SWN Production Company, LLC v. BlueBeck, LTD

CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 10, 2023
Docket3:22-cv-00091
StatusUnknown

This text of SWN Production Company, LLC v. BlueBeck, LTD (SWN Production Company, LLC v. BlueBeck, LTD) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
SWN Production Company, LLC v. BlueBeck, LTD, (M.D. Pa. 2023).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT MIDDLE DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA

SWN PRODUCTION COMPANY, : LLC, Plaintiff : CIVIL ACTION NO. 22-cv-91

v. : (JUDGE MANNION)

BLUE BECK LTD., :

Defendant :

MEMORANDUM

Presently before the court is Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss Plaintiff’s Amended Complaint. Plaintiff SWN Production Company, LLC and Defendant Blue Beck, Ltd., parties to an oil and gas lease on land in Susquehanna County, have experienced certain disputes regarding their agreement. Plaintiff brought this suit seeking declaratory relief with respect to these disputes. (Doc. 14). Defendant has moved to dismiss. (Doc. 23).

I. Background1 Plaintiff, a Delaware company with its principal place of business in Texas, is an oil and gas exploration company. (Doc. 14 ¶¶7, 23). Defendant

1 In considering a motion to dismiss, the court considers only the facts alleged in the complaint, exhibits attached to the complaint, and matters of public record. Bruni v. City of Pittsburgh, 824 F.3d 353, 360 (3d Cir. 2016). is a New York corporation with its principal place of business in New York. (Id. ¶20). Defendant entered as lessor an oil and gas lease (the “Lease”) with

Fortuna Energy Inc., the lessee, in September 2009. (Doc. 14-1). Fortuna assigned the lease to Plaintiff in 2012; therefore, Plaintiff is now the lessee. (Doc. 14 ¶¶15, 30).

A.) The Lease The Lease covers land in Susquehanna County, Pennsylvania, and is governed by Pennsylvania law. (Doc. 14 ¶34; Doc. 14-1 §27(e)). “[I]n all circumstances,” the Lease is to be “construed against invalidation,

termination, or forfeiture.” (Doc. 14-1 §27(b)). A failure by Plaintiff to make any royalty payments due under the Lease constitutes an event of default. (Id. §26(a)). After receiving written disclosure of a failure to make royalty

payments, Plaintiff has 30 days within which to cure, and may be afforded an additional 60 days if it has commenced the cure within 30 days and continued to diligently cure. (Id. §26(b)). If Plaintiff fails to cure an event of default within the time afforded, Defendant has the right to terminate the

Lease after ten days written notice to Plaintiff. (Id. §26(c)). But termination would not take effect if Plaintiff cures the event of default within those ten days. (Id.) The Lease also establishes a procedure under which the parties

must attempt in good faith to resolve any disputes. (Id. §27(k)). B.) Royalty Payments The Lease provides for the payment of royalties from Plaintiff to

Defendant of twenty percent of the sales price of all oil and gas produced.2 (Doc. 14-1 §6 & pg. 14). Plaintiff is required to make royalty payments within 90 days following the month of production. (Id. §6). Defendant has the right

to audit Plaintiff’s books, records, and accounts annually to verify the accuracy of Plaintiff’s statements and check the amount owed to Defendant. (Id. §27(c)). C.) Dispute

Pursuant to the Lease’s dispute resolution provision, Defendant sent a Notice of Dispute letter on October 5, 2021 asserting that Plaintiff had failed to make royalty payments on four wells and a compression station. (Doc. 14

§66). Defendant sent an amended version of this letter sixteen days later. (Id. §69). The parties agreed to meet to discuss these issues. (Id. §70). Before this meeting, however, Defendant sent Plaintiff a Notice of Event Default, again citing a failure to make royalty payments. (Doc. 14-3). The

Notice generally asserts that “Lessee has failed to pay all Royalties due to

2 The Lease provides the method for determining the sales price of oil and gas and measuring the volume and/or heating value of oil and gas. (Doc. 14-1 pg. 14). Lessor in accordance with” various provisions of the Lease; it does not state what amount is owed. (Id.).

The parties’ business representatives met as planned, but Defendant did not specify the amount owed. (Doc. 14 §§75–76). Based on its own review, Plaintiff determined that it had made errors in calculating the royalty

payment for three wells, but had correctly made payments on the other 16 wells. (Id. 14 §79–80). Plaintiff remedied these calculation errors and issued a check to Defendant for the deficiency. (Id. §81–82). It responded to Defendant’s Notice with a letter describing its review of the payments and its

attempt to cure. (Doc. 14-4). Defendant continued to assert that Plaintiff had failed to make royalty payments. (Doc. 14-5). Plaintiff requested that Defendant inform it of the amounts believed due, and Defendant responded

that Plaintiff already possessed the information required to cure. (Docs. 14- 7, 14-8). The parties entered into a tolling agreement effective December 15, 2021, in which they agreed to toll both the 30-day period for curing any

alleged events of default and the statute of limitations applicable to any claims either party may have against the other. (Doc. 14-6). The tolling agreement expired on January 15, 2022. (Id.; Doc. 14 ¶122). The amended complaint avers that there exist several “dueling interpretations” of the Lease between the parties, such that “[a] declaration

by this court as to the correct interpretation of the Lease will assist the parties.” (Doc. 14 ¶134). First, Plaintiff disputes that the events of default identified in Defendant’s Notice of Event Default exist or have not been

cured. Second, Plaintiff interprets the lease as prohibiting Defendant from asserting an event of default until after the 60-day dispute resolution time frame provided by §27(k) of the Lease. (Id. ¶¶129–30). Third, according to Plaintiff, Defendant interprets the Lease as permitting Defendant to terminate

any time it believes Plaintiff has failed to cure an event of default, while Plaintiff reads it as allowing termination only if the parties agree that an event of default has occurred or if there has been a final judicial declaration

regarding one. (Id. ¶¶135–37). Finally, Plaintiff “interprets the Lease as requiring sufficient Notice of the amount of alleged Royalty underpayment” to allow Plaintiff to cure. (Id. ¶155). D.) Relief Requested

Plaintiff requests relief in the form of a declaration that: (i) none of the purported Events of default exist or have not been cured; and (ii) the Lease’s Section 26(b) & (c) cure period (30 +10 days) for an Event of Default requires disclosure of sufficient detail, including the alleged amount of underpayment, that would allow SWN Production the opportunity [to] cure; (iii) once the Lessor engaged in the Dispute Resolution process under the Lease, it was required to allow the 60-day period for resolution of disputes to run before it could send a Notice of an Event of Default; (iv) there is no “occurrence” of an “Event of Default” that would allow for forfeiture of the Lease until (a) the Lessor and Lessee agree that an Event of Default has occurred or (b) there has been a final judicial determination that an Event of Default has occurred; and (v) the Lease’s cure period does not begin to run until after the “occurrence” of an “Event of Default” has been (a) agreed to by the Lessor and Lessee or (b) determined to exist by a final judicial order.

(Doc. 14 at 37–38).

II. Legal Standard

Defendant moves to dismiss Plaintiff’s amended complaint under Federal Rules of Civil Procedure 12(b)(1), (6), and (7). (Doc. 23 at 2). A. Rule 12(b)(1) Rule 12(b)(1) provides for the dismissal of a complaint for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction. A Rule 12(b)(1) motion can be a facial or factual attack on subject-matter jurisdiction. Schuchardt v. President, 839 F.3d 336, 343 (3d Cir. 2016).

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