{1 Thе questions before this Court are whether a clause in an agreement giving a liinited liability company the right to participate in all future wells on unleased property violates Article II, Section 32 of the OKla-homa Constitution prohibiting perpetuities and whether a limited lability company is a life in being for purposes of Article II, Seetion 32 of the Oklahoma Constitution.' We answer the first question in the affirmative and the second question in the negative. We find that the district court did not commit error in granting a motion to dismiss based on these two questions,.
I. BACKGROUND AND ALLEGATIONS
1 2 On August 23, 2005, Defendants' predecessor in interest, Encore Operating, L.P. and American Natural Resources (ANR), entered into a letter agreement with an effective date of September 1, 2005, regarding the development of an "area of mutual interest" (AMI), ANR agreed to assign Encore leases in the AMI, and, in exchange, Encore agreed to (1) drill a test well, (2) pay $350.00 per acre with "ANR delivering no less than seventy-eight percent (78%) net revenue interest," (8) allow ANR the option of participating in the test well, (4) give ANR a twelve and one half percent back-in after payout on the initial test well, (5) "pay $100,000 regarding the pooling covering the drillsite of the test well," and (6) allow ANR to participate in all future wells drilled in the AMI at any time whether or not the parties held a current lease. Defendants became Encore's successor in interest to the agreement by acquiring Encore's interest in the AMI
1 3 The provision allowing ANR to participate in future wells (Option Provision) is at the heart of this controversy. It provides:
2. In all subsequent wells within the AMI, ANR shall have the right to participate in the prospect area with a twenty-five percent (25%) working interest, ..,
ANR contends that Defendants have drilled and completed seventeen wells in the AMI without allowing ANR to participate in breach of this provision.
II. PROCEDURAL HISTORY
14 ANR claimed damages for breach of contract and for intentional interference with prospective economic benefits, sought a declaration that it is entitled to participate in future wells drilled in the AMI, and sought an accounting of all expenses and revenues relating to the AMI since the date of the agreement. Defendants filed a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim, urging that the rule against perpetuities prevented ANR from enforcing the Option Provision. ANR responded that the rule against perpetuities '(1) does not apply to oil and gas operating agreements and (2) does not apply to the Option Provision because oil and gas production is always of limited duration. After holding a hearing, the district judge granted Defendants' motion to dismiss.
T5 The Court of Civil Appeals affirmed in part and reversed in part, The Court of Civil Appeals remanded the case so that ANR could amend it's pleadings and for a determination of "whether, if alleged, a personal contract and a specific or perpetual organization life, together or separately, suffice to create an exception to the application of the Rule Against Perpetuities as set out in Producers Oil Co. v. Gore,
III STANDARD OF REVIEW
T6 This Court subjects a trial court's judgment dismissing a petition to de nmovo review. Darrow v. Integris Health, Inc.,
IV,. ANALYSIS
€ 7 The rule against perpetuities is embedded in the Oklahoma Constitution at Article II, Section 32, which provides:
Perpetuities and monopolies are contrary to the genius of a free government, and shall never be allowed, nor shall the law of primogeniture or entailments ever be in force in this State.
In Melcher v. Camp,
No interest is good unless it must vest, if at all, not later than twenty-one years after some life in being at the creation of the interest.
Id. ¶ 18,
A. The Rule Against Perpetwities and Joint Operating Agreements with Options
. The common-law rule against ly personal. Melcher,
[ 9 We examine whether the relevant provision in this case creates a property right subject to Article II, Section 82's constitutional perpetuity prohibition. ANR alleged in its petition that it had a "right to participate for a 25% working interest in each of the Disputed Wells as wеll as in all future wells within the AMI drilled in the future by [Defendants]," which would include wells drilled on leases procured in the future within the AML.
' 10 Defendants rely primarily on Melcher v. Camp,
"The parties further mutually agree that in the event [the lessors] shall at any time have an opportunity to lease the oil, gas and other minerals and mineral rights below 5500 feet, [the lessee] is to be given a five day option оf acquiring such. lease himself on the same terms and conditions offered to [the lessors] »
Id. ¶ 2,
¶ 11 ANR relies on Producers Oil Co. v. Gore,
15, "Should any Non-Operator desire to sell the interest, or any part thereof, owned by such Non-Operator in the oil and. gas lease, or leases, hereinabove described, such Non-Operator shall promptly give written notice to Operator with full information concerning such proposed sale, including the name and address of the prospective purchаser (who must be ready, willing and able to purchase), the purchase price and all other terms of the offer. Operator shall then have an optional prior right for a period of ten days after receipt of the notice to purchase on the same terms and conditions, the interest which such Non-Opеrator proposes to sell...."
Id. ¶ 1,
¶ 12 Producers Oil Co. distinguished the option in Melcher.
In Melcher the preemptive rights were not a part of an operating agreement dependent upon a lease. The rights in Melcher would vest only if a new lease was offered. The preemption did not apply to previously leased property but to unleased vertically contiguous property. In Melcher only one party held preemptive rights while here the preеmptive rights are reciprocal. These rights were not delineated by any time frame; a new lease could have been acquired whether or not there was any production in the upper formation.
Producers Oil Co.,
113 Here, the Option Provision is more akin to the Meicher option than to the one in Producers Oil Co. The Optiоn Provision is not part of a JOA or a lease. It does not expire when an existing lease expires, but continues when new leases are executed with new wells drilled thereon, Nonetheless, ANR postulates that the option to participate is self-terminating by the cessation of production, citing Producers Oil Co.,
B. Life in Being
114 ANR urged and the Court of Civil Appeals accepted as true, both without supporting authority, that an LLC, such as *771 ANR, could be a life in being for the purposes of the rule against perpetuity. We cannot agree.
{15 ANR claims that a "life in being" includes entities such аs a corporation and an LLC, based on this Court's determination in Cartwright v. Hillcrest Investments, Ltd.,
[ 16 At common law, a corporation did not qualify as a life in being. Restatement (First) of Property § 374, emt. h (1944). The comment expounds on the meaning of life in being:
The lives which can be used in measuring the permissible period under the rule against perpetuities must be lives of human beings. For many purposеs in the law a corporation is a "person," but not for the measurement of the period described in Clause (a). So also no such measurement may be expressed in terms of the life of any animal (other than man), even though the animal is one of a type having a life span typically shorter than that of human beings, as for example, a dog or a horse.
The United States Supreme Court also found that the use of a corporation as a life in being under the common law would violate the rule against perpetuities. Fitchie v. Brown,
T17 When there is no measurable life in being, such as with a corporation or an LLC, the "only definite period permitted by the rule against perpetuities is a term. not exceeding 21 years." Melcher,
~ (18 ANR states that they wish to amend their petition to show that they are 'a "single member limited liability écompany with a 30 year duration." ANR urges that as a single-member LLC, the LLC should be disregarded as an entity for purposes of the rule against perpetuities, just as it can be for federal tax purposes. Here, we are not dealing with federal taxes; we-are dealing with contractual rights. Oklahoma's statutory scheme makes an LLC a legal entity separate from its owners with the filing of its executed articles of organization. 18 0.$.2011, § 2004; 18 0.S.Supp. 2004, § 2004. Whether an LLC is for a specific or perpetual duration is not significant to its status as a separate entity. See 18 0.98.2011, § 2004; 18 0.8. 2001, § 2004, An LLC "generally remains a separate entity for state law purposes." Timothy, M.. Larason, Using One-Member L.L.C.s as "Disregarded Entities," 73 Okla. Bar J. 1753, 1753 (2002). ANR executed the AMI agreement as a business entity, not as its owner. Here, ANR, as an LLC, is not a life in being rеgardless of whether it has an expiration date or it is perpetual, 1 Thus, the Option Prowsmn is subject to the twenty-one-year limit imposed by the rule against perpetuities. and Melcher, ANR's right to participate in future wells is indeterminable, does not vest within the twenty-one-year limit, and may never vest. Thus, the Optlon Provision violates the rule against perpetuity.
C. Refomatzon and Cy Pres
(19 ANR also urges for the first time in its Response to Appellees' Petition for Certiorari that, if the Option Provision is void, then it should be reformed under Title 60, Sections 75-77 of the 2011° Oklahoma Statutes. Rule 1.26(a) of the Oklahoma Supreme Court Rules requires that an appellant, here ANR, include in its petition in error or a timеly filed amended petition in which as-a separate legal entity continues until *772 error "any error or any issue presented to and resolved by the trial court which is supported by the record." Okla.Sup.Ct.R. 1.26(a), 12 0.8.2011, app. 1, r. 1.26(a). The only exception is found in Rule 1.26(b), which deems the petition in error amended to include errors set forth in the brief in chief,. In appeals brought under Supreme Court Rule 1.86 (Accelerated procedure for summary judgments and certain dismissals) as here, briefs are not filed unless otherwise ordered by the appellate court. In this case, no appellate briefs were ordered by either the Court of Civil Appeals or by this Cоurt, precluding review of issues not raised by the petition in error.
T20 ANR failed to assert in the district court that the Option Provision, if violating the rule against perpetuities, should be reformed under the cy pres doctrine. Having failed to raise the issue in the district court, ANR could not assert in the petition in error as an issue that the district court erred in not reforming the Option Provision: Further, even with a liberal reading of the petition in error, we find nothing which raises the issue of reformation. For these reasons, ANR's argument that the Option Provision is subject to reformation is not before this Court.
«V. CONCLUSION
{21 ANR has failed to show that the district court erred in granting the motion to dismiss, The Court of Civil Appеals' opinion is vacated. The judgment of the district court is affirmed. c
COURT OF CIVIL APPEALS' OPINION VACATED; DISTRICT COURTS ORDER AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The date that ANR filed its executed articles of organization are not part of the record. Title 18, Section 2004 now provides:
A limited liability company formed under this act is a separate legal entity, the existence of which as-a separate legal entity continues until cancellation of the limited Hability completlon of its winding up, if any.
