MEMORANDUM RULING
Before the Court are Cross Motions For Partial Summary Judgment, filed by plaintiffs Chevron USA, Inc. [doc. no. 22]; Texaco, Inc. [doc. no. 22]; Amerada Hess Corporation [doc. no. 23]; Union Oil Company of California [doc. no. 23]; Mobil Oil Corporation [doc. no. 39]; and, Exxon Mobil Corporation [doc. no. 28] (hereinafter collectively referred to as “the Oil Companies”) and the Vermilion Parish School Board [doc. no. 25]; [doe. no. 27]; [doc. no. 28]; [doc. no. 27]; [doc. no. 43]; and [doc. no. 34], respectively, as well as Cross Motions For Partial Summary Judgment filed by plaintiff Exxon Mobil Corporation [doc. no. 26] and Marshall W. Guidry [doc. no. 32] (the Vermilion Parish School Board and Marshall W. Guidry will hereinafter be referred to as “the Royalty Owners”). As the central issues in each of the foregoing motions are identical, the Court will address all of the motions in this ruling. 1 For the reasons that follow, the Oil Companies’ motions will be granted and the Royalty Owners’ motions will be denied.
I. Background,
By individual letters, the Royalty Owners made demands upon the Oil Companies pursuant to the Louisiana Mineral Code, on behalf of the Royalty Owners and “all similarly situated royalty owners” for additional royalties on natural gas liquids which they alleged the Oil Companies had underpaid pursuant to mineral leases executed by the Royalty Owners and the Oil Companies (the “Liquids Demand”). By individual letters, the Oil Companies responded to the Liquids Demand. (Id. at ¶.4). Subsequently, by individual letters, the Royalty Owners made demands upon the Oil Companies pursuant to the Louisiana Mineral Code, on behalf of the Royalty Owners and “all similarly situated royalty owners” for additional royalties on dry natural gas which they alleged the Oil Companies had underpaid pursuant to mineral leases executed by the Royalty Owners and the Oil Companies (the “Dry Gas Demand”). The Oil Companies responded to the Dry Gas Demand by individual letters. The Oil Companies filed the instant actions for declaratory judgment pursuant to Title 28 of the United States Code section 2201, et seq. based on the Liquids Demand, and amended their complaints to include the Dry Gas Demand. The Royalty Owners filed answers to the Oil Companies’ complaints and amended complaints as well as counterclaims against the Oil Companies on behalf of the Royalty Owners individually and as representative of a class of all others similarity situated on the “Liquids Demand” and the “Dry Gas Demand.”
II. Summary Judgment Standard
A motion for summary judgment shall be granted if the pleadings, depositions, and affidavits submitted show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
Fed.
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RCiv.P. 56.
Once the movant produces such evidence, the burden shifts to the respondent to direct the attention of the court to evidence in the record sufficient to establish that there is a genuine issue of material fact requiring a trial.
Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
III. Analysis
The issues before the Court are (1) whether the demand letters submitted by the Royalty Owners pursuant to the Louisiana Mineral Code constitute the required written notice for a class of complainants, the “putative class” and (2) whether the contents of the demand letters were adequate or sufficient to put the Oil Companies on notice of the claims of the Royalty Owners individually, as well as the putative class. The parties agree that these issues present no questions of fact, but rather are legal issues which are appropriate for determination by summary judgment at this stage of the proceedings.
A. The Notice Requirement of the Louisiana Mineral Code
The Oil Companies contend that because Louisiana Revised Statute 31:137 requires individual lessors to make an individual demand in the lessor’s individual name, the use of a “class action” demand letter is insufficient to satisfy the requirements of 31:137. 2 The Oil Companies further contend that, to the extent that the rules governing class actions permit such an interpretation, they are in conflict with the Mineral Code. The Oil Companies assert, therefore, that the demand letters sent to the Oil Companies by the Royalty Owners individually and as representative of a class of similarly situated royalty owners, purporting to make demand for the underpayment of liquid gas and dry gas royalties on production in Louisiana were not an adequate pre-litigation demand as to the unnamed class members.
“The applicable law as to notice and demand is set forth in the Louisiana Mineral Code. Louisiana Revised Statute 31:137 et seq. establishes the procedure to be followed by a mineral lessor seeking the proper payment of royalties. Article 137 provides that, ‘[i]f a mineral lessor seeks relief for the failure of his lessee to make timely or proper payment of royalties, he must give his lessee written notice of such failure as a prerequisite to a judicial demand for damages or dissolution of the lease.’ When the written notice has been given, the provisions of article 138 become applicable. This provision affords the mineral lessee thirty (30) days after receipt of the required notice within which to pay the royalties due or to respond, in writing, by stating a reasonable cause for non-payment. Under article 139, if the lessee pays the royalties demanded within thirty (30) days after receipt of the lessor’s written notice, the remedy of dissolution becomes unavailable to the lessor, unless the lessee fraudulently withheld payment. Under article 140, if the lessee fails to pay
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royalties due or fails to inform the lessor of a reasonable cause for failure to pay in response to the notice, the court may award as damages double the amount of royalties due, interest on that sum from the date due, and a reasonable attorney’s fee, regardless of the cause for the original failure to pay royalties. The court may, in its discretion, dissolve the lease.”
Lewis v. Texaco Exploration and Production Co., Inc.,
“The Official Comment to 31:137 3 states ‘[i]t is the intent of [Mineral Code] Articles 137 [through] 141 to provide lessors with a meaningful remedy while simultaneously giving operators who have made substantial investments in producing properties the security of title which the nature and size of their investment deserves.’ These provisions provide lessors with some meaningful remedy, besides recovery of interest, to assure timely payment of the production royalties, and are balanced with the harshness of lease cancellation, which may involve the investment of millions of dollars. The Comment further notes that 31:137 does not intend that this notice be a demand for performance, as in the case of the traditional default under the Louisiana Civil Code, since the lessor may not desire performance. Rather, the device of notice is merely to inform the lessee he has not paid royalties deemed by the lessor to be due. The total effect of the articles is to provide an impetus to timely payment of royalties due, while giving lessees a reasonable way in which to avoid the harsh remedy of cancellation. It also affords the lessee an opportunity to evaluate a non-payment situation and to make a decision regarding whether the royalties allegedly due should be paid.” Id. at 1009.
“This statutory scheme evidences a legislative determination that a mineral lessor does not have a right of action to judicially complain of the failure of his lessee to make timely or proper payments of royalties until he gives written notice of such failure to his lessee and allows the lessee thirty (30) days after receipt of the required notice to either pay the royalties due or state the reasonable cause for nonpayment. The notice requirements set forth in LSA-R.S. 31:137 are an indispensable prerequisite to a judicial demand for dissolution of the lease or damages. The 30 day notice period requirement affords the lessee an opportunity to evaluate the nonpayment problem and then to make an informed decision as to whether the accrued royalties should be paid.”
Rivers v. Sun Exploration and Production Co.,
The Oil Companies assert that it is inherently unreasonable to subject a lessee to a class wide demand purportedly issued on behalf of “several thousand” unnamed royalty owners as in the cases at bar. The Oil Companies contend that such demand would require them as lessees, within a thirty day period, to investigate the specifics of every lease and every liquids processing and gas sale arrangement that they have ever undertaken in Louisiana in order to determine whether each and every royalty interest owner, even though having made no demand, has been satisfactorily paid pursuant to the lessee’s royalty obligation under every lease. The Oil Companies cite the language in article 137, “[H]e must give his lessee written notice ... ”, in maintaining that the reason *966 ably specific notice must be given by an individual lessor, in his or her individual name, through individual, demand.
B. Whether class notice is available under the Mineral Code
The parties do not dispute that in this case the Court is to apply the substantive law of Louisiana, nor that the Mineral Code and the aforementioned articles apply. Rather, the parties are in dispute as to the application of the Louisiana jurisprudence applying the article 137 notice requirement. The Oil Companies contend that
Willis v. Franklin,
The Oil Companies cite
Stoute v. Wagner & Brown,
“because of the many different contracts • involved ..., there are many different rights, remedies and defenses which are likewise involved. The [trial] court concluded that it would not be more efficient to try these disputes in a class action.
After reviewing the record, we cannot say the trial court committed manifest error in its holding. On the contrary, we are convinced that the reasons enunciated by the [trial] court are correct and we affirm, adopting the trial court’s opinion as our own.... ”
Stoute,
In
Lewis v. Texaco Exploration and Production Co., Inc.,
“The Mineral Code does not contain any specific guidelines as to the precise requirements of the formal written demand set forth in 31:137, but requires only that the lessor ‘give his lessee written notice of such failure’ to make timely and proper payment of royalties. Nowhere in the statute is there a requirement that a notice be given by each and every mineral lessor individually. The use of the word ‘he’ in 31:137 is not indicative of any legislative intent that each individual lessor provide such notice. The use of the masculine term is equally applicable to the feminine, and the use of the singular is likewise applicable to the plural. LSA-R.S. 1:7 and 8. Nor has the jurisprudence established any specific requirements for the sufficiency of that notice.”
Lewis at 1009.
In addition to citing Lewis in support of their position, the Royalty Owners contend that their position is further supported by Duhe, et al v. Texaco, Inc., et al., Parish of Iberia, 16th Judicial District Court, “D”, No. 86-848 c/w No. 88707. In Duhe, six proposed class representatives made written demand on Texaco on behalf of four statewide classes of persons who owned royalty interests in hydrocarbon production from all fields located in Louisiana whose royalty was calculated and/or paid by Texaco. Texaco filed an exception of prematurity arguing that the class notice letter was not effective under article 137. The court denied Texaco’s exception of prematurity and the Third Circuit denied Texaco’s writ application. (R 28, Exh. C; D).
The Oil Companies assert that the Leía-is court erred in its analysis when it placed the burden on the lessee to prove that it had been harmed by the individual royalty owners’ failure to make the required demand, instead of reviewing the class wide demand letter to see if it strictly adhered to the requirements of article 137. While the Oil Companies assert that such a case-by-case analysis performed in Leíais removes the certainty of the notice requirement that the Mineral Code was intended to provide the lessee, they maintain that if the Court were to apply the case-by-case analysis of Lewis, the demand letters sub judice would be deemed ineffective under article 137.
In a diversity case such as this, “[i]n ascertaining the law of the forum state, a federal court ‘is bound to apply the law as interpreted by the state’s highest court.’ ”
Texas Department of Housing & Community Affairs v. Verex Assurance,
The Court finds that by its own terms, “[H]e must give his lessee written notice”, the notice required by article 137 must be individualized. When a law is clear and unambiguous and its application *968 does not lead to absurd consequences, the law shall be applied as written and no further interpretation may be made in search of the intent of the legislature. La. Civ.Code art. 9. The Royalty Owners’ Demand Letters are legally insufficient to serve as written notice on behalf of unnamed royalty owners under article 137 of the Louisiana Mineral Code, and therefore, class action relief is unavailable under such circumstances.
This Court is of the opinion that the Louisiana Court of Appeal for the First Circuit was correct in the
Stoute
case in its interpretation of the notice requirement of article 137 of the Louisiana Mineral Code rather than the position that the same court took in the
Lewis
case. As set out in Willis, the written notice requirement of article 137 is clear and unambiguous and a suit brought before giving a lessee the requisite individual written notice is premature. Even if this Court had considered the Louisiana First Circuit Court of Appeal’s holding in
Lewis
to be a
correct
application of article 137, the case at bar is distinguishable from the facts of that case. First, the demands in
Lewis
affected royalty owners in only one field which was specifically identified as the “Hollywood Field [ ] located in Terrebonne Parish, Louisiana, and includes within its boundaries the City of Houma.”
Lewis,
Conclusion
Because Louisiana’s highest court has not yet adjudicated the issue which is before the Court in the case at bar, it is this Court’s task to determine “to the best of its ability” how the Louisiana Supreme Court would rule if the issue were before *969 it. In making its “Erie-guess” the Court has considered the existing Louisiana jurisprudence concerning article 137 notice as set out above. This Court is of the firm conviction that the Louisiana Court of Appeal for the Third Circuit in Willis and the Louisiana Court of Appeal for the First Circuit in Stoute correctly interpreted the clear and unambiguous language of article 137 of the Louisiana Mineral Code. This Court believes that were the issue before the Louisiana Supreme Court, that Court would find the demand letters sent to the Oil Companies by the Royalty Owners did not constitute the required notice for the putative class and the contents of the letters did not give the Oil Companies sufficient notice of the nature of the claims of the putative class.
This is an important issue that could have far reaching effects not only on the parties before the Court but for potentially thousands of people across this state and beyond, as well as the oil and gas industry in Louisiana and beyond. The Court therefore expressly determines that there is no just reason for delay and will certify this ruling as a final judgment pursuant to Rule 54(b) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure for appeal to the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit in order for that court to certify the issues raised herein to the Louisiana Supreme Court or for the Circuit Court to otherwise dispose of the issues as it deems appropriate.
JUDGMENT
In accordance with the Memorandum Ruling issued on this date,
IT IS ORDERED that the Motions for Partial Summary Judgment, filed by Chevron USA, Inc., CA00-0279 [doc. no. 22]; Texaco, Inc., CA00-0280 [doc. no. 22]; Am-erada Hess Corporation, CA00-0281 [doc. no. 23]; Union Oil Company of California, CA00-0282 [doc. no. 23]; Mobil Oil Corporation, CA00-0295 [doc. no. 39]; and, Exxon Mobil Corporation, CA00-0297 [doc. no. 28] against Vermillion Parish School Board are GRANTED and the Motions for Partial Summary Judgment filed by Vermillion Parish School Board, CA00-0279 [doc. no. 25]; CA00-0280 [doc. no. 27]; CA00-0281 [doc. no. 28]; CA00-0282 [doc. no. 27]; CA00-0295 [doc. no. 43]; and CA00-0297 [doc. no. 34] are DENIED.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the Motion for Partial Summary Judgment, filed by Exxon Mobil Corporation, CA00-0296 [doc. no. 26] against Marshall W. Guidry is GRANTED and the Motion for Partial Summary Judgment, filed by Marshall W. Guidry [doc. no. 32] is DENIED.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED THAT the Court certifies this ruling as a final judgment pursuant to Rule 54(b) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, and directs the entry of such judgment under the express determination that there is no just cause for delay.
Notes
. These cases were consolidated by the Court’s December 7, 2000 Order. (R. 41).
. The Oil Companies cite
Bollinger v. Texas Co.,
. The official comments do not constitute part of the law, but provide some aid in interpreting legislative intent.
State on Behalf of Jones
v.
Mallet,
. its noted by the Oil Companies, Judge Parro was also a member of the panel in
Stoute
but
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dissented in the 2-1
Lewis
decision on Lhc grounds that article 137 requires that notice be given by each mineral lessor.
Lewis,
