Yuma Exploration and Production Co. Inc. v. Mayne & Mertz, Inc.

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 3, 2010
DocketCA-0009-0764
StatusUnknown

This text of Yuma Exploration and Production Co. Inc. v. Mayne & Mertz, Inc. (Yuma Exploration and Production Co. Inc. v. Mayne & Mertz, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Yuma Exploration and Production Co. Inc. v. Mayne & Mertz, Inc., (La. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT

09-0763

MAYNE & MERTZ, INC.

VERSUS

SWEET LAKE LAND & OIL CO., L.L.C., ET AL.

CONSOLIDATED WITH

09-0764

YUMA EXPLORATION AND PRODUCTION CO., INC.

************

APPEAL FROM THE THIRTY-FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT PARISH OF JEFFERSON DAVIS, NOS. C-178-07 AND C-817-07 HONORABLE STEVE GUNNELL, DISTRICT JUDGE

JIMMIE C. PETERS JUDGE

Court composed of Oswald A. Decuir, Jimmie C. Peters, and David E. Chatelain,* Judges.

AFFIRMED AS AMENDED. Larry C. Hebert Paul J. Hebert David M. Kaufman Ottinger Hebert, L.L.C.

* Honorable David E. Chatelain participated in this decision by appointment of the Louisiana Supreme Court as Judge Pro Tempore. P. O. Drawer 52606 Lafayette, LA 70505-2606 (337) 232-2606 COUNSEL FOR PLAINTIFF/APPELLANT AND DEFENDANT/APPELLANT: Mayne & Mertz, Inc.

Thomas C. McKowen, IV James C. Bates Strain, Dennis & Bates, L.L.P. 318 St. Charles Street Baton Rouge, LA 70802 (225) 343-0100

Tim M. Cassidy Cassidy Law Firm P.O. Box 1446 Jennings, LA 70546 (337) 824-7322 COUNSEL FOR PLAINTIFFS/APPELLEES: Yuma Exploration and Production Company, Inc. The Chalkley Exploration Group, L.L.C. PETERS, J.

This litigation involves the interpretation of a joint operating agreement entered

into by a number of parties to develop and produce the oil, gas, and minerals under

certain immovable property located in Jefferson Davis Parish, Louisiana. In these

consolidated cases, Mayne & Mertz, Inc. (Mayne & Mertz) appeals the trial court’s

grant of a partial summary judgment in favor of Yuma Exploration and Production

Co., Inc. (Yuma) and The Chalkley Exploration Group, L.L.C. (Chalkley), awarding

the two entities a 2.60500 percent proportionate share of the net revenue produced

from the HBY RB SUA, Mayne & Mertz, Inc.-Romero No. 1 Well (Romero well)

from the time production began until October 31, 2008. For the following reasons,

we amend the trial court judgment to reflect payment through October 10, 2008,

instead of October 31, 2008, and affirm the trial court judgment as amended.

DISCUSSION OF THE RECORD

By an October 27, 2005 order, the Louisiana Commissioner of Conservation

created Unit HBY RB SUA (the Romero unit), with Mayne & Mertz as the designated

unit operator. On February 15, 2006, twelve different entities, including Mayne &

Mertz and Yuma, entered into the joint operating agreement at issue in this litigation.

The twelve entities asserted in the joint operating agreement that they owned one

hundred percent of the oil, gas, and mineral interests in the Romero unit and agreed

that the purpose of joining together was to explore and develop various oil and gas

leases and interests in that unit. The joint operating agreement listed Yuma’s interest

as a 2.60500 percent working interest that Yuma had acquired from two separate oil,

gas, and mineral leases from the purported owner of part of the immovable property

in the Romero unit, Sweet Lake Land & Oil Company, L.L.C. (Sweet Lake). Sweet

Lake executed the first lease in favor of Yuma on March 29, 2005, and the second on May 1, 2006. At some point after execution of the joint operating agreement, Yuma

assigned one fourth of its interest to Chalkley.

The Romero well is located on the immovable property covered by the Romero

unit and began producing on September 22, 2006. At some point thereafter, a dispute

arose over the ownership of certain tracts contained in the properties governed by the

joint operating agreement (hereinafter the disputed tracts). Because fourteen entities

were claiming an ownership interest in the proceeds derived from the production

attributable to the disputed tracts, Mayne & Mertz filed a concursus proceeding on

March 12, 2007, to obtain a judgment directing the disbursement of the disputed

funds. Concurrent with the filing of the concursus proceeding, Mayne & Mertz

obtained authorization from the trial court to deposit the disputed proceeds into the

registry of the court.

On October 3, 2007, Yuma filed a separate suit against Mayne & Mertz,

requesting payment of its proportionate share of revenues produced by the Romero

well. Specifically, Yuma alleged that, even if its title was ultimately found to be

invalid, it was entitled to its share of revenues from the date production began until

ninety days after a final determination of its title failure.1 The two suits were

consolidated on March 5, 2008.

On May 1, 2008, nine defendants2 (hereinafter the Mallett defendants) filed a

motion for summary judgment, seeking to be awarded the royalties attributable to the

1 This litigation includes numerous other issues yet to be resolved and has involved various procedural matters not relevant to this appeal. 2 The nine defendants are Kelly Bree Mallett Lowe, Lacie Beth Mallett Corbello, Susanne Belaire Mallett, Belinda Mallett Delome Felsenthal, Rose Regina Flournoy Mallett, Margaret Mallet Bebee, Brandi Renee Romero, Wayne Wright Thibodeaux, and Clint Fontenot.

2 disputed tracts. Yuma, Chalkley, and Sweet Lake opposed this motion for summary

disposition.

On July 28, 2008, Mayne & Mertz filed a motion for partial summary judgment

seeking a declaration that Sweet Lake had no ownership interest in the disputed

tracts, and, therefore, neither Sweet Lake, Yuma, nor Chalkley were entitled to

royalty or revenue interests in the Romero well. After a September 16, 2008 hearing

wherein Yuma did not oppose Mayne & Mertz’s motion, the trial court rendered a

partial summary judgment in favor of Mayne & Mertz. When reduced to writing on

October 10, 2008, the partial summary judgment held that Sweet Lake never owned

the disputed tracts,

and that as a consequence thereof Sweet Lake is not entitled to any of the royalty revenues from the Romero Well, the unit well for the above described unit, based on ownership of the said Disputed Tracts and that Yuma, Chalkley and any of their assigns and any other lessee of Sweet Lake are not entitled to any of the working interest revenues from the Romero Well based on their ownership of any lease covering and affecting the Disputed Tracts from Sweet Lake or as a result of Sweet Lake’s claim of ownership of the Disputed Tracts.

However, this judgment explicitly reserved Yuma’s and Chalkley’s claims under the

joint operating agreement.

On October 31, 2008, the trial court granted the Mallett defendants’ motion for

partial summary judgment as well. In that partial summary judgment, the trial court

rejected Sweet Lake’s claims to the disputed tracts, recognized the claims of the

Mallett defendants to the disputed tracts, and ruled that the Mallett defendants’

interests “are to be further designated among the individual landowners by a division

order or orders or by consent.”

Yuma and Chalkley filed their own motion for summary judgment on

November 17, 2008. In that motion, they asserted that, regardless of the invalid title

3 issue, under the terms of the joint operating agreement they were entitled to receive

a 2.60500 percent proportionate share of the revenues, less expenses, from the

Romero well from production until October 31, 2008.

Mayne & Mertz responded by filing its own motion for partial summary

judgment on December 5, 2008, wherein it asserted that the joint operating agreement

prohibited payment of revenues to Yuma because of Yuma’s title failure; that the

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