Zehentbauer Family Land, LP v. Chesapeake Exploration, L. L.C.

935 F.3d 496
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedAugust 15, 2019
Docket18-4139
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 935 F.3d 496 (Zehentbauer Family Land, LP v. Chesapeake Exploration, L. L.C.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Zehentbauer Family Land, LP v. Chesapeake Exploration, L. L.C., 935 F.3d 496 (6th Cir. 2019).

Opinion

RONALD LEE GILMAN, Circuit Judge.

This appeal concerns oil and gas leases in Ohio's Utica Shale Formation. The defendants are exploration and production companies that have contracted with landowners to drill for oil and gas on the leased properties, and the plaintiffs are a putative class of such landowners. Between 2010 and 2012, the plaintiffs and the defendants entered into hundreds of oil and gas lease agreements that provide for royalty payments to the plaintiffs based on the gross proceeds received by the defendants from the sale of each well's oil and gas production.

The defendants sell the oil and gas extracted from the leased properties to so-called midstream companies affiliated with the defendants. To calculate the price that an unaffiliated entity would have presumptively paid for the oil and gas, the defendants use the "netback method." According to the plaintiffs, the defendants underpaid the royalties due to the plaintiffs during the years in question because the netback method (1) does not accurately approximate an arm's-length-transaction price, and (2) improperly deducts post-production costs from the price.

The district court granted class certification. In this interlocutory appeal, the defendants argue that class certification under *500 Rule 23(b)(3) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure is improper because issues common to the class members do not predominate over individual issues. For the reasons set forth below, we AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.

I. BACKGROUND

A. Factual background

Chesapeake Exploration, LLC, and a predecessor company, Ohio Buckeye Energy, LLC, entered into hundreds of oil and gas leases with landowners in Ohio, including the three named plaintiffs in the present case. These leases establish that Chesapeake Exploration and its assigns are entitled to produce oil and gas from beneath the surface of the landowners' properties in exchange for royalty payments based on the gross proceeds received from the oil and gas sold.

The plaintiffs have split the leases into three subclasses. Group A's royalty provisions contain language governing the sale price and royalty percentage, but the gas royalty provisions contain a definitional clause and a comparable-sales requirement that the oil royalty provisions do not. The definitional clause outlines the substances governed by the provision and the comparable-sales requirement governs gas sales to companies affiliated with the defendants. Zehentbauer Family Land, LP, and Hanover Farms, LP-two of the three named plaintiffs-are in the Group A subclass.

Group B's royalty provisions contain a definitional clause and comparable-sales requirement for both oil and gas sales. Evelyn Frances Young, Successor Trustee of the Robert Milton Young Trust-the third named plaintiff-is in the Group B subclass.

Finally, all of Group C's oil and gas royalty provisions have a definitional clause, but do not have a comparable-sales requirement. None of the named plaintiffs, however, are in the Group C subclass.

The lease agreements provide that Zehentbauer and Hanover are entitled to a 17.5% royalty and that Young is entitled to a 20% royalty "based upon the gross proceeds paid to Lessee" from the sale of oil or gas sold from the leased premises. The leases define the term "gross proceeds" as "the total consideration paid for oil, gas, associated hydrocarbons, and marketable by-products produced from the leased premises."

For gas sales, the leases specify that the royalties are based on the gross proceeds paid to the defendants "computed at the wellhead." Royalties are based on the defendants' sales price when they sell gas "in an arms-length transaction to an unaffiliated bona fide purchaser." The comparable-sales requirement of the leases accounts for the possibility that the defendants might sell gas to their own affiliates. In such cases, the Zehentbauer and Hanover leases provide that

the price upon which royalties are based shall be comparable to that which could be obtained in an arms length transaction (given the quantity and quality of the gas available for sale from the leased premises and for a similar contract term) and without any deductions or expenses except for Lessee to deduct from Lessor's royalty payments Lessor's prorated share of any tax, severance or otherwise, imposed by any government body.

The Young lease has a nearly identical provision, but its exception for deducting the plaintiffs' share of taxes is incorporated in the sentence following the phrase "and without any deductions or expenses."

For oil sales, the Young lease uses virtually the same royalty language, but omits the phrase "at the wellhead." The Zehentbauer *501 and Hanover leases, however, provide for the calculation of oil royalties based on "the purchase price received for oil prevailing on the date such oil is run into transporter trucks or pipelines."

Following the execution of these leases, Chesapeake Exploration assigned some of its rights under the leases to CHK Utica, LCC, and to Total E&P USA, Inc., both of which are defendants in the present case. CHK Utika is an affiliate of Chesapeake Exploration.

As permitted by the leases, the defendants sell the extracted oil and gas to their affiliates. Chesapeake Exploration and CHK Utica sell the oil and gas to an affiliated company called Chesapeake Energy Marketing, LLC. Total E&P USA sells the oil and gas to a corporate affiliate called Total Gas & Power North America, Inc. These affiliates are midstream companies that buy raw oil and gas at the wellhead and then process the raw products, transport them, and sell them to unaffiliated downstream companies that in turn sell the refined oil and gas products to consumers.

Because the defendants sell the extracted oil and gas to affiliates, the royalty payments are governed by the lease provisions specifying that such payments are to be based on the prices that an unaffiliated entity would have paid for the oil and gas in an arm's-length transaction. (The defendants appear to employ the same method when calculating Group A's oil royalties, despite the lack of comparable-sales language in the governing provision.) In order to determine the arm's-length-transaction price, the defendants and their midstream affiliates employ the "netback method." That method takes a weighted average of prices at which the midstream affiliates sell the oil and gas at various downstream locations and adjusts for the midstream company's costs of compression, dehydration, treating, gathering, processing, fractionation, and transportation to move the raw oil and gas from the wellhead to downstream resale locations.

These costs are referred to as post-production costs. The netback method is intended to account for the midstream costs associated with moving the raw oil and gas from the wellhead to the downstream markets.

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Bluebook (online)
935 F.3d 496, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zehentbauer-family-land-lp-v-chesapeake-exploration-l-lc-ca6-2019.