Texas Keystone Inc. v. Pennsylvania Department of Conservation & Natural Resources

851 A.2d 228, 2004 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 464
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 7, 2004
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 851 A.2d 228 (Texas Keystone Inc. v. Pennsylvania Department of Conservation & Natural Resources) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Texas Keystone Inc. v. Pennsylvania Department of Conservation & Natural Resources, 851 A.2d 228, 2004 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 464 (Pa. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

OPINION BY

Judge LEAVITT.

Texas Keystone Incorporated (TKI) has filed a Petition for Review in the Nature of a Complaint in Equity and Complaint for Declaratory Judgment against the Department of Conservation and Natural Resources (DCNR) pursuant to this Court’s original jurisdiction. At issue is DCNR’s recently adopted policy relating to its leases of state-owned forest lands for oil and gas production. DCNR has filed preliminary objections alleging, inter alia, that this Court lacks subject matter jurisdiction because TKI has failed to exhaust its administrative remedies. For the reasons set forth herein, TKI’s petition is dismissed as premature insofar as it seeks relief with respect to permits it needs to drill natural gas wells in certain state forest lands it has leased and the remainder of the petition, asserting contractual claims, is transferred to the Board of Claims.

TKI is engaged in the business of oil and gas exploration in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. Pursuant to the Conservation and Natural Resources Act, 1 DCNR *231 is charged with the management and use of state-owned forest lands, including the leasing of such land for the exploration and production of oil and natural gas. In this capacity, DCNR has leased out in excess of 100,000 acres of land located in and around Sproul State Forest in Clinton and Centre Counties. Many of these leases have in turn been subject to “farmout agreements” 2 by which the leasehold rights were assigned to third parties with the full consent of DCNR. Equitable Production Company (Equitable), as both lessee and farmee, has assembled a number of leases in this area into a block, referred to by the parties as the Council Run Tract. Notably, these leases contain an express assignment clause, pursuant to which the leases have been passed from assignor to assignee, on numerous occasions since the making of the original lease.

Beginning in 2000, TKI expressed interest in acquiring Equitable’s gas exploration rights in the Council Run Tract. On October 8, 2001, Stephen Perdue, a Regional Director for Equitable, telephoned a representative of DCNR’s Bureau of Forestry and requested DCNR’s guidelines on farmout agreements. By letter dated October 10, 2001, DCNR responded to Purdue’s request. According to TKI’s complaint in this action, Equitable and DCNR then came to an understanding and agreed upon a procedure with respect to the manner in which Equitable could sublease, ie., “farmout,” portions of the Council Run Tract to TKI. Petition for Review at 6. Thereafter, on June 20, 2002, TKI and Equitable entered into a farmout agreement requiring TKI to drill a specified number of gas wells by December 31, 2002. 3 TKI obtained performance bonds to cover its contractual obligations. Representatives frona TKI and DCNR met on June 25, 2002 to discuss TKI’s prospective operations on the Council Run Tract. Although formal approval by DCNR was still forthcoming, nothing transpired during *232 this meeting to suggest that DCNR would withhold its approval.

By letters dated September 4 and September 12, 2002, TKI notified John Walker, Chief of DCNR’s Minerals Section, of its first and second groups of proposed drilling locations in the Council Run Tract. Walker responded with two letters in which he expressed concerns that TKI would actually be a mfr-farmee on several of the proposed wells, since Equitable was itself operating under a farmout agreement with the original lessee of those locations. Although Walker did not indicate that DCNR would not approve the proposed well sites, he stated that he was “not optimistic that the Department’s response will be as prompt as you would like it to be.” Petition for Review, Exhibit G.

In another meeting with DCNR on November 12, 2002, TKI’s representatives were advised to be patient and that “changes in Commonwealth administration resulting from the then recent state-wide elections would temporarily delay approvals/but that once the new gubernatorial administration was in place, development of the Council Run Tract by [TKI] would proceed.” Petition for Review at 9.

On April 15, 2003, Walker forwarded to TKI a new statement of policy entitled “DCNR’s Farmee and Sub-Farmee Policy Relating To Oil And Gas Operations On State Forest Lands” (Policy). The Policy, effective January 1, 2003, states that

[t]he [Department shall not recognize any new farmee or sub-farmee rights to conduct oil and gas drilling or production operations on state forest lands under oil and gas leases issued by this department. Furthermore, if any new farmee or sub-farmee has commenced operations on or after January 1, 2003, on the leased premises, it shall be the responsibility of the lessee of record to comply with the following stipulations.

Petition for Review, Exhibit H. 4 (emphasis added). According to Walker’s letter to TKI,

The policy was developed in order to minimize forest management complexities and problems, which, our experience has shown, are, associated with [farmee *233 and sub-farmee] operations, and to emphasize that the lessee of record is solely responsible to the Department for all oil and gas operations on the leased lands.

Petition for Review, Exhibit H.

In May 2003, TKI notified DCNR, as surface landowner, of seven proposed shallow gas well sites in the Council Run Tract. Petition for Review, Exhibit M. TKI supplied DCNR with copies of the drilling permit applications it intended to submit to the Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) and requested that DCNR approve the proposed well sites. Id. DCNR responded on June 19, 2003, advising TKI that, in accordance with the Policy, it would not consider approving the proposed well sites unless it received a written request for approval from Equitable, the lessee of record. Petition for Review, Exhibit N. Equitable, through Stephen Perdue, submitted a written request for approval of TKI’s proposed well sites to DCNR. Petition for Review, Exhibit O. In response, Walker advised Equitable by letter dated September 22, 2003 that DCNR was not a party to the farmout agreement between Equitable and TKI and had not been provided with a copy of the agreement until March 2003, after the effective date of the Policy. Petition for Review, Exhibit P. Consequently, “only the lessees of record on these State Forest tracts are authorized to conduct oil and gas operations on them in compliance with the lease provisions. Only the lessees of record are legally responsible to the Department for performance under the leases.” Id. (emphasis original). Walker further advised Equitable that, pursuant to the Policy, DCNR would not issue its standard Agreement for Consent to Assignment documents for the seven proposed well sites unless Equitable assumed total responsibility. 5

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Bluebook (online)
851 A.2d 228, 2004 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 464, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-keystone-inc-v-pennsylvania-department-of-conservation-natural-pacommwct-2004.