Inflection Energy, LLC (“Inflection”), Victory Energy Corporation, and Megaenergy, Inc. (collectively, the “Energy Companies”) appeal from the District Court’s order granting summary judgment to Walter and Elizabeth Beardslee and over thirty other landowners (collectively, the “Landowners”), and denying summary judgment to the Energy Companies. See Beardslee v. Inflection Energy, LLC (Beardslee I),
We assume the reader’s familiarity with the District Court’s opinion; our certification opinion, Beardslee v. Inflection Energy, LLC (Beardslee II),
I. Factual Background
Beginning in 2001, the Landowners entered into certain oil and gas leases (the “Leases”) with the Energy Companies, granting the Energy Companies rights to extract oil and gas underlying the Landowners’ real property in Tioga County, New York. Each of the Leases contains an identical “habendum clause.”
It is agreed that this lease shall remain in force for a primary term of FIVE (5) years from the date hereof and as long thereafter as the said land is operated by Lessee in the production of oil or gas.
App’x 32 ¶ 1. The habendum clause thus establishes both a five-year “primary term” and a secondary term lasting as
In addition, each Lease contains what the parties refer to as a force majeure clause, which speaks to the effect of delays and interruptions in drilling. That clause provides, in relevant part: •
If and when drilling ... [is] delayed or interrupted ... as a result of some order, rule, regulation ... or necessity of the government, or as the result of any other cause whatsoever beyond the control of Lessee, the time of such delay or interruption shall not be counted against Lessee, anything in this lease to the contrary notwithstanding. All express or implied covenants of this lease shall be subject to all Federal and State Laws, Executive Orders, Rules or Regulations, and this lease shall not be terminated, in whole or in part, nor Lessee held liable in damages for failure to comply therewith, if compliance is prevented by, or if such failure is the result of any such Law, Order, Rule or Regulation.
App’x 33 ¶ 6.
On July 23, 2008, then-Governor David Paterson “ordered formal public environmental review to address the impact of combined use of high-volume hydraulic fracturing (HVHF) (commonly known as ‘fracking’) and horizontal drilling.” Beardslee III,
II. Procedural History
In 2010, Inflection sent notices of extension to those Landowners with whom it had contracted, asserting that New York’s regulatory actions constituted a force majeure event under the Leases and thus extended the Leases’ primary terms. On February 8, 2012, the Landowners filed this declaratory action against the Energy Companies in the United States District Court for the Northern District of New York, seeking a ruling that the Leases’ primary terms had not been extended and the Leases had instead expired at the conclusion of those terms. The Energy Companies counterclaimed, reasserting the po
The parties each moved for summary judgment. The District Court granted the Landowners’ motion and denied the Energy Companies’ cross-motion, concluding that the force majeure clause did not operate to extend the Leases. See Beardslee I,
III. Our Certification Opinion and the New York Court of Appeals’ Answer
Because this appeal “turns on significant and novel issues of New York law concerning the interpretation of oil and gas leases, a legal field that is both relatively undeveloped in the State and of potentially great commercial and environmental significance to State residents and businesses,” Beardslee II,
1. Under New York law, and in the context of an oil and gas lease, did the State’s Moratorium amount to a force majeure event?
2. If so, does the force majeure clause modify the habendum clause and extend the primary terms of the leases?
Id. at 232.
The Court of Appeals began by answering the second certified question. Construing the Leases “with reference to both the intention of the parties and the known practices within the industry,” the court concluded that the force majeure clause “does not modify the primary term of the habendum clause and, therefore, does not extend the leases.” Beardslee III,
In construing the Leases, the Court of Appeals observed, first, that the habendum clause does not incorporate the force majeure clause either explicitly or by reference. See id. at 157-58,
IV. Application
Having received a definitive statement of New York law from the Court of Appeals, we now apply that law in reviewing the District Court’s judgment.
Under New York law, as the Court of Appeals has explained, the Leases’ force majeure clause does not modify the habendum clause. Whether or not the moratorium on HVHF and horizontal drilling qualifies as a force majeure event, then, it did not operate to extend the Leases’ primary terms. Accordingly, because we perceive no factual disputes material to the legal question presented, we conclude that the District Court correctly granted summary judgment in favor of the Landowners and denied Defendants’ cross-motion for summary judgment.
CONCLUSION
For the reasons discussed above, we AFFIRM the judgment of the District Court.
Notes
. A habendum clause, which is “typically found in standard oil and gas leases” such as those at issue here, is used to "fix the duration of such a lease.” Wiser v. Enervest Operating, L.L.C.,
. In June 2015, three months after Beardslee III issued, the DEC concluded its review of HVHF and announced that it "will not establish a high-volume hydraulic fracturing permitting program; that no individual or site-specific permit applications ... will be processed; and that high-volume hydraulic fracturing will be prohibited in New York State.” Findings Statement, Final Supplemental Generic Environmental Impact Statement on the Oil, Gas and Solution Mining Regulatory Program, at 41 (June 29, 2015), available at http://www.dec.ny.gov/docs/materials_ minerals_pdf/findingstatehvhf62015 .pdf.
. In a submission filed in our Court sifter the New York Court of Appeals’ decision in this case, the Energy Companies urge us not to follow Beardslee III, advancing the argument that the Court of Appeals misquoted the Leases’ language and misapplied New York law. Those same arguments were presented to the Court of Appeals in the Energy Companies' motion for reargument there — a motion that the court denied. See 25 N.Y.3d 1189,
