EQT PRODUCTION COMPANY, Petitioner, Defendant Below v. MARGOT BETH CROWDER and DAVID WENTZ, Respondents, Plaintiffs Below
No. 17-0968
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF APPEALS OF WEST VIRGINIA
June 5, 2019
January 2019 Term; FILED June 5, 2019 released at 3:00 p.m. EDYTHE NASH GAISER, CLERK SUPREME COURT OF APPEALS OF WEST VIRGINIA
JUSTICE HUTCHISON delivered the Opinion of the Court.
Appeal from the Circuit Court of Doddridge County
The Honorable Timothy L. Sweeney, Judge
Civil Action No. 14-C-64
AFFIRMED
Submitted: March 12, 2019
Filed: June 5, 2019
Nicolle R. Snyder Bagnell, Esq.
Lucas Liben, Esq.
Reed Smith LLP
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Counsel for the Petitioner
EQT Production Company
David L. Grubb, Esq.
Kristina Thomas Whiteaker, Esq.
The Grubb Law Group
Charleston, West Virginia
David McMahon, Esq.
Charleston, West Virginia
Counsel for the Respondents Margot Beth Crowder and David Wentz
George A. Patterson, III, Esq.
Evan G. Conard, Esq.
Bowles Rice LLP
Charleston, West Virginia
Counsel for Amicus Curiae
Independent Oil and Gas Association of West Virginia, Inc.
John F. McCuskey, Esq.
Marc F. Mignault, Esq.
Shuman, McCuskey & Slicer, PLLC
Charleston, West Virginia
Counsel for Amicus Curiae
West Virginia Farm Bureau
Bradley Ward Stephens, Esq.
Morgantown, West Virginia
Counsel for Amicus Curiae
West Virginia Surface Owner‘s Rights Organization
JUSTICE HUTCHISON delivered the Opinion of the Court.
SYLLABUS BY THE COURT
- “A circuit court‘s entry of summary judgment is reviewed de novo.” Syl. Pt. 1, Painter v. Peavy, 192 W.Va. 189, 451 S.E.2d 755 (1994).
- “Generally, findings of fact are reviewed for clear error and conclusions of law are reviewed de novo. However, ostensible findings of fact, which entail the application of law or constitute legal judgments which transcend ordinary factual determinations, must be reviewed de novo.” Syl. Pt. 1, in part, State ex rel. Cooper v. Caperton, 196 W.Va. 208, 470 S.E.2d 162 (1996).
- “An encroachment by one person on the land of another is a trespass, although the damage may be negligible.” Syl. Pt. 2, Hark v. Mountain Fork Lumber Co., 127 W.Va. 586, 34 S.E.2d 348 (1945).
- “The owner of the mineral underlying land possesses as incident to this ownership the right to use the surface in such manner and with such means as would be fairly necessary for the enjoyment of the mineral estate.” Syl. Pt. 1, Squires v. Lafferty, 95 W.Va. 307, 121 S.E. 90 (1924).
- A mineral owner or lessee has an implied right to use the surface of a tract in any way reasonable and necessary to the development of minerals underlying the tract. However, a mineral owner or lessee does not have the right to use the surface to benefit mining or drilling operations on other lands, in the absence of an express agreement with the surface owner permitting those operations.
HUTCHISON, Justice:
Plaintiffs Margot Beth Crowder and David Wentz own the surface of land in Doddridge County, West Virginia. Defendant EQT Production Company (“EQT“) holds a century-old lease that allows EQT to drill wells to extract oil and gas from beneath the plaintiffs’ surface estate. The plaintiffs brought this lawsuit to challenge EQT‘s use of their surface estate to drill horizontal wells that extend under neighboring properties so that EQT can extract natural gas from beneath those properties. The plaintiffs contend that EQT‘s lease does not allow it to use their surface estate to extract oil and gas from neighboring mineral estates. Hence, the plaintiffs assert EQT is trespassing on their surface tracts, to the extent it is drilling for and removing minerals from neighboring properties.
The Circuit Court of Doddridge County agreed with the plaintiffs and entered an
For the reasons set forth below, we affirm the circuit court‘s order and the jury‘s award of damages.1
I. Factual and Procedural Background
Ownership of the plaintiffs’ surface tracts traces back to Joseph L. and Bell Carr who, in 1901, owned a 351-acre tract in Doddridge County, West Virginia. The Carrs owned the “Carr Tract” in fee, ad coelum.2 “The common law rule . . . is that a land owner with a fee simple title owns everything over the land and under it to the center of the earth. This rule extends to the minerals, be they solid (like coal), fluid or fugacious minerals (like oil and gas).” Faith United Methodist Church & Cemetery of Terra Alta v. Morgan, 231 W.Va. 423, 429-30, 745 S.E.2d 461, 467-68 (2013).
In August 1901, the Carrs leased the 351 acres of oil and gas below the Carr Tract to the predecessors of EQT. The lease agreement states that EQT‘s predecessor had a lease “for the sole and only purpose of mining and operating for oil and gas, and of laying pipe lines and building tanks, stations and structures thereon, to take care of said products[.]” The lease was to last “as long thereafter as oil or gas . . . is produced therefrom[.]” The parties agree that this lease remains in effect today.
Until 1936, the Carrs and their successors in title owned the entire 351-acre tract in fee (subject, of course, to the 1901 oil and gas lease). Then, the owner of the Carr Tract decided to split the surface from the mineral estate beneath the tract.3 In November 1936, the then-owner of the Carr Tract, R.L. McCulty, conveyed to Grace Lowther “the surface only” of the Carr Tract.4 Mr. McCulty retained the right to the oil and gas royalties from the 1901 lease, as well as sole ownership of any other minerals beneath the surface.
By the mid-1970s, Grace Lowther and her successors had partitioned the surface of the Carr Tract into several smaller parcels. In 1975, one of these parcels, within the boundaries of the original Carr Tract, was conveyed to the plaintiffs (Mr. Wentz and
Ms. Crowder). The plaintiffs, who were married, constructed a home on their parcel built from timber cut on the land, and moved into the home in April of 1977.
Between 1901 and 1936, and under the 1901 oil and gas lease, EQT‘s predecessors drilled three conventional vertical wells on the surface of the 351-acre tract.5 These vertical wells were designed to pull oil and gas from the rock strata beneath the 351-acre Carr Tract. After the surface estate was severed from the mineral estate in 1936, EQT‘s predecessors drilled six more conventional vertical wells on the Carr Tract, with the last being drilled in 1995.
By 2011, Patty J. and R. Keith Crihfield owned the mineral estate beneath the Carr Tract, an estate that included the right to royalties from the 1901 oil and gas lease. Defendant EQT owned the right to drill and operate under the 1901 lease and approached the Crihfields seeking to modify the lease. On March 11, 2011, the Crihfields signed an “Amendment of Ratification of Oil and Gas Lease” that allowed EQT to pool and/or unitize
and combine the rights provided by the 1901 lease with other leases to drill and extract oil and gas under neighboring lands.6
EQT then sought permits to drill modern, horizontal Marcellus shale gas wells on the plaintiffs’ surface lands. EQT designed the wells to extract gas from a total area of 3,232 acres, not just the 351 acres beneath the Carr Tract. Modern technology allowed EQT to initially drill vertically on the plaintiffs’ surface lands, but then curve the head of the drill and extend the bore of the well horizontally thousands of feet beyond the Carr Tract and through mineral estates under neighboring properties.7
In mid-2012, the plaintiffs learned of EQT‘s plans to use their surface lands to extract gas from beneath neighboring properties. On June 18, 2012, a lawyer for the plaintiffs mailed a letter to EQT stating that EQT had rights to use the plaintiffs’ surface lands only “as are reasonably necessary to extract the severed minerals from beneath the Carr tract.” The plaintiffs’ lawyer further advised EQT that it did “not have the right to burden, damage and otherwise occupy the Crowder/Wentz property for the purpose of extracting minerals from other mineral tracts.” Finally, the plaintiffs’ lawyer told EQT that
it did not have lease rights or the plaintiffs’ permission to enter their surface lands, and warned EQT: “Do not enter the Crowder/Wentz property for oil and gas operations.” EQT ignored this letter.
In February 2013, EQT entered onto the plaintiffs’ surface parcels (and adjacent parcels in the Carr Tract), built various two-lane roads, and cleared about forty-two acres. EQT also constructed a 19.7-acre well pad. After sixteen months of work, by June 2014, EQT had drilled nine new wells on the plaintiffs’ land, and had drilled some 9.7 miles (51,470 feet) of horizontal bores under neighboring properties. EQT claims that 37.5% of the horizontal bores were in the minerals beneath the Carr Tract, and the remaining 62.5% extended into minerals beneath neighboring tracts.8
contended that, “EQT did not have the right to enter on, burden, damage, or otherwise occupy Plaintiffs’ surface lands at all for the purpose of extracting minerals from other, neighboring mineral tracts.”10
Following discovery, the plaintiffs made a motion for partial summary judgment. The plaintiffs asserted that there was no genuine issue of material fact that EQT had trespassed on their surface lands to not only drill into the mineral strata underlying their lands, “but to drill into, frac, produce and transport gas from neighboring mineral tracts.”
Defendant EQT responded with its own motion for summary judgment. EQT argued that because (1) about 37.5% of the horizontal wellbore was through gas-bearing shale beneath the Carr Tract, and (2) the 1901 Carr oil and gas lease was unitized in 2011
with oil and gas leases on neighboring lands, then EQT‘s actions were proper. EQT further asserted that horizontal drilling is reasonable and necessary to the production of natural gas in the shale formations under the Carr Tract; accordingly, it was reasonable and necessary to extend that drilling under neighboring properties to produce natural gas from beneath those properties.
In an order dated February 19, 2016, the circuit court found as a matter of law that EQT had trespassed on the plaintiffs’ surface lands, and so granted the plaintiffs’ motion and denied EQT‘s motion. The circuit court found that EQT had the implied right to use the plaintiffs’ surface lands “for well pads, roads, and pipelines to drill into, and produce gas from, but only from, the mineral tract” underlying the plaintiffs’ lands. However, the circuit court found EQT had no express or implied right to enter or use the plaintiffs’ surface lands to drill into and produce gas from neighboring mineral tracts. Hence, the circuit court ruled that EQT was liable to the plaintiffs for trespass.11
The parties proceeded to a jury trial on September 5, 2017, to determine the plaintiffs’ damages on their trespass claim. After three days of trial, the jury returned a verdict awarding the plaintiffs damages against EQT. The jury awarded Mr. Wentz
$180,000 and Ms. Crowder $10,000. The circuit court entered a judgment order on September 26, 2017.
Defendant EQT now appeals the circuit court‘s February 19, 2016, order granting partial summary judgment to the plaintiffs,
II. Standard of Review
EQT asserts that the circuit court erred in granting partial summary judgment and holding EQT liable to the plaintiffs for trespass as a matter of law. This Court reviews a circuit court‘s entry of summary judgment de novo. See Syl. Pt. 1, Painter v. Peavy, 192 W.Va. 189, 451 S.E.2d 755 (1994) (“A circuit court‘s entry of summary judgment is reviewed de novo.“). Additionally, EQT challenges the circuit court‘s entry of judgment on the jury‘s verdict, primarily because that verdict was founded upon the court‘s summary judgment ruling. “Generally, findings of fact are reviewed [by this Court] for clear error and conclusions of law are reviewed de novo. However, ostensible findings of fact, which entail the application of law or constitute legal judgments which transcend ordinary factual determinations, must be reviewed de novo.” Syl. Pt. 1, in part, State ex rel. Cooper v. Caperton, 196 W.Va. 208, 470 S.E.2d 162 (1996).
III. Discussion
EQT argues that it is long-standing law in West Virginia that a mineral owner (or its lessee) can make any use of the surface that is “reasonably necessary” to develop
the minerals. Accordingly, EQT asserts that the only question the circuit court should have addressed is whether a mineral owner‘s (or its lessee‘s) use the surface of a tract to develop both the minerals below the surface and the minerals under neighboring tracts is “reasonably necessary.” EQT contends that it produced substantial evidence before the trial court showing that its actions on the plaintiffs’ surface lands were reasonably necessary, and that the plaintiffs failed to rebut that evidence. Accordingly, EQT argues that the circuit court‘s grant of summary judgment to the plaintiffs, and the jury‘s verdict in favor of the plaintiffs, must be reversed.
The plaintiffs, however, contend that the circuit court was correct in holding that EQT had no explicit or implicit right to use the plaintiffs’ surface lands to extract minerals from neighboring tracts. In other words, the plaintiffs take the position that, as a matter of law, EQT trespassed on their surface lands to the extent it conducted operations on neighboring tracts. Furthermore, plaintiffs assert it is irrelevant whether EQT‘s actions were reasonably necessary to develop the minerals under neighboring tracts because EQT had no right to develop those minerals from the plaintiffs’ surface lands in the first place. On this record, we agree with the plaintiffs.
This Court has defined “trespass” as “an entry on another man‘s ground without lawful authority, and doing some damage, however inconsiderable, to his real property.” Hark v. Mountain Fork Lumber Co., 127 W.Va. 586, 591-92, 34 S.E.2d 348, 352 (1945) (quoting 3 Blackstone‘s Commentaries 209).12 “In every case where one man has a right to exclude another from his land, the common law encircles it, if not inclosed already, with an imaginary fence. And to break such imaginary fence, and enter the close of another, is a trespass[.]” Haigh v. Bell, 41 W.Va. 19, 21, 23 S.E. 666, 667 (1895) (citation omitted). “A trespasser who does so intentionally or recklessly with intent to ‘take an unconscientious advantage of his victim’ commits a willful or bad faith trespass and is liable for damages in a greater amount than an innocent trespasser.” Reynolds v. Pardee & Curtin Lumber Co., 172 W.Va. 804, 809, 310 S.E.2d 870, 876 (1983) (quoting Pan Coal Co. v. Garland Pocahontas Coal Co., 97 W.Va. 368, 381, 125 S.E. 226, 231 (1924)).
The parties agree that the owner of a mineral estate has the implicit right to use the surface estate overlying the minerals, in a reasonable manner, to access and remove those minerals. “The owner of the mineral underlying land possesses as incident to this ownership the right to use the surface in such manner and with such means as would be fairly necessary for the enjoyment of the mineral estate.” Syl. Pt. 1, Squires v. Lafferty, 95 W.Va. 307, 121 S.E. 90 (1924). The severance of a surface estate from a mineral estate “gives rise to an implied easement in the mineral owner to use the surface” because “without rights of surface use the underlying severed minerals would be worthless.” Tara
Righetti, Contracting for Sustainable Surface Management, 71 Ark. L. Rev. 367, 368-69 (2018).
Because this right of the mineral owner is implied into the parties’ deed or lease, the right is limited only to uses of the surface that are demonstrably reasonable, necessary, and which can be exercised without substantial burden on the surface owner. As this Court has stated:
[W]here implied as opposed to express rights are sought, the test of what is reasonable and necessary becomes more exacting, since the mineral owner is seeking a right that he claims not by virtue of any express language in the mineral severance deed, but by necessary implication as a correlative to those rights expressed in the deed. In order for such a claim to be successful, it must be demonstrated not only that the right is reasonably necessary for the extraction of the mineral, but also that the right can be exercised without any substantial burden to the surface owner.
Buffalo Mining Co. v. Martin, 165 W.Va. 10, 18, 267 S.E.2d 721, 725-26 (1980).
When a surface owner complains that the mineral owner has exceeded its implied rights, it is the duty of the court to weigh whether the mineral owner has invaded the surface owner‘s rights:
In a case where there is a dispute of fact, the jury should find the facts, and from such finding of facts by the jury it is the duty of the court to determine whether the use of the surface by the owner of the minerals has exceeded the fairly necessary use thereof, and whether the owner of the minerals has invaded the rights of the surface owner, and thus exceeded the rights possessed by the owner of such minerals.
Adkins v. United Fuel Gas Co., 134 W.Va. 719, 724, 61 S.E.2d 633, 636 (1950). See also, Syl. Pt. 2, in part, Porter v. Mack Mfg. Co., 65 W.Va. 636, 64 S.E. 853 (1909) (“The owner of the surface cannot obstruct the mineral owner from a use of the surface for a tramway or other means of transportation fairly useful and necessary.“); Thornsbury v. Cabot Oil & Gas Corp., 231 W.Va. 676, 681–82, 749 S.E.2d 569, 574–75 (2013) (“[T]he general, common law rule in West Virginia is that a mineral owner or developer has the right to enter the overlying surface estate, but only to do that which is ‘fairly necessary’ or ‘reasonably necessary’ for the extraction of the mineral.“).13
The plaintiffs argue that the implied right of a mineral owner to use the surface to extract the minerals in a reasonable and necessary way applies only to the minerals underneath the specific surface tract. Conversely, the plaintiffs argue that there is no implied right to use a surface tract to extract minerals from neighboring tracts. Based upon our review of the law on this question, we agree with the plaintiffs.
This Court has never had occasion to directly address the question raised by the parties. However, precedent from this Court has repeatedly noted that a mineral owner does not have an implied right to use the overlying surface lands to benefit mining or
drilling on other property. This Court has said that while a mineral owner has an implied right to necessary use of the surface, that rule “applies to the mining and production of minerals from a given tract of land, and does not contemplate the use of such tract in connection with the production of minerals from another and different tract.” King v. S. Penn Oil Co., 110 W.Va. 107, 110, 157 S.E. 82, 84 (1931). See also Fisher v. W.Va. Coal & Transp. Co., 137 W.Va. 613, 620, 73 S.E.2d 633, 638 (1952) (“[i]n the absence
A review of other jurisdictions shows “the contemporary position is that the mineral owner is not entitled to use the surface for the benefit of other mineral ventures without express permission.” Donald N. Zillman, J. Russell Tyler, Jr., The Common Law of Access and Surface Use in Mining, 1 J. Min. L. & Pol‘y 267, 288 (1985).14 As one high
court
It is a well established principle of property law that the right to use the surface of land as an incident of the ownership of mineral rights in the land, does not carry with it the right to use the surface in aid of mining or drilling operations on other lands.
Stated simply, “[t]he mineral owner‘s [implied] right of surface use does not include the right to use the surface in connection with mineral development and production from other lands, and the mineral owner will be liable in the event of such use.” Steve Ruffatto, Kemp Wilson, Scrivener‘s Concerns in the Creation and Transfer of Severed Mineral and Royalty Interests, 9 Pub. Land L. Rev. 31, 52 (1988). As one legal commentator recently noted, when examining the law on this question in the context of horizontal drilling:
While a surface owner has no choice but to allow a mineral owner to do what is necessary to reach the minerals directly below his surface, the [surface] owner should not be forced, without his consent or any additional compensation, to allow the [mineral] owner to use his land in order to reach minerals that are not directly below his surface.
Jason A. Proctor, The Legality of Drilling Sideways: Horizontal Drilling and Its Future in West Virginia, 115 W.Va. L. Rev. 491, 519 (2012).
Finally, scholars have also found it “a rather strict general rule that in the absence of contractual permission, the holder of the minerals underlying a tract of land will not be permitted to use the surface thereof in aid of mining operations on adjacent, adjoining, or other tracts of land.” See W. C. Crais III, Right of owner of title to or interest in minerals under one tract to use surface, or underground passages, in connection with mining other tract, 83 A.L.R.2d 665 (1962). Scholars examining the rights of surface owners and mineral owners have consistently found that a mineral “lessee does not have the right to use the surface of the premises in aid of drilling operations on other lands.” William B. Browder, The Dominant Oil and Gas Estate – Master or Servant of the Servient Estate, 17 Sw. L.J. 25, 46 (1963).15 As one writer on the subject noted:
A mineral owner or lessee may impliedly use the surface of a tract in any way reasonable to the development of the minerals underlying that tract. However, the right to use the surface of one tract for the benefit of another tract will not be implied. Such unauthorized use will constitute an “excessive user.” The surface owner should prevail in enjoining the drilling operation in a trespass action or suing for damages based upon the value of the unauthorized surface use.
John D. McKinnis, Directional Drilling, Subsurface Trespass, and Conversion, 4 J. Min. L. & Pol‘y 235, 243 (1988).
We therefore hold that a mineral owner or lessee has an implied right to use the surface of a tract in any way reasonable and necessary to the development of minerals underlying the tract. However, a mineral owner or lessee does not have the right to use the surface to benefit mining or drilling operations on other lands, in the absence of an express agreement with the surface owner permitting those operations. Stated differently, “Although the owner [or lessee] of the mineral estate hypothetically owns to the deepest depths of the earth, horizontally the ad coelum doctrine is limited to the interior of the surface boundaries from which the mineral estate is derived.” Christopher S. Kulander, R. Jordan Shaw, Comparing Subsurface Trespass Jurisprudence – Geophysical Surveying and Hydraulic Fracturing, 46 N.M. L. Rev. 67, 73 (2016).
In the instant case, EQT asserts that the 1901 oil and gas lease gives it the explicit right to enter the plaintiffs’ lands for the “purpose of mining and operating for oil and gas, and of laying pipe lines and building tanks, stations and structures thereon, to take care of said products.” The 1901 lease, however, clearly has application only to the premises described in the lease: the 351-acre Carr Tract. The Carrs plainly intended for their 1901 lease to limit EQT (and its predecessors) to mining and operating for oil and gas to remove minerals beneath the surface of the Carr Tract. “[C]ourts cannot rewrite a contract or deed that plainly expresses the parties’ intent,” Faith United Methodist, 231 W.Va. at 444, 745 S.E.2d at 482, and we decline to rewrite the 1901 lease to expand EQT‘s rights.
Moreover, when the plaintiffs’ surface estate was severed from the mineral estate in 1936, the surface estate was subject only to the terms of the 1901 lease. The deeds severing the surface and mineral estates contain no language altering the burden imposed on the surface under the 1901 lease, and no express language allowing the surface estate to be used in the extraction of hydrocarbons from neighboring lands. After the 1936 severance, the mineral owner and leaseholder only had the rights, explicit and implicit, to use the surface to reasonably explore for and extract minerals from the Carr Tract. We therefore also decline to rewrite the 1936 severance deed to alter EQT‘s rights and the surface owners’ burdens.
EQT, however, contends that it modified the 1901 lease in 2011, when the current owners of the mineral estate signed an amendment allowing EQT to “pool” or “unitize” the Carr mineral estate with surrounding mineral tracts. EQT argues that this 2011 modification to the lease changed the rights attendant to the surface estate, an estate that split from the mineral estate in 1936. We reject this argument because, in 2011, the owners of the mineral estate no longer owned the right to use the surface estate for exploration on and production from neighboring tracts. Because the mineral estate was severed from the surface estate in 1936, that right belonged to the plaintiffs or, more specifically, was a right attached to their surface
We end with EQT‘s central argument, which is that its method of horizontally drilling wells from the plaintiffs’ surface lands was reasonable and necessary
to develop the natural gas beneath neighboring lands. We reject this argument because, as the plaintiffs established, EQT had no right to be upon the Carr Tract to explore and drill for natural gas beneath neighboring lands. This Court will not imply a right to use a surface estate to conduct drilling or mining operations under neighboring lands; as noted above, the right must be expressly obtained, addressed, or reserved in the parties’ deeds, leases, or other writings.
In sum, under the 1901 lease, EQT only had a right to conduct operations on the plaintiffs’ surface lands to explore for and extract oil and gas from beneath the Carr Tract. EQT had neither an express agreement with the plaintiffs (or their predecessors) nor an implicit right to use the plaintiffs’ surface lands to benefit its drilling operations on neighboring lands. EQT has identified no genuine issue of material fact on this question. Accordingly, the circuit court was correct to grant the plaintiffs’ motion for partial summary judgment. The record supports the circuit court‘s finding that EQT trespassed on the plaintiffs’ surface lands to the extent it used those lands to extract minerals from neighboring properties. The jury‘s verdict, and the court‘s consequent judgment order, are therefore proper.
IV. Conclusion
Our holding today does not challenge or constrain the drilling methods chosen by the oil and gas industry. The industry has shown that horizontal drilling and hydraulic fracturing techniques are evolving at a rapid pace and are an economical and efficient tool for producing hydrocarbons. Our opinion only affirms a classical rule of
property jurisprudence: it is trespassing to go on someone‘s land without the right to do so. A mineral owner or lessee has an implicit right to use the overlying surface to access only the minerals directly below the surface. Using the surface to extract minerals elsewhere, without the permission of the surface owner, is a trespass. Should the mineral owner or lessee want to utilize the surface to access minerals under neighboring land, they can certainly reach a separate agreement with the surface owner.
A primary “aim of government is to protect property rights, insure the possession and enjoyment thereof by the owners and thus promote domestic tranquillity and the general welfare.” State v. McDowell Lodge, No. 112, A.F. & A.M., 96 W.Va. 611, 613, 123 S.E. 561, 563 (1924). To protect property rights, this Court‘s goal is to promote clear and simple rules of land ownership, and “to avoid bringing upon the people interminable confusion of land titles; instead, we must endeavor to prevent and eradicate uncertainty of such titles.” Faith United Methodist, 231 W.Va. at 431, 745 S.E.2d at 469 (cleaned up). Our opinion merely restates a bright-line rule founded long ago in the common law that surface owners and mineral owners (or their lessees) can easily navigate.
The circuit court‘s February 19, 2016, partial summary judgment order and September 26, 2017, judgment order are supported by the record and must be affirmed.
Affirmed.
Notes
Faith United Methodist, 231 W.Va. at 430, 745 S.E.2d at 468 (footnotes omitted).The owner of a fee simple title may sever the land into separate surface and mineral estates in a number of ways. The owner may convey to another ownership in a particular mineral underlying the tract (such as all of the coal, oil, gas, uranium, silver, or limestone), a seam of one mineral, or all of the minerals, while retaining the surface of the tract. Or, the owner may convey the surface only; a conveyance of the “surface only” in effect reserves all the remaining minerals to the grantor. The separate estates that are created may later be conveyed, devised, and/or taxed.
Brown v. Spilman, 155 U.S. 665, 670 (1895). See generally, Gain v. S. Penn Oil Co., 76 W.Va. 769, 86 S.E. 883 (1915); Boggess v. Milam, 127 W.Va. 654, 34 S.E.2d 267 (1945).[Oil and gas] belong to the owner of the land, and are part of it, so long as they are on it or in it or subject to his control; but when they escape and go into other land, or come under another‘s control, the title of the former owner is gone. If an adjoining owner drills his own land, and taps a deposit of oil or gas, extending under his neighbor‘s field, so that it comes into his well, it becomes his property.
