Stephenson v. Oneok Resources Co.

2004 OK CIV APP 81, 99 P.3d 717, 75 O.B.A.J. 3042, 160 Oil & Gas Rep. 687, 2004 Okla. Civ. App. LEXIS 63, 2004 WL 2361112
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 21, 2004
Docket99,383
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 2004 OK CIV APP 81 (Stephenson v. Oneok Resources Co.) 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
Stephenson v. Oneok Resources Co., 2004 OK CIV APP 81, 99 P.3d 717, 75 O.B.A.J. 3042, 160 Oil & Gas Rep. 687, 2004 Okla. Civ. App. LEXIS 63, 2004 WL 2361112 (Okla. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinions

Opinion by

CAROL M. HANSEN, Judge:

1 1 This case arises from a dispute regarding overhead charges under an oil and gas lease joint operating agreement (JOA) and its attached Council of Petroleum Account ants Societies (COPAS) accounting procedure.1 The operator under the JOA, Defendant/Appellant Oneok Resources Company (Operator), seeks review of the trial court's judgment, based on a jury verdict, granting judgment against it both on the claim of the non-operating, participating working interest owners, Plaintiffs/Appellees (Owners) for declaratory relief and on Operator's counterclaim against Owners for breach of contract. Owners seek review of the trial court's order denying their application for attorney fees. We affirm the trial court's judgment but reverse the attorney fee order to the extent it found Operator's counterclaim was not an action to recover for services rendered and to the extent it awarded copying costs in excess of the statutory limit. We remand for determination of the amount of the fee award and redetermination of copying costs.

T2 Operator acquired its interest in the JOA and the subject leases in 1997 from PSEC, Inc., formerly known as Potts-Stephenson Exploration Company (PSEC). PSEC's principals were Robert Stephenson, the lead plaintiff in this case, and Ray Potts. Both individually owned non-operating working interests in the wells. At the time Operator acquired PSEC's interests, Potts sold Operator his individually owned interest, while Stephenson retained his interest. The remaining Owners are Stephenson's friends and family.

13 The JOA and attached COPAS accounting procedure were based on standard industry model forms. The accounting procedure provided for the operator to charge an overhead rate "as compensation for administrative, supervision, office services and warehousing costs." The section on overhead also provided:

The well rates shall be adjusted as of the first day of April each year following the effective date of the agreement to which this Accounting Procedure is attached. The adjustment shall be computed by multiplying the rate currently in use by the percentage increase or decrease in the average weekly earnings of Crude Petroleum [720]*720and Gas Production Workers for the last calendar year compared to the calendar year preceding as shown by the index of average weekly earnings of Crude Petroleum and Gas Fields Production Workers as published by the United States Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics, or the equivalent Canadian index as published by Statistics Canada, as applicable. The adjusted rates shall be the rates currently in use, plus or minus the computed adjustment.

The JOA provided for a higher overhead rate while a well was being drilled and a lower one while a well was producing. It stated the overhead rates "may be amended from time to time only by mutual agreement between the Parties hereto if, in practice, the rates are found to be insufficient or excessive." The section of the JOA relating to the adjustment of bills provided,

[A]ll bills and statements rendered to Non-Operators by Operator during any calendar year shall conclusively be presumed to be true and correct after twenty-four (24) months following the end of any such calendar year, unless within the said twenty-four (24) month period a Non-Operator takes written exception thereto and makes claim on Operator for adjustment. No adjustment favorable to Operator shall be made unless it is made within the same prescribed period....

T4 According to the parties' stipulations, during the period when PSEC operated the wells, it voluntarily decided in certain years to forego annual upward adjustments of the producing overhead rates. The working interest owners paid PSEC's joint interest billings for those years without complaint as to the overhead rates.

5 Approximately three years after Operator took over operations, it internally audited the overhead rates it was charging for all wells it operated, and discovered PSEC had not escalated the overhead rates in prior years. Operator then took the initial rate and adjusted it forward by the applicable index factor for each year beginning from the effective date of the JOA. Onee it had caleu-lated the producing overhead rate it believed should have been charged, it went back two years, to January 1998, and billed the recalculated rate for each well from 1998 forward.

T 6 Owners refused to pay the recalculated rate. They filed this action for declaratory judgment, seeking a determination Operator was not entitled to escalate overhead charges retroactively, but was required to multiply the rate in effect for the preceding year by the annual adjustment factor. Operator answered and counterelaimed for its recalculated overhead charge. The trial court denied both sides' motions for summary judgment and set the matter for jury trial.

T7 Jury trial took place on May 7, 8, 9, 12, and 18, 2008. The jury returned a verdict in favor of Owners on their claim for declaratory relief and against Operator on its counterclaim. The trial court entered judgment based on the verdict, decrecing,

that the method utilized by [Operator] to adjust its producing overhead rates for the subject wells did not comply with the terms of the applicable joint operating agreements and that [Owners] have suffered damages and could suffer damages in the future as a direct result of [Operator's] breach of contract regarding past billings and the threat of future unauthorized billings.
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... [Operator] shall only charge [Owners] indirect overhead rates based on the overhead rates in use and being billed at the time of [Operator's] 1997 acquisition of the subject wells, plus or minus the annual adjustment factor referenced in Article III of the COPAS Accounting Procedures.

T8 As prevailing parties, Owners moved for attorney fees pursuant to 12 O.S. Supp. 2002 § 936, which authorizes fees in actions any civil action to recover for labor or services rendered." Operator objected. After a hearing, the trial court entered an order finding (1) the hours and rates charged by Owners' attorneys were commensurate with the hours and rates charged for similar legal work in the relevant legal community, (2) the skill and expertise of Owners' attorneys was considerable, and was necessary to obtain the results garnered in this case, 8) the underlying case presented difficult issues [721]*721of first impression in Oklahoma, (4) the results obtained on Owners' behalf were exceptional and significant to the oil and gas industry as a whole, (5) the hourly rates for Owners' attorneys and the total number of hours expended were reasonable, (6) if Owners were entitled to an attorney fee award as prevailing party on Operators' counterclaim, it would award to Owners one-third of Own-erg actual attorneys fees plus an incentive bonus equal to one-half of the fee awarded. However, the trial court ruled that Operator's counterclaim sought recovery of adjusted indirect overhead charges claimed due under the parties' JOA, and that such a claim was not one for the recovery of payments due for labor and services under a strict and narrow interpretation of § 986. It therefore denied Owners' application for attorney fees.

19 Operator appeals from the judgment against it and Owners counter-appeal from the order denying attorney fees.

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Stephenson v. Oneok Resources Co.
2004 OK CIV APP 81 (Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma, 2004)

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Bluebook (online)
2004 OK CIV APP 81, 99 P.3d 717, 75 O.B.A.J. 3042, 160 Oil & Gas Rep. 687, 2004 Okla. Civ. App. LEXIS 63, 2004 WL 2361112, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stephenson-v-oneok-resources-co-oklacivapp-2004.