STATE OF LOUISIANA COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT
CA 11-999 consolidated with CA 11-1001, CA 11-1046
VERMILION PARISH SCHOOL BOARD
VERSUS
CONOCOPHILLIPS COMPANY, ET AL.
**********
APPEAL FROM THE FIFTEENTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT PARISH OF VERMILION, NO. 84388-F HONORABLE GLENNON P. EVERETT, DISTRICT JUDGE
BILLY HOWARD EZELL JUDGE
Court composed of Oswald A. Decuir, Billy Howard Ezell, and James T. Genovese, Judges.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Genovese, J., concurs in the result.
Scott R. Bickford Regina O. Matthews Martzell & Bickford 338 Lafayette St. New Orleans, LA 70130 (504) 581-9065 COUNSEL FOR PLAINTIFF/APPELLANT: Vermilion Parish School Board Lawrence Paul Simon, Jr. Liskow & Lewis P. O. Box 52008 Lafayette, LA 70505 (337) 232-7424 COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANTS/APPELLEES: Union Oil Company of California The Pure Oil Corp.
David L. Landry 1214 Parasol Place Pensacola, FL 32507 (850) 492-7240 COUNSEL FOR PLAINTIFF/APPELLANT: Vermilion Parish School Board
Daria B Diaz Keith B. Hall Stone, Pigman, Walther, Wittmann 546 Carondelet St. New Orleans, LA 70130 (504) 581-3200 COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANT/APPELLEE: ConocoPhillips Company EZELL, Judge.
These consolidated cases present the res nova issue of whether an action by the
Vermilion Parish School Board (VPSB) for underpayment of royalties, on its behalf
and on behalf of the State, is subject to the three-year prescriptive period found in
La.Civ.Code art. 3494. The VPSB argues that the leases at issue cover Section 16
lands which are state-owned properties not subject to the three-year prescriptive
period. La.Civ.Code art. 3494(5). All three trial courts held that the three-year
prescriptive period is applicable. For the following reasons, we reverse and remand
for further proceedings.
FACTS
In December 2005, the VPSB, individually and on behalf of the school children
of Vermilion Parish and on behalf of the State of Louisiana, filed suit against several
Defendants concerning an oil, gas, and mineral lease dated December 5, 1963,
referred to as the Unocal Lease and an oil and gas mining lease dated April 4, 1935,
referred to as the LL&E Lease. In January 2006, the VPSB filed a second suit against
several Defendants concerning oil, gas, and mineral leases dated September 25, 1984,
March 1, 1968, January 5, 2000, and December 5, 1963, referred to as the Amerada
Hess Leases. The third lawsuit was filed by the VPSB on January 3, 2006, against
several Defendants concerning oil, gas, and mineral leases dated July 2, 1953, January
2, 1976, and February 1, 1979, referred to as the ConocoPhillips Leases. All three
suits involved claims for the underpayment of royalties derived from Section 16
mineral leases occurring in the 1990‟s.
The Defendants filed exceptions of prescription. A hearing in the Unocal
matter was held on June 25, 2007. In reasons for ruling, the trial court stated that the
mineral rights at issue were severed from the land and vested in the VPSB, with the
VPSB seeking payment of royalties pursuant to contractual rights between the VPSB and Unocal. The trial court stated that the State was not a party to the mineral leases
and that the VPSB was a separate body with the sole power to enter into the mineral
lease, with the power to sue and be sued. The court granted the exception of
prescription finding that the three-year prescriptive period in La.Civ.Code art. 3494(5)
is applicable because only the State is immune from liability.
A hearing in the Amerada Hess matter was held on October 8, 2007. The trial
court also ruled that the three-year prescriptive period was applicable.
In the ConocoPhillips matter, the VPSB entered into a stipulated consent
judgment. Reserving all rights of appeal, the VPSB agreed not to oppose the
exception of prescription in order to place the action in the same procedural posture
for appeal as the other two matters.
The VPSB appealed all three matters. At the request of the VPSB, and without
opposition from the Appellees, the three matters were consolidated for briefing and
argument on appeal.
DISCUSSION
We must first address an argument by the Defendants that stipulations by the
VPSB preclude it from appealing the judgments in the trial court. The Defendants
argue that the VPSB is not an “agent” of the State and that the State has no rights to
royalties from the VPSB‟s lease of Section 16 lands. They claim that the VPSB
stipulated in the Unocal and Amerada Hess matters that it would not appeal the trial
court‟s ruling that the State itself has no cause of action for the claims of nonpayment
or underpayment of royalties under the mineral lease.
The VPSB did make this assertion in its motion to withdraw certain affirmative
defenses and for certification of the order as a final judgment. However, the VPSB
further stated that it was reserving its right to litigate the issue of “whether its royalty
claims are immune from liberative prescription due to the ownership, in trust, of the
lands at issue by the State.” The VPSB specifically reserved “the right to seek the
2 remedy of lease cancellation and all other remedies that may be available for breach
of a lease by underpayment of royalties in the event that [the trial court‟s] grants of
Defendants‟ Exception of Prescription is reversed on appeal.”
Also, as recited in the factual section above, the VPSB simply did not oppose
the exception of prescription in the ConocoPhillips matter so that all three cases
would be in the same procedural posture for appeal. We find that the VPSB properly
reserved its right to seek review of the granting of the exceptions of prescription in
favor of the Defendants. Therefore, we will now address the issue raised by the
VPSB of whether it is immune from prescription because of ownership of Section 16
lands by the State.
This issue raised by this case involves questions of law. Therefore, the
appropriate standard of review is de novo. Thiels v. Dennis, 09-957 (La.App. 3 Cir.
2/3/10), 29 So.3d 715. Pursuant to a de novo standard of review, an appellate court
must determine whether the trial court was legally correct or legally incorrect and
gives no additional weight to the trial court‟s determination. Id.
The VPSB‟s arguments are based on its position that the revenues from the
mineral leases are derived from Section 16 lands, which are state-owned properties,
making La.Civ.Code art. 3494(5)‟s three-year liberative prescription inapplicable.
The VPSB argues that it entered into the leases on behalf of the State, the owner of the
Section 16 lands and mineral rights, as trustee, and also on behalf of the school
children, the beneficiaries of the trust.
Pursuant to La.Const. art. 12, § 13, “Prescription shall not run against the State
in any civil matter, unless otherwise provided in this Constitution or expressly by
law.” Applicable to this particular matter, La.Civ.Code art. 3494(5) specifically
provides that an action for the recovery of an underpayment of royalties is subject to a
three-year prescriptive period unless the payment, rent, or royalties are derived from
“state-owned properties.”
3 Ownership of Section 16 Lands
In 1806, the United States Congress set aside and dedicated for the use of
public education Section 16 lands. State v. Humble Oil and Ref. Co., 195 La. 457,
197 So. 140 (1940); Terrebonne Parish Sch. Bd. v. Texaco, Inc., 178 So.2d 428
(La.App. 1 Cir.), writ refused, 179 So.2d 640 (La.1965), cert denied, 384 U.S. 950, 86
S.Ct. 1568 (1966). After Louisiana was admitted to the Union in 1812, title to the
lands was vested in the State. Id. The Louisiana Supreme Court recognized that
Section 16 lands are unique because they are a separate and distinct part of public
lands and that the administration of those lands has always been separate and apart
from the administration of other public lands. Humble Oil and Ref. Co., 197 So. 140.
“For more than one hundred years it has been the settled policy of this State, as
reflected in various constitutional and statutory provisions, to treat sixteenth section
lands as separate and distinct from all other State lands and to place them under the
control of the school authorities.” Id. at 144.
In Ebey v. Avoyelles Parish School Board, 03-765 (La.App. 3 Cir. 12/17/03),
861 So.2d 910, writ denied, 04-196 (La. 3/26/04), 871 So.2d 349, this court discussed
the history of the trust doctrine over Section 16 lands in Louisiana and recognized that
Section 16 lands are held by Louisiana in trust for the benefit of school children. We
further observed that “[t]he management of these trust lands is vested by the State in
the local school boards.” Id. at 914 (citing La.R.S. 17:100.6 and La.R.S. 41:638).
In School Board of Avoyelles Parish v. U.S. Department of Interior, 647 F.3d
570 (5 Cir. 2011), the federal court, citing Ebey, recognized that the school board is
not the true owner of Section 16 lands; the State of Louisiana is the true of owner of
Section 16 lands who vests the management of these trust lands in local school boards.
Statutory provisions further evidence that Section 16 lands are owned by the
State because specific authority is granted to the school boards regarding the lands,
which would not be necessary if school boards owned the lands. Louisiana Revised
4 Statutes 41:961(emphasis supplied), involving an action by a school board for the
recovery of title and damage for trespass, specifically provides that title to Section 16
lands is still in the State as follows:
The school boards of the various parishes of the state may contract with and employ on the part of the State of Louisiana, attorneys at law, to recover for the state, damages for trespass to the sixteenth section known as school lands the title to which is still in the state. Each of the boards may make these contracts for the lands situated in its own parish and no others. The school boards may also sue for and recover the sixteenth section known as school lands.
Section 30 of Act 110 of 1922 authorized parish school boards to grant mineral
leases on Section 16 lands. Humble Oil and Refining Co., 197 So. 140. Louisiana
Revised Statutes 30:151 through 30:158 sets forth the procedures for the granting of
mineral leases covering Section 16 lands. Pursuant to La.R.S. 30:152(A), “[e]very
agency is authorized to lease its land for the development and production of
minerals.” Louisiana Revised Statutes 30:152(A) further gives school boards the
authority to lease Section 16 lands. A “school board” is included in the definition of
“agency.” La.R.S. 30:151. If school boards owned Section 16 lands and the minerals,
there would be no need to further authorize them to lease the lands because the statute
already authorizes an agency to lease its own lands.
Further indication that the State is owner of Section 16 lands is found in La.R.S.
41:631 which provides that the Registrar of the State Land Office shall sell a tract of
land not less than five acres of Section 16 lands donated by Congress to this State for
school purposes. Louisiana Revised Statutes 17:87 authorizes parish school boards to
rent or sell Section 16 lands or to sell the timber located on Section 16 lands.
Clearly, Section 16 lands are owned by the State. Both jurisprudence and
statutory authority provides that Section 16 lands are owned by the State with school
boards given the administrative authority over lands.
5 Ownership of Minerals in Section 16 Lands
Defendants argue the VPSB was given the exclusive right to lease Section 16
lands and, as the mineral lessor, it enjoys all benefits under the lease. Defendants
further argue that only the VPSB has the capacity to sue to enforce the contractual
rights under the Section 16 lands leases, and therefore, the VPSB may not assert the
State‟s constitutional immunity. Relying on State, through Department of Highways v.
City of Pineville, 403 So.2d 49 (La.1981), the Defendants claim that the VPSB is a
state agency which is subject to a claim of liberative prescription. The supreme court
explained:
We subscribe to the following reasoning, advanced in the cases cited above: the “State,” for the purposes of the constitutional immunity from prescription, does not include a state agency which is a body corporate with the power to sue and be sued and which, when vested with a cause of action, is the sole party capable of asserting it. Regardless of its status as an instrumentality of the state, such an agency remains a distinct legal entity subject to claims of prescription except where the law provides otherwise.
Id. at 52.
While we agree that school boards are agencies which are subject to claims of
prescription, we find that premise does not apply under the circumstances of this case
when Section 16 lands are involved.
The Louisiana Constitution of 1921, Article 4, § 2 provided that the State could
not alienate the mineral rights it owned. Louisiana Constitution of 1974, Article 9, §
4(A) retained the provisions that the State could not alienate any minerals it owned.
School boards were not given the authority to grant mineral leases on Section 16 lands
until 1922 by Section 30 of Act 110. Therefore, the State still owns the minerals
contained in Section 16 lands. The school boards are given administrative authority
over Section 16 lands and have been specifically given the power to grant mineral
leases on Section 16 lands as part of the overall administrative scheme concerning
6 Section 16 lands. La.R.S. 30:152(A). No ownership of the minerals was conferred as
the Louisiana Constitution forbids it.
In discussing Article 9, § 4 enacted by the 1974 Louisiana Constitution, the
second circuit acknowledged the “jurisprudential rule holding that prescription does
not run against state-owned mineral rights was established as a corollary to the
prohibition against alienation of state-owned minerals” had been codified by La.Const.
art. 9, § 4(B). Cohort Energy Co. v. Caddo-Bossier Parishes Port Comm’n, 37,449, p.
9 (La.App. 2 Cir. 8/20/03), 852 So.2d 1174, 1180 (citing Shell Oil Co. v. Bd. of
Comm’rs. of Pontchartain Levee Dist., 336 So.2d 248 (La.App. 1 Cir.), writ refused,
338 So.2d 1156 (La.1976)). Louisiana Constitution Article 9, § 4(B) provides that:
“[l]ands and mineral interests of the state, of a school board, or of a levee district shall
not be lost by prescription.”
The second circuit then considered whether the prohibition against alienation of
its minerals by the State also applied to state agencies. The second circuit recognized
that the supreme court in Stokes v. Harrison, 238 La. 343, 115 So.2d 373 (1959), held
that when a school board sold a parcel of land that it had previously purchased from a
private landowner without reservation of minerals, the sale was not a sale of property
by the State requiring it to reserve the minerals for the purposes of La.Const. art. 4, § 2
of the 1921 Louisiana Constitution. The second circuit recognized that that “the
Stokes court concluded that a „political subdivision‟ or a „political corporation‟ was
not intended by the framers of the Constitution to be included within the term „state‟
where it applies to the restriction or limitation of the strong policy of this state
favoring prescription of reserved mineral interests.” Cohort Energy Co., 852 So.2d at
1182. The second circuit then concluded that the Caddo-Bossier Parishes Port
Commission is a separate entity from the State because it is appointed by municipal
and parish authorities, and title to land no longer vests in the State but vests in the port
commission citing La.R.S. 34:3158 and 34:3160. There is obviously a difference
7 when dealing with land the school board owns itself as opposed to Section 16 lands
the school board administers for the State.
In Dynamic Explorations, Inc. v. LeBlanc, 362 So.2d 734 (La.1978), the
supreme court affirmed a decision of the first circuit holding that a levee district was
the “state” within the meaning of La.Const. art. 4, § 2 of the 1921 Louisiana
Constitution. The court noted that the 1974 Louisiana Constitution overruled Stokes,
115 So.2d 373, by providing that a school board cannot alienate minerals.
The law is clear that a state agency can sue and be sued as an independent
entity. In that case, the benefit the State has of immunity from prescription is not
applicable. However, Section 16 lands are a different matter. Section 16 lands are
lands owned by the State but managed by the school boards for the benefit of public
education. The State still owns the minerals in Section 16 lands but as part of the
administrative scheme of the lands, the school boards were given the authority to lease
the lands.
State as a Party to Proceedings
The courts below found that the State has no cause of action for the claims of
nonpayment or underpayment of royalties under the mineral lease granted by the
VPSB. The VPSB argues that it has brought this action in the name of the State as
agent and administrator of the Section 16 lands and mineral interests. The Defendants
argue that the VPSB is the sole lessor under the mineral lease so that it is the only
proper party.
In Board of Com’rs. of Port of New Orleans v. Toyo Kisen Kaisha, 163 La. 865,
113 So. 127 (1927), the supreme court declared that the personal rights of state
agencies may be lost by liberative prescription, but public things administered by a
state agency may not be lost by acquisitive prescription. The supreme court further
recognized that liberative prescription runs against public agencies unless brought by
and in the name of the State itself.
8 Terrebonne Parish School Board v. Southdown, Inc., 03-402 (La.App. 1 Cir.
7/14/04), 887 So.2d 8, involved a suit for damage to Section 16 lands caused by
erosion from canals and exploration activities undertaken by individual oil and gas
firms for the purpose of mineral exploration and production. Citing Terrebonne
Parish School Board v. Mobil Oil Corp., 310 F.3d 870 (5 Cir. 2002), the first circuit
held that the State‟s constitutional immunity in civil matters found in Article 12, § 13
did not apply to the school board when it was not brought by, or in the name of the
State.
As recognized in State v. F.B. Williams Cypress Co., 131 La. 62, 58 So. 1033
(1912), judgment amended on other grounds, 132 La. 949, 61 So. 988 (1913), title to
Section 16 lands has been vested in the State since their donation by Congress for the
benefit of public schools. Everything that the State holds in her capacity as trustee is
also protected by the State‟s constitutional immunity from prescription. School
boards shall aid the State in its execution of its trust of Section 16 lands.
The federal court has also recently recognized that the State, as owner of
Section 16 lands, “has more than a nominal interest in the treatment of Section 16
lands.” Sch. Bd. of Avoyelles Parish, 647 F.3d at 578.
Just as the Louisiana State Mineral Board was given the right to grant mineral
leases on state land by Act 93 of 1936, the school boards were also give the right to
grant mineral leases on Section 16 lands, also state land, by Act 100, § 30 of 1922. In
State v. Texas, 205 La. 417, 425-26, 17 So.2d 569, 572 (1944), the supreme court
stated:
Unquestionably before the passage of Act 93 of 1936 there existed in the state the right to sue or be sued in its own name on matters pertaining to its mineral interests; all suits of that nature then were in the name of the state proper, whether as plaintiff or defendant. The statute, as we appreciate and interpret it, has not divested the sovereign of such right. It is true that the created State Mineral Board was thereby vested with authority to lease any state lands; that it was given full supervision of all mineral leases awarded by the state; and that it was granted the power to institute actions to annul any such lease. But these conferred
9 authorizations were not declared by the Legislature to be exclusive. Neither has the state transferred to the board title to its lands and mineral rights. The State Mineral Board, by the statute, has been designated merely the agent of the state to supervise and handle that portion of its affairs which deals with the development of its lands for mineral purposes, and to this end the agent is permitted the right, concurrently with the principal (state), to institute actions in nullity. The board may be likened to an agent of an individual property owner who (agent) has been granted full, but not exclusive, authority in the management and supervision of the owner‟s holdings, with power to bring suits respecting the property. In such case certainly the owner has not precluded himself to institute all necessary actions.
The supreme court further explained that, “the State Mineral Board, by reason
of statute creating it, has the right to sue…for the nullity of mineral leases, the state is
authorized to maintain this action in its name.” Id.
In the present case, the VPSB entered into mineral leases as an agent of the
State. The VPSB has sued on behalf of the State and makes no claims that it owns the
Section 16 lands at issue. Section 16 lands and minerals are owned by the State. The
State has a right to sue for underpayment of royalties on Section 16 lands in its own
name. The immunity from prescription provision of La.Civ.Code art. 3494(5) clearly
applies to “state-owned properties.” The VPSB‟s claims that Defendants have
improperly calculated and underpaid royalties on the Section 16 lands mineral leases
are not prescribed pursuant to La.R.S. 3494(5) and La.Const. Art. 12, § 13.
Accordingly, the trial court erred in granting Defendants‟ exceptions of
prescription. The judgment of the trial court is vacated and reversed. This case is
remanded to the trial court for further proceedings. Costs of this appeal are assessed
equally amongst the Defendants.