MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
Sеveral motions are before the court in this prospective class action by the plaintiff Wallace B. Roderick Revocable Living Trust alleging that the class — composed of royalty owners of natural gas wells in Colorado, Kansas, and Oklahoma — received inadequate royalties for natural gas produced by defendant lessee XTO Energy, Inc. The defendant XTO has filed two motions to dismiss. The first alleges that the implied covenant to market underlying plaintiffs claims is recognized only in Colorado law, not in Kansas or Oklahoma. The second alleges that certain portions of the present case should be dismissed in light of a similar class action under way in Oklahoma. XTO has also filed a summary judgment motion, seeking dismissal of certain claims in light of prior, settled class actions in Oklahoma and Colorado on the grounds of release and res judicata. The plaintiff Roderick Trust has moved for additional time to respond to the motion for summary judgment, in order to conduct discovery on certain issues. These motions are granted or denied as provided herein.
Implied Covenant to Market
XTO seeks dismissal of that portion of the Amended Complaint advancing claims for violation of the “Marketable Condition Rulе.” (Dkt. 37, at ¶ 57). It notes that the Amended Complaint states that the leases included implied covenants requiring XTO to “bear all costs of placing the gas (and constituent parts) in ‘Marketable Condition,’ ”
(Id.
at ¶ 18), and that XTO “alone bears the expense of making all products marketable. Gas and its constituent parts are marketable only when in the physical condition and location to be bought and sold in a commercial marketplace.”
(Id.
at ¶ 19). XTO seeks dismissal of all of the claims alleging breach of the Market Condition Rule outside of Colorado, arguing that the Rule is a unique feature of Colorado law, and that the cause of action is not recognized in Kansas or Oklahoma. XTO notes that in
Rogers v. Westerman Farm
Gas is marketable when it is in the physical condition such that it is acceptable to be bought and sold in a commercial marketplace, and in the location of a commercial marketplace, such that it is commercially saleable in the oil and gas marketplace.
Id.
at 906. It contends that the Kansas and Oklahoma have adopted versions of the rule which are more restrictive, that the law in those states recognizes that the “at the well” language in lease agreements authorizes the lessee to make reasonable charges for gathering and processing the gas.
See Smith v. Amoco Production Co.,
The plaintiff responds with two arguments. First, it contends that the Amended Complaint does not advance some Colorado-specific version of the Marketable Condition Rule. It stresses the “location” language cited from paragraph 19 of the Amended Complaint is the only time this term is used in the lengthy, 24-page complaint, and that the complaint provides no specific definition of the Marketable Condition Rule. The plaintiff contends that the Amended Complaint’s language makes clear that it seeks recovery for breach of an implied covenant of marketability generally. Second, it argues that in any event the law of the three states is not dissimilar. According to the plaintiff, all three states recognize the existence of an implied condition of marketability, the only distinction being that Colorado holds that the determination of marketability, and hence the proper allocation of costs, is a question of fact, while Kansas and Oklahoma treat the issue as one of law.
A careful review of decisions from the three states establishes that, for gas leases which require that royalty interests are determined by the marketability of the gas “at the well,” all three states impose a general obligation on the part of the lessee to render the gas marketable, and hold that such expenses may not be charged to lessors. However, the states disagree on whether the lessors may be charged for transportation expenses, and whether the issue is a question of law or fact.
The issue arises because natural gas is almost never produced in a marketable condition straight from the well.
It is common knowledge that raw or unprocessed gas usually undergoes certain field processes necessary to create a marketable product. These field activities may include, but are not limited to, separation, dehydration, compression, and treatment to remove impurities.
Mittelstaedt,
In
Stemberger,
the court addressed the propriety of the lessee’s charges for аmortized transportation costs. Reviewing its earlier decisions in
Scott v. Steinberger,
are dispositive of the issue in this case [and] clearly show that where royalties are based on market price “at the well,” or where the lessor receives his or hershare of the oil or gas “at the well,” the lessor must bear a proportionate share of the expenses in transporting the gas or oil to a distant market.
Once a marketable product is obtained, reasonable costs incurred to transport or enhance the value of the marketable gas may be charged against nonworking interest owners. The lessee has the burden of proving the reasonableness of the costs. Absent a contract providing to the contrary, a nonworking interest owner is not obligated to bear any share of production expense, such as compressing, transporting, and processing, undertaken to transform gas into a marketable product. In the case before us, the gas is marketable at the well. The problem is there is no market at the well, and in that instance we hold the lessor must bear a proportionate share of the reasonable cost of transporting the marketable gas to its point of sale.
Id.
In 1998, the Oklahoma Supreme Court in
Mittelstaedt
addressed a certified question from the Tenth Circuit as to the validity of fees imposed by lessees for transportation, blending, compression, and dehydration.
Generally, costs have been construed as either production costs which are never allocated,- or post-production costs, which may or may not be allocated, based upon the nature of the cost as it relates to the duties of the lessee created by the express language of the lease, the implied covenants, and custom and usage in the industry. We conclude that dehydration costs necessary to make a product marketable, or dehydration within the custom and usage of the lessee’s duty to create a marketable product, without provision for cost to lessors in the lease, are expenses not paid from the royalty interest. However, excess dehydration to an already marketable product is to be allocated proportionately to the royalty interest when such costs are reasonable, and when actual royalty revenues are increased in proportion to the costs assessed against the royalty interest. It is the lessee’s burden to show that the excess dehydration costs charged against the royalty interest occurred to a marketable product, i.e., that the cost is a post-production cost. It is also the burden of the lessee to show both the reasonableness of the costs and that the royalty revenues increased in proportion with the costs assessed against the royalty interest.
The court declined to hold that compression or blending costs to an already marketable product could not be proportionally charged against the lessors’ interests:
The certified question asks us to determine whether blending costs are a post-production expense. The exact nature of the “blending” is not identified. The analysis for blending costs is the same as for dehydration costs. Blending costs necessary to make a marketable product are not costs allocated to the royalty interest. Blending costs to an already marketable product are to be allocated proportionately to the royalty interest when such costs are reasonable,and when actual royalty revenues increase in proportion to the costs assessed against the royalty interest. The lessee has the burden of showing the reasonableness of the cost, the proportional increase in revenues to the royalty interest, and that the cost was incurred to alter a marketable product. The lessee must show that the cost was a post-production cost.
Clearly, compression on the leased premises to push marketable gas into the purchaser’s pipeline is a cost not allocated to the royalty interest. We decline to turn compression costs into costs paid by the royalty interest merely by moving the location of the compression off the lease. However, we recognize that when marketable gas is transported off the lease to a point where its constituents are changed, additional cоmpression may then become necessary to push the changed product into a purchaser’s pipeline. We conclude that offlease compression costs may be allocated to the royalty interests if such costs are reasonable, when actual royalty revenues increase in proportion to the costs assessed against the nonworking interest, and when the compression is associated with enhancing an already marketable product off the lease. The lessee bears the burden of showing the reasonableness of the cost and the increase in royalty revenues resulting from the compression costs.
In sum, a royalty interest may bear post-production costs of transporting, blending, compression, and dehydration, when the costs are reasonable, when actual royalty revenues increase in proportion to the costs assessed against the royalty interest, when the costs are associated with transforming an already marketable product into an enhanced product, and when the lessee meets its burden of showing these facts.
Id. at 1209-10 (citation omitted).
The Colorado Supreme Court expressed its most recent view of the issue in
Rogers v. Westerman Farm Co.,
In defining whether gas is marketable, there are two factors to consider, condition and location. First, we must look to whethеr the gas is in a marketable condition, that is, in the physical condition where it is acceptable to be bought and sold in a commercial marketplace. Second, we must look to location, that is, the commercial marketplace, to determine whether the gas is commercially saleable in the oil and gas marketplace.
Id. at 905 (footnote omitted). Marketability exists when the gas “is in the physical condition such that it is acceptable to be bought and sold in a commercial marketplace, and in the location of a commercial marketplace, such that it is commercially saleable in the oil and gas marketplace.” Id. at 906.
Further, the decision of whether gas is in a marketable condition “is a question of fact, to be resolved by a fact finder.”
Id. See also
The court will deny the motion to dismiss. XTO argues in its Reply that the plaintiff is wrongly attempting to “homogenize” the laws of the three states, and that a marketability claim under Colorado law has two separate prongs relating to physical condition and location. (Reply at 3-4.) It further stresses that the Stemberger decision was tied to a construction of the lease’s “at the well language” rather than an implied covenant (id. at 6-8, 10-11). But while there are indeed nontrivial differences in the law of the three states, 2 this does not establish that it is entitled to dismissal of the implied covenant of marketability claims for Oklahoma and Kansas.
First, the Amended Complaint nowhere sets forth any argument that invokes only the Colorado version of the implied covenant of marketability, with its exclusion of transportation costs from allocation. Rather, the Amended Complaint alleges a violation of a general duty to market, and there are substantial grounds for concluding that both states protect such an interest.
While the
Rogers
court in Oklahoma suggested that its decision was based on an implied covenant to market as distinct from attempts to interpret the leases’ “at the well” language, it is apparent that Kansas and Oklahoma both view their law as also imposing an implied covenant to market. Both Kansas and Oklahoma explicitly agree with
Garman,
the Colorado case recognizing an implied covenant of mаrketability.
See Sternberger,
That Oklahoma and Kansas hold that under proper circumstances transportation costs may be allocated to lessors is not fatal to the plaintiffs claims. In its Response, the plaintiff explicitly disclaims any “claim that XTO is making transportation deductions” in Oklahoma or Kansas. (Resp. at 29). Read in the light most favorable to plaintiff, the Amended Complaint asserts claims that XTO charged for improper, non-transportation expenses in violation of its legal duty in each respective state, and the relief sought is not justified.
Beer v. XTO
Defendant XTO seeks dismissal of the claims here which would also fall within those claims advanced in a certified class action currently before the United States District Court for the Western District of Oklahoma, Beer, et al. v. XTO Energy Inc., Case No. CPV-07-798-L. XTO argues that, under the first-to-file rule, the court should enter an order dismissing the claims of those plaintiffs within the proposed class who also fall within the plaintiff class in Beer.
The Beer case involves claims by owners of gas wells in Kansas and Oklahoma alleging the improper subsidiary-based pricing by XTO. All of the wells involved in Beer are processed through XTO’s Tyrone Plant in Timberland, Oklahoma.
The Amended Complaint here defines the proposed class as
All royalty owners of XTO Energy, Inc. (and its predecessors and successors) from wells located in Kansas, Colorado or Oklahoma that have produced gas and/or gas constituents (such as residue gas or methane, natural gas liquids, helium, nitrogen or condensate) from January 1,1999 to the present.
Excluded from the Class are: (1) the Mineral Management Service (Indian tribes and the United States); and (2) Defendant, its affiliates, predecessors, and employees, officers and directors.
(Dkt. 37, ¶ 10.) The Amended Complaint alleges defendant breached an implied covenant to place the gas in marketable condition at the exclusive cost of XTO, and to properly account and pay royalties, and that XTO breached this obligation by under payments. (Id. at ¶ 60). It alleges that XTO retained monies owing to the class unjustly, and that it should account for “such monies and a disgorgement of such moneys, including recovery for monies wrongfully retained” with interest. (Id. at ¶ 64, 66).
In Beer, the court certified as a class Nongovernmental royalty owners who, during Relevant Times, received payments based on production from an XTO-operated well for which the production is processed in Timberland’s Tyrone natural gas processing plant.
a. Kansas Subclass. Members of the Timberland Class who receive royalties from at least one well located in Kansas.
b. Oklahoma Subclass. Members of the Timberland Class who receive royalties from at least one well located in Oklahoma.
As used in the class definitions, “Relevant Times” means the following: (1) for members of the Kansas Subclass, for a period of at least as early as March 25, 1997 to present; (2) for members of the Oklahoma Subclass, (a) for a period from July 1, 2002 to present for those bound by the Booth settlement, and (b) for a period from March 25, 1997 to present for those who opted out of the Booth settlement.
Roderick Trust submits five arguments in opposition to dismissal. First, the plaintiff argues that the first-to-file rule should not apply at all given that XTO seeks only a partial dismissal, and notes that XTO cites no authority for the rule’s application under such circumstances. They argue that, effectively, XTO’s motion is a premature attempt to reduce the prospective class by excluding the Beer claimants.
Second, Roderick Trust argues that the motion invoking the protection of the first-to-file rule should have been filed in Oklahoma, and is not properly advanced here. Citing decisions such as
Johnson v. Pfizer, Inc.,
Case No. 04-1178,
Third, the Trust argues that XTO is not entitled to the equitable relief which underlies the first-to-file rule, since it essentially failed to adequately inform the Beer court of the nature of this litigation.
Fourth, the Trust contends that the two actions are not substantially similar, because the present action involves many more claimants (since the Beer action is restricted to royalty owners served by XTO’s Tyrone Plant in Timberland, Oklahoma), but also additional claims not present in Beer (since the claim in that action is restricted to the issue оf subsidiary-pricing).
Finally, as an alternative argument, the Trust contends that even if the court determines that the first-to-file rule applies, the court should transfer the action to the Northern District of Oklahoma rather than dismiss the action.
The first-to-file rule is a “well-established doctrine that encourages comity among federal courts of equal rank.”
Zide Sport Shop of Ohio v. Ed Tobergte Assocs.,
The Tenth Circuit applies the first-to-file rule, which “permits a district court to decline jurisdiction where a complaint raising the same issues against the same parties has previously been filed in another district court.”
Buzas Baseball, Inc. v. Bd. of Regents of the Univ. of Ga.,
The court finds that the issue is properly before the court. The cases cited by the Trust merely establish that the
preference
is for the court of first-filing to decide the application of the rule. Thus, the plaintiff correctly quotes
Johnson v. Pfizer,
And indeed the
Johnson
court ultimately decided to enforce the rule, holding that it would “reluctantly follow the first-to-file rule and will stay this case” pending resolution of the issues in the New Jersey action.
Id.
at *5. Additionally, there are numerous decisions by second-filed courts applying the first-to-file rule in cases involving class actions.
See, e.g., Peak v. Green Tree Finan’l Serv’ng,
No. 00-0953-SC,
Nor is the fact that the plaintiff seeks a partial dismissal here grounds for avoidance of the first-to-file rule. The first-to-file rule “normally serves the purpose of promoting efficiency well and should not be disregarded lightly.”
Church of Scientology v. United States Dep’t of the Army,
The Trust next argues that the court should not resolve the first-to-file issue, since XTO has behaved inequitably. In particular, it cites language from a footnote in the Beer certification decision:
The court takes judicial notice that a putative class action is currently pending in the District of Kansas against defendant. Wallace B. Roderick Revocable Living Trust v. XTO Energy, Inc., Case NO.08-1330-JTM (D. Kan. filed Oct. 24, 2008). In the Kansas action, plaintiff contends defendant underpaid royalties by taking improper deductions and failing to obtain the best reasonable price. It is unclear whether the price claims in the Kansas case overlap the claims in this case. The court notes, however, that defendant — the party most familiar with the allegations in both cases — has not argued that the Kansas case presents the same issues.
Beer v. XTO Energy,
Slip op., at 16, n. 11, No. 07-798-L,
Roderick Trust cites several decisions noting that the first-to-file rule may be denied under certain circumstances. See
Nacogdoches Oil & Gas, v. Leading Solutions,
No. 06-2551-CM,
Here, the Oklahoma action was filed by the Beer plaintiffs, not XTO, and there is absolutely no indication that XTO had any motive to mislead the Oklahoma court as to the nature of the present action, filed only days before the certification hearing in Beer, and there is no substantial reason to deny application of the first-to-file rule if the elements of the rule are met.
Turning to the merits of XTO’s first-to-file argument, the court finds no grounds for concluding that the two claims are not substantially similar. The plaintiff argues that the present action cannot be substantially similar to the
Beer
case, since the number of claimants involved is greater and this case involves types of claims not presented in
Beer.
But the first-to-file rule does not require identity of claims, since “there need be only substantial overlap for the actions to be duplicative and to thus implicate the first-to-file rule.”
Fuller v. Abercrombie & Fitch Stores, Inc.,
In the
Beer
certification order, the court noted that the plaintiff class alleged as a common issue the claim that XTO improperly “determines its royalty payments for all members of the class based on the
In the present case, the plaintiff initially alleged that XTO “failed to properly account to the royalty owners and underpaid royalty owners by taking numerous deductions before the gas products were in marketable condition and for not obtaining the highest and best reasonable price by selling to one or more affiliates.” (Dkt. 50-2, at ¶ 4). The Amended Complaint filed by plaintiff alleges that XTO made improper deductions by violating the Marketable Condition provision of the leases, and that it “should have paid for gas at arm’s length prices not affiliate sale prices.” (Dkt. 37, at ¶ 14k).
The court finds that the first-to-file rule applies to the сlaims advanced by the Tyrone plaintiffs, and the remaining question is whether those claims should be dismissed or transferred. The plaintiff argues that the court should transfer the affected claims rather than dismissing the case, citing various decisions. XTO responds that the court should not transfer the affected claims, because the present case is so much larger than Beer, and because the plaintiff itself chose to file this action in Kansas only two weeks before the Beer certification hearing.
Courts rarely dismiss claims pursuant to the first-to-file rule, preferring instead to transfer those claims to the court where the similar claims were first filed.
See Steavens v. Electronic Data Sys. Corp.,
No. 07-14536,
The court concludes that transfer of the entire action is unjustified. The cases supporting transfer cited by plaintiff involved transfers of claims which were identical to
(Allen v. Rohm and Haas Co. Ret. Plan,
No. 3:06-CV-25-S,
In the present case, the Beer action is severаl years ahead of the present litigation and has already received class certification. Further, as the plaintiff itself has stressed, this action is “approximately six times” larger than the 200 or so wells at issue in Beer. (Dkt. 70, at 5) (Emphasis by plaintiff). Transfer is both unjustified and unnecessary, as the Tyrone plaintiffs are already represented in the Beer class. Accordingly, the court will grant the motion to dismiss.
Summary Judgment
XTO has moved for summary judgment as to claims advanced by the prospective plaintiff class which would re
Here, plaintiff seeks the creation of a class of royalty owners of XTO from wells in Colorado, Kansas, and Oklahoma for production from January 1, 1999 to the present time. (Dkt. 37 at ¶ 10). XTO argues that the claims are barred by the doctrines of
res judicata
and release. It notes that under the laws of the respective states, the prior class action settlement agreements are interpreted by the court as a matter of law,
Ringquist v. Wall Custom Homes,
The plaintiff has responded by filing a motion pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.Pr. 56(5) seeking more time to respond to XTO’s motion. Citing
Pelt v. Utah,
The court finds that the facts set forth by XTO are uncontroverted, and XTO has satisfied its burden of demonstrating the existence of prior decisions which would bar some of the claims by the present proposed class under the doctrine of
res judicata,
and finds the application of that doctrine is consistent with due process. The court further finds that the discovery proposed by plaintiff would essentially re
Summary judgment is proper where the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with affidavits, if any, show there is no genuine issue as to any material fact, and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c). In considering a motion for summary judgment, the court must examine all evidence in a light most favorable to the opposing party.
McKenzie v. Mercy Hospital,
In resisting a motion for summary judgment, the opposing party may not rely upon mere allegations or denials contained in its pleadings or briefs. Rather, the nonmoving party must come forward with specific facts showing the presence of a genuine issue of material fact for trial and significant probative evidence supporting the allegation.
Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc.,
In Booth, the plaintiff class agreed to a Settlement Agreement which was subsequently incorporated into the final judgment under which the class released all claims
any and all claims, ... demands, ... contracts, ... causes of action of any kind or nature, which Class Representatives, Class Counsel or any member of this Plaintiff Class have had or may now have arising out of or in anyway associated with the acts alleged or which could have been alleged in the Class Action Litigation, ... the deduction of expenses in computing royalty payments, the taking into account of expenses in computing the proceeds, value or othеr sums on which royalty is paid, ... reporting and/or non-reporting of such expenses, ... the under-payment or non-payment of such royalties, ... in tort or contract, ... which in any manner relate to PostProduction Costs, ... sales by and/or to affiliated or related entities of XTO; failure to obtain the highest price reasonably available for the sale of gas from the Plaintiff Class wells, ... failure to pay interest on production revenues ... claims for breach of express and implied duties of oil and gas leases, ... unjust enrichment, accounting, and all other claims and/or damages relating to Post Production Costs....
(Booth Set. Agr. at ¶ 1.13). In approving final judgment on April 25, 2003, the Dewey County District Court specifically found that the notice had been mailed to all members of the Booth Plaintiff Class who could reasonably be identified and that the mailing and publication “constituted valid, due, and sufficient notice to all Plaintiff Class Members, and complied fully with 12 O.S. § 2023, the United States Constitution, the Oklahoma Constitution and any other applicable law.” (Dkt. 54-2, at ¶ 5). Thirty interest owners had opted out of the litigation. For the remainder, the court found that
Those Plaintiff Class members who have not filed timely and valid requests for exclusion from the settlement are bound by this Order, the Plan of Allocation, the Final Judgment in this action and by the terms of the Settlement Agreement to the fullest extent permitted by law.
{Id. at ¶ 7). The court conducted a separate fairness hearing in which it “considered all submissions made in connection with the proposed Settlement including all oral and written comments and/or objections received from the Settlement Class members,” and subsequently “reviewed and considered the evidence, files and records” prior to approving the settlement. {Id. at 2). The court found that the Settlement Agreement “is the result of good faith arms-length negotiations by the parties thereto” and that it was “fair, reasonable and adequate in all respects to the Settlement Class members.” {Id. at ¶ 8). It also specifically found that the class representatives had fairly and adequately protected the interests of the plaintiff class, and that the claims of the class representatives were typical of the claims of the plaintiff class. The court concluded:
IT IS, THEREFORE, ORDERED, ADJUDGED AND DECREED AS FOLLOWS:
11. To the fullest extent permitted by law, all of the Released Claims of the Settlement Class against XTO and Released Parties are dismissed on the merits and with prejudicе....
12. To the fullest extent permitted by law, all Settlement Class members shall conclusively be deemed to have released and forever discharged XTO and the Released Parties from all Released Claims, and all Settlement Class members shall forever be enjoined and barred from asserting, instituting, or prosecuting, in any capacity, before any court or governmental agency, any action or proceeding against XTO and/or the Released Parties that involves or asserts any of the Released Claims.
{Id.
at 6-7.) The court also held that the Final Judgment and Settlement Agreement should not generally be “offered or received in evidence as an admission, concession, presumption or inference against any party in any proceeding” but specifically excepted and allowed such use “in any action by XTO, or in any action against XTO by any Settlement Class member, or in any action against the Settlement Class, or any of them, to support a claim or defense of
res judicata,
collateral estoppel, release, full faith and credit, or other theory of claim preclusion, issue preclusion, or similar claim or defense.”
{Id.
at ¶ 10). The court reserved exсlusive and continuing jurisdiction to supervise and en
In support of the settlement, XTO issued settlement checks to approximately 9,901 Booth settlement class members for over $1,628,981.00 after fees and expenses in accordance with the Plan of Allocation and the Final Judgment. In addition, XTO issued a check to Class Counsel for $885,312.55 in attorneys fees, costs and expenses
The Colorado District Court in La Plata County entered a final judgment in Burkett v. J.M. Huber Corp. on June 21, 2005. The court certified the class action under Colo.R.Civ. Pr. 23(b)(3), defining the class as
All royalty owners, including overriding royalty interest owners, who have been entitled to receive royalty payments under oil and gas leases located in La Plata County, Colorado, owned in whole or in part, or operated by J.M. Huber Corporation and later by XTO Energy Inc. (“Defendants”) at any time during the period September 22, 1998, through the present.
(Dkt. 52-8, at 2).
The Settlement Agreement included Any and all claims ... rights ... that might have been asserted prior hereto or in the future, directly, representatively, derivatively, or otherwise by the members of the Plaintiff Class based on any ... omissions, failures to act, conflicts of interest, tortuous acts ... acts of unjust enrichment, breaches of express provisions, breaches of implied covenants or any other duties arising under the leases ... or breach of other statutory or common law duties ... which were or could have been alleged by the Class Representatives on behalf of the Plaintiff Class arising from Deductions by Defendants.
(Dkt. 52-9, at ¶ 1.25). In Burkett, “Deductions” were defined as “[a]ny monetary or volumetric deduction taken by Defendants in calculating and paying royalty.” (Id. at ¶ 1.6). The Settlement Agreement incorporated these definitions. (Dkt. 52-8, at 4). The Burkett Settlement Agreement stated that the class members shall be deemed to have “dismissed the Action against Defendants with prejudice as to the Settled Claims,” and “acknowledged full and complete satisfaction of, and fully, finally and forever settled, released and discharged the Settled Claims against Released Parties.” (Dkt. 52-9, at ¶ 9.2.)
In issuing its final order, the court found that the content of the notice to class members and its manner — notice by mail to all identifiable class members coupled with publication notice — '“comply with due process and with C.R.C.P. 23.” (Dkt. 52-8 at 4.) The notice provided for prospective class members to opt out of the litigation and eleven interest owners did so.
The court conducted a fairness hearing and took into account matters contained in the court file, heard statements of counsel, and was advised by certain Class Representatives concerning the proposed settlement. (Id. at 3.) The court found that the claims of the class representative were typical of the claims of the plaintiff class, and that the class representative would fairly and adequately protect the interests of the plaintiff class. The court found that “[t]he prerequisites to maintain this action as a class action as set forth in C.R.C.P. 23(a)[and] 23(b)(3) are met.” (Id. at 3.)
Based on its review of the entire record in the case, the Court determined that the Settlement should be approved, and held that the agreement “was arrived at through arms-length and vigorous and extensive negotiations” and that it had been “arrived at in good faith and was based on a realistic appraisal by the parties and their counsel of the difficulties inherent in a case of this magnitude and complexity.”
The Settled Claims through the date of this Judgment are fully and completely settled, discharged, and released. Upon XTO’s issuance of the Distribution Checks, Settlement Class members are deemed conclusively to have released and settled the Settled Claims. All such members of the Plaintiff Class are barred and permanently enjoined from commencing or prosecuting either directly, representatively, derivatively or in any capacity, any of the Settled Claims against the Released Parties.
(Id. at 7).
In compliance with the settlement, XTO issued checks to 563 royalty owners for over $3.7 million after fees and expenses. In addition, XTO issued a check to Class Counsel for $1,299,668.46 in attorneys’ fees and expenses.
“Representative suits with preclusive effect on nonparties include properly conducted class actions.”
Taylor v. Sturgell,
As the Tenth Circuit observed in Pelt:
It is well settled that a class action judgment is binding on all class members. See Hansberry v. Lee,311 U.S. 32 , 40,61 S.Ct. 115 ,85 L.Ed. 22 (1940). It is also well settled that a class action judgment will not bind absent members if they were not accorded due process of the law. Id. at 41,61 S.Ct. at 115 . The preclusive effect of a prior judgment will depend upon whether absent members were “in fact” adequately represented by parties who are present. Id. at 42-43,61 S.Ct. at 118 .
Further, as plaintiff correctly stresses, the decision of the court adjudicating the earlier class action cannot by itself “predetermine the
res judicata
effect of its own judgment; that can only be determined in a subsequent suit.”
Id.
at 1285 (citing
Taunton Gardens Co. v. Hills,
The Pelt court noted the standards for adequacy of representation could be stringent:
The standard for evaluating adequacy of representation in a class action suit was discussed by the Fifth Circuit in Gonzales [v. Cassidy,474 F.2d 67 , 72 (5th Cir.1973) ], where the court established a two-prong test to determine whether
primary criterion for determining whether the class representative had adequately represented his class for purposes of res judicata is whether the representative, through qualified counsel, vigorously and tenaciously protected the interests of the class. A court must view the representative’s conduct of the entire litigation with this criterion as its guidepost.
Id. at 75. The adequacy inquiry following final judgment “necessarily requires a hindsight approach to the issue of adequate representation, and in no way reflects on the [district] court’s conclusion [at the outset] that the [class representative] would adequately represent the class.” Id. at 73 n. 11. After consideration of these standards, the Gonzales court concluded that the representative’s failure to appeal an order denying retroactive relief to all class members except the representative constituted inadequate representation of the class. Id. at 75-76.
The court also recognized that the
Gonzales
standard had not been previously adopted in this Circuit, but noted the holding adopted in
Garcia v. Board of Educ’n,
The fact that the Keyes [v. School Dist. No. One,313 F.Supp. 61 (D.Colo.1970) ] litigation went on for seven years is evidence in itself that it was a hard-fought contest. The desegregation plan that was ultimately adopted by the district court was one developed by the court’s own expert. The court rejected each of the parties’ plans as being too one-sided. Plaintiffs’ argument that their interests were not identical with all those of the plaintiff class in Keyes does not preclude the application of res judicata. Where, as we have already shown, substantially all of plaintiffs’ interests were vigorously presented in the litigation by the various parties, there is no justification for allowing the litigation to be effectively reopened at this time.
Applying this standard to the case before it, the Pelt court affirmed the decision of the district court that the plaintiff class was not barred by the results of two prior class actions, where both prior cases had been dismissed for failure to prosecute after the issuance of a show cause order.
Notably, however, the
Pelt
court twice distinguished cases which involved the preclusive effects of an earlier Rule 23(b)(3) class action. After first acknowledging the
We have distinguished Gonzales, which permitted a Rule 23(b)(2) collateral attack, from class actions certified under Rule 23(b)(3). There are no mandatory notice requirements in subsections (b)(1) and (b)(2) actions, and members do not have the opportunity to opt out of the class, opportunities accorded to subsection (b)(3) class members. See In re Four Seasons Sec. Laws Litig.,502 F.2d 834 , 842, n. 9 (10th Cir.1974). “As a result of these distinctions class members in (b)(1) and (b)(2) actions must necessarily rely on the representative to protect their interests.” Id. (quoting Gonzales,474 F.2d at 74 n. 12). “Therefore, the propriety and adequacy of representation accorded to absent class members by the named parties in (b)(1) and (b)(2) actions should be critically evaluated before their rights are foreclosed.” Grigsby v. N. Miss. Med. Ctr., Inc.,586 F.2d 457 , 461 (5th Cir.1978).
Later, the court responded to defendant’s arguments that a contrary ruling would require “ ‘second guess[ing]’ class counsel’s litigation strategy and tactics” and that “even a class representative’s decision to abandon a claim is not per se inconsistent with adequate representation.” Id. at 1288. The court carefully distinguished the relinquishment of a claim by settlement, and the extraordinary and inexplicable abandonment of the earlier class actions present in Pelt.
Utah is correct that in the context of settlement, abandonment of claims can be a reasonable litigation tactic that does not necessarily support a finding of inadequate representation, citing WalMart Stores, Inc. v. Visa U.S.A., Inc.,396 F.3d 96 , 109-113 (2d Cir.2005). The Wal-Mart case was a Rule 23(b)(3) case, however, and plaintiffs were given notice and the opportunity to object to the proposed settlement. Id. at 102-103. Plaintiffs’ claim of inadequate representation was rejected by the Second Circuit as akin to a challenge to the adequacy of the settlement, rather than due process. Id. at 112. By contrast, the [earlier] accounting claims were not abandoned in the context of settlement, but rather, were simply dismissed for failure to prosecute. Unlike class members in a settlement, the plaintiffs received nothing in exchange for abandonment of those claims.
Id. (Emphasis added.) 5
The court concluded by stressing that its holding was triggered by “[t]he unique factual situation” presented by the abandonment of the earlier accounting claims. It stated:
we recognize the importance of finality of judgments and do not read the adequacy of representation inquiry as requiring second-guessing of every litigation decision. As one court succinctly stated, “[d]ue process entitles class members to notice and to adequate representation. It does not entitle them tocontinue to challenge the defendant’s conduct until they are ultimately successful.” Quigley v. Braniff Airways, Inc., 85 F.R.D. 74 , 77 (N.D.Tex.1979).
The court finds that the wholesale reexamination of the results of Burkett and Booth advocated by plaintiff to be precisely the sort of “second-guessing of every litigation decision” which the Pelt court stated was not a requirement of due process. Both of the Tenth Circuit’s decisions in Pelt and Garcia were resolved by an independent review of the results obtained as exemplified by the pleadings in the earlier litigation. In neither case did the court require independent depositions from parties to the earlier action in an attempt to determine if the terms of the settlement were on “less favorable terms.”
In Pelt, the court was able to determine that the due process requirement of adequate representation was not satisfied where the earlier class action counsel had inexplicably abandonеd a contest they were in the process of winning. 6 In contrast, In Garcia, the court found that the requirements of due process were met based upon a review indicating simply that the earlier litigation had proceeded for some time, was vigorously contested, and that the court exercised independent judgment in reaching a settlement.
The court has here reviewed extensively the litigation in both Burkett and Booth, and finds that in both cases the matters were vigorously and effectively contested by counsel and proceeded to results favorable to the plaintiff class. In both cases, the relevant courts exercised their independent judgment fairly on the basis of an independent examination of the evidence and the submissions of the parties. The courts found the Rule 23(b)(3) notices were adequate and consistent with due process, and the interests of the class were protected by the vigorous representation by class counsel. This court’s reviety of the records in both cases confirms this conclusion, and the court finds that the notices issued in Booth and Burkett were adequate to notify the proposed class as to the claims involved, that these claims arise from the same set of facts implicated in the present action, and that the courts rendered fair and appropriate settlements based on all actual or potential claims arising from those facts.
Further, both decisions were rendered after finding that the classes were properly certified pursuant to the relevant state versions of Rule 23(b)(3), and the Tenth Circuit’s decision in
Pelt
suggests that Rule 23(b) procedures play an important role in ensuring the existence of due process.
See Taylor v. Sturgell,
The court will accordingly grant the defendant’s motion for partial summary judgment as to the class members’ claims settled in
Booth
and
Burkett,
as such claims are barred by both the doctrines of
res judicata
and settlement, the class members having released such claims pursuant to the settlement agreements. This is true
As the Supreme Court has observed, in order to accomplish a full and effective settlement and thereby “ ‘ “prevent relitigation of settled questions at the core of a class action, a court may permit the release of a claim based on the identical factual predicate as that underlying the claims in the settled class action even though the claim was not presented and might not have been presentable in the class action.” ’ ”
Matsushita Electric Indus. Co. v. Epstein,
The plaintiff argues that
Booth
and
Burkett
did not separately advance certain claims, such as those advanced here for the alleged “failure to pay for NGLs, condensate, helium and nitrogen” or for “affiliate pricing,” and thus denominates these as “Unlitigated Claims” which should not be deemed released. But the identical factual predicate rule does not require that claims be pled or litigated to be rеleased.
See Wal-Mart,
IT IS ACCORDINGLY ORDERED this 11th day of January, 2010 that the defendant’s Motion to Dismiss (Dkt. 47) and plaintiffs Rule 56(f) Motion (Dkt. 80) are denied; defendant’s Motion to Dismiss (Dkt. 49) and for Summary Judgment (Dkt. 53) are granted.
Notes
. The
Rogers
court explicitly distinguished decisions such as
Piney Woods Country Life School v. Shell Oil Co.,
We disagree, however, with these jurisdictions because they fail to recognize that the implied covenant to market controls the lessee’s duty to make the gas marketable. Instead, these jurisdictions have adopted the rule that thе lessee’s duty has ended once gas is severed from the wellhead, and thus, any costs incurred subsequent to thatphysical removal are to be shared by the parties.
. As noted earlier, Kansas has explicitly held that transportation costs are allocable to lessors,
Sternberger,
. Plaintiff also acknowledges that the issue itself ultimately may be moot, as plaintiff observes in its Rule 56(f) motion that the ultimate Class Definition will "likely be amended to delete the 100 wells covered by the Burkett settlement.” (Dkt. 81, at 14 n. 6; cf. Dkt. 54-9 at 5, 8 with 55-4 at 8). But court finds no just release for any delay in the application of res judicata, as the relevant motions are ripe for ruling and no sufficient reason presented for a delay in ruling.
. On the basis of a footnote contained in a decision by the Delaware Supreme Court,
Prezant v. De Angelis,
.
See also Caruso v. Candie’s, Inc.,
. As mentioned earlier, the
Pelt
court noted the Fifth Circuit’s decision in
Gonzales,
where the court had refused to give
res judicata
effect to a prior class action because the class representatives — without any justification— failed to appeal the judgment thereby depriving the class of complete relief.
Gonzales v. Cassidy,
