpose and drafting history. Statoil agrees Section 1719(d)(1) penalties may be assessed against regulated entities that knowingly retain inaccurate internal records. For Section 1719(d)(1) to cover these regulated entities' internal information but not cover entities who knowingly keep inaccurate reports on file with ONRR would be incongruous. Both sets of information need to be accurate for ONRR to verify lessee data and ensure timely and accurate royalty accounting and collection. During FOGRMA's drafting, Congress expressed concern for the validity of information on file with the Government. Congress identified the "fundamental problem with royalty accounting" was the "disarray" of the Government's accounts, not lessees' records. See H.R. REP. NO. 97-859, at 15-16. Given Congress's concern for the state of the Government's accounts, it would be incomprehensible for it to impose the strictest sanction for reporters internal retention of inaccurate records while allowing only lighter sanctions for knowingly or willfully keeping inaccurate information on file with the Government.
Statoil attempts to draw on legislative history to support its contention that Congress distinguished between internal and external record maintenance. Statoil cites language from the Senate Committee Report, stating that, with FOGRMA, Congress sought balance
between the need to deter violations ... and the need to avoid a situation in which exposure to very severe penalty liability for relatively minor or inadvertent violations of necessarily complex regulations becomes a major disincentive to produce oil or gas from lease sites on federal or Indian Land.
S. REP. NO. 97-512, at 17.
This excerpt does not assist Statoil. It indicates that Congress did not wish to severely penalize "inadvertent" or "relatively minor" violations. In contrast, all violations of Section 1719(d)(1) are necessarily "knowing[ ] or willful[ ]," and thus not "inadvertent." The quoted material also provides no guidance over what Congress deemed a "relatively minor" violation.
Observing that Sections 1719(d)(2) and (3) should be construed to penalize "physical theft" of oil and gas, Statoil contends that knowing maintenance of inaccurate information with ONRR is "minor" relative to the other conduct penalized by Section 1719(d). The Court disagrees. As demonstrated by the facts of Statoil's case, incorrect records on file with ONRR that understate a reporter's oil and gas sales result in artificially small royalties paid to the Government. This "paper theft," as Statoil calls it, is a seminal part of what FOGRMA was designed to address. The so-called paper theft results in artificially low royalties paid to the Government, just as physical theft does.
Moreover, knowingly maintaining inaccurate information with ONRR is not "minor" relative to conduct Statoil concedes is subject to Section 1719(d)(1), i.e. , knowing maintenance of inaccurate internal records. As noted, it would be incongruous to deem internal record maintenance a major violation worthy of sanction under Section 1719(d)(1) but, at the same time, deem the maintenance of inaccurate reports on file with ONRR, on which ONRR principally *762relies for determination of royalties due, a minor violation. Both are likely to result in royalty underpayments to the Government.
In sum, the Court concludes Statoil "maintained" its inaccurate reports, within the meaning of Section 1719(d)(1), by submitting them to ONRR and leaving them on file for a prolonged period without amendment.
B. Section 1719(d)(1) Does Not Require Proof of an "Intent to Defraud"
Statoil contends that because Section 1719(d)(1) is a punitive provision incorporated by reference into Section 1720,53 a criminal statute, Section 1719(d)(1) requires proof the reporter, lessee, or other regulated entity intended to defraud the Government. According to Statoil, Section 1719(d)(1) thus means the reporter must intend to deceive the Government and deprive it of royalties. Statoil contends, and the Government does not contest, that Statoil lacked such a malevolent mental state.
Assuming, without deciding, that Section 1719(d)(1) should be interpreted with the stringency of a criminal statute, the Court is unpersuaded by Statoil's argument. In effect, Statoil requests the Court graft an extratextual, heightened mental state requirement onto Section 1719(d)(1). To the contrary, Section 1719(d)(1) is clear regarding the mental state required. Section 1719(d)(1) is not violated unless the reporter's conduct is done either "knowingly or willfully." Neither of these mental state elements indicates, even in a criminal context, that the Government must prove intent to defraud. "[T]he term 'knowingly' merely requires proof of knowledge of the facts that constitute the offense," unless "the text of the statute dictates a different result." Dixon v. United States ,
For "willful" conduct, the term is sometimes "said to be 'a word of many meanings' whose construction is often dependent on the context in which it appears." See Bryan ,
*763The Court declines Statoil's invitation to incorporate an additional, unenumerated mental state element into Section 1719(d)(1). "The definition of the elements of a criminal offense is entrusted to the legislature." Liparota v. United States ,
Aside from its text, FOGRMA's manifest purpose and drafting history corroborates that no proof of intent to defraud is required. FOGRMA was not enacted to punish wrongdoing recognized as criminal under the common law. It was enacted to facilitate "accurate[ ]" and "timely" royalty accounting, a goal furthered by a less-culpable mental state requirement. See
In sum, "intent to defraud" is not an element of Section 1719(d)(1). As the text, purpose, and history of Section 1719(d)(1) make clear, the Government only needed to prove the violation was "knowing[ ] or willful[ ]." Accordingly, the Government properly alleged and established, via Statoil's stipulation that it "knew" its data was incorrect, the mental state element for Section 1719(d)(1) penalties.
C. Under the Government's Interpretation, Sections 1719(a) and (b) Retain a Role Distinct from Section 1719(d)(1)
Statoil contends that the Government's interpretation allows ONRR to "manufacture" a "knowing or willful" violation and contravenes Section 1719's tiered penalty structure by using Section 1719(d)(1) to supplant Sections 1719(a) and (b)'s statutory roles. Contrary to Statoil's assertion, under the Government's interpretation, Sections 1719(a) and (b) retain their distinct statutory role from Section 1719(d).
As previously stated, under Section 1719(a), ONRR may impose a penalty of up to $500 for each day any statutory, regulatory, or lease-term violation continues if that violation is not corrected within 20 days "after due notice of violation." Under Section 1719(b), the maximum daily penalty escalates to $5,000 after 40 days without correction. During the relevant time period and currently, "due notice of violation" under these provisions is transmitted by ONRR to regulated entities via a "Notice of Noncompliance." See
Statoil characterizes the Government's interpretation as follows: once a reporter receives notice, i.e. , a communication from ONRR of a reporting inaccuracy, the reporter immediately "knows" its reports are inaccurate and is thus subject to Section 1719(d) penalties. As a result, according to Statoil, the Government's interpretation provides an unjustified shortcut around Sections 1719(a) and (b). These more lenient provisions, Statoil contends, were designed to afford regulated entities an opportunity to correct their errors after notice of a violation, a path the Government's *764interpretation of Section 1719(d)(1) eliminates.
Statoil's challenge is rejected. It is not properly before the Court. To raise its interpretative point, Statoil must hypothesize rulings and remove stipulated facts from the record. Statoil creates a strawman, namely, it attacks an agency ruling that a reporter "knows" its reports are inaccurate when the reporter receives from ONRR a notice alleging an error in a report filed by the reporter. No such agency ruling exists in this case. ONRR's February 2012 Notice of Civil Penalty to Statoil did not assert, and the IBLA never ruled, that notice of the agency's contention of a reporting error automatically establishes "knowledge" by the reporter of a false or inaccurate report. Indeed, the IBLA affirmatively ruled that although it was uncontested that Statoil received notice from ONRR, "it remain[ed] to be determined whether ONRR can demonstrate that Statoil's failure to act was, in fact, knowing or willful."54 Nor is such a rule necessary to sustain ONRR's penalty. The stipulated record55 is that Hydro"knew the data was incorrect" as evidenced by its unfulfilled promises to correct its reports.56 Given this stipulation, the Court has no occasion to decide whether mere notice establishes knowledge. In sum, there is no agency ruling that "notice" automatically confers "knowledge" of that inaccuracy upon the reporter. Nor does the record require the Court to adopt such a rule to sustain ONRR's penalty.
Because there is no agency ruling that ONRR's notice automatically confers knowledge of a Section 1719(d)(1) violation, Statoil's attack is a mere strawman and it fails. Sections 1719(a) and (b) retain their distinct role from Section 1719(d). Section 1719(a) and (b) remain catch-all penalty provisions, penalizing all statutory, regulatory, and lease-term violations after receipt of a Notice of Noncompliance and an opportunity to cure, without regard to the regulated entity's mental state. Section 1719(d)(1) penalizes a narrow set of "knowing or willful" violations, which, as a matter of logic,57 cannot be, and were not in *765this case, established by receipt of a Notice of Noncompliance or mere notice from ONRR of a violation.
D. Statoil's "Fair Notice" Argument Is Waived and Lacks Merit in Any Event
Statoil contends that it lacked requisite "fair notice" of its exposure to penalties under Section 1719(d)(1). According to Statoil, the Government concedes Statoil was the first entity penalized for knowingly or willfully maintaining incorrect reports with ONRR under Section 1719(d)(1).58 The Government contends Statoil's fair notice challenge is waived and that, in any event, Statoil had fair notice based on the text and application of Section 1719(d)(1).
"There are three related manifestations of the fair warning requirement." United States v. Lanier ,
First, there is the vagueness doctrine. This doctrine "bars enforcement of 'a statute which either forbids or requires the doing of an act in terms so vague that men of common intelligence must necessarily guess at its meaning and differ as to its application.' "
Second, there is "the canon of strict construction of criminal statutes, or rule of lenity."
Third, the last manifestation of the fair warning requirement emanates from a principle of "due process" that "bars courts from applying a novel construction of a criminal statute to conduct that neither the statute nor any prior judicial decision has fairly disclosed to be within its scope." Lanier ,
In any event, Statoil expressly waived this due process argument during administrative proceedings. Before the ALJ and the IBLA, Statoil expressly waived any defense other than the "single, purely legal issue" of whether "under Section 1719(d)(1)" Statoil can be penalized "for knowingly or willfully maintaining incorrect information on [reports] previously submitted to ONRR."62 Accordingly, by its own agreement, Statoil's surviving challenge addresses the ultimate legal meaning of Section 1719(d)(1), not whether Statoil's due process rights were violated by the lack of a previous definitive resolution of the Section's meaning.
Finally, for the reasons stated in the preceding sections, the Court concludes that, "standing alone," FOGRMA makes it "reasonably clear" that Statoil's conduct was subject to sanction under Section 1719(d)(1). See Lanier ,
V. CONCLUSION AND ORDER
Statoil's APA challenge fails. Each of its four grounds either ignores FOGRMA's plain language, Statoil's own factual stipulations, or Statoil's express waiver. Consequently, the Government's interpretation and ONRR's penalty are lawful and not arbitrary, capricious, or an abuse of discretion. See
ORDERED that Statoil's Motion [Doc. # 27] is DENIED and the Government's Cross-Motion [Doc. # 34] is GRANTED .
A final judgment will be entered separately.
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
352 F. Supp. 3d 748, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/statoil-usa-ep-inc-v-us-dept-of-the-interior-txsd-2018.