XOG OPERATING, LLC AND GERONIMO HOLDING CORPORATION, PETITIONERS, v. CHESAPEAKE EXPLORATION LIMITED PARTNERSHIP AND CHESAPEAKE EXPLORATION, L.L.C., RESPONDENTS
No. 15-0935
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF TEXAS
April 13, 2018
Argued January 9, 2018
This case and a companion, Endeavor Energy Resources, L.P. v. Discovery Operating, Inc.,1 also decided today, require us to interpret retained-acreage provisions in oil-and-gas lease instruments. We lay out more fully in Endeavor the regulatory and industry contexts in which the provisions are used and the principles that guide our analysis. Each case turns on the text of the retained-acreage provision at issue. In Endeavor, we hold that “a governmental proration
assigned to a well” refers to acreage assigned by the operator, not by field rules.2 Here, we hold that acreage “included within the proration unit for each well . . . prescribed by field rules” refers to acreage set by the field rules, not acreage assigned by the operator. We affirm the judgment of the court of appeals.3
I
By a term assignment,4 XOG5 conveyed to Chesapeake6 its rights as lessee under 4 oil-and-
gas leases covering approximately 1,625.80 acres in 3 sections of land in Wheeler County.7 The assignment‘s primary term was 2 years and “as long thereafter as operations“—defined to include
save and except that portion of [the leased acreage] included within the proration or pooled unit of each well drilled under this Assignment and producing or capable of producing oil and/or gas in paying quantities. The term “proration unit” as used herein, shall mean the area within the surface boundaries of the proration unit then established or prescribed by field rules or special order of the appropriate regulatory authority for the reservoir in which each well is completed. In the absence of such field rules or special order, each proration unit shall be deemed to be 320 acres of land in the form of a square as near as practicable surrounding[] a well completed as a gas well producing or capable of production in paying quantities . . . .8
(Emphasis added.) More simply, as important to the issues before us, Chesapeake would retain for each well the acreage “included within the proration . . . unit” “prescribed by field rules” or, “absen[t] . . . field rules“, 320 acres. The acreage not retained by Chesapeake would revert to XOG on termination of the assignment, and Chesapeake was to “promptly provide [XOG] with a fully executed and recordable release of this Assignment and reassignment to [XOG] for all lands and depths which have so terminated, on a form satisfactory to [XOG], free and clear“.
Chesapeake completed 6 wells during the primary term of the assignment, all producing or capable of producing gas in paying quantities.9 Five of the 6 wells are located in the Allison-Britt Field,10 for which the Railroad Commission has promulgated field rules. Rule 2 provides:
The acreage assigned to the individual gas well for the purpose of allocating allowable gas production thereto shall be known as the prescribed proration unit. No proration unit shall consist of more than three hundred twenty (320) acres except as hereinafter provided; . . . provided that tolerance acreage of ten (10) percent shall be allowed for each unit so that an amount not to exceed a maximum of three hundred fifty-two (352) acres may be assigned. For allowable assignment purposes, the prescribed proration unit shall be a three hundred twenty (320) acre unit, and each unit containing less than three hundred twenty (320) acres shall be a fractional proration unit.
The “prescribed” proration unit is 320 acres, though “tolerance acreage” can increase its size to as much as 352 acres. A unit smaller than 320 acres is “a fractional proration unit.” Chesapeake‘s 6th well is located in the Stiles Ranch Field,11 for which there are no field rules.
Chesapeake refused to release or reassign to XOG any acreage covered by the assignment. XOG sued Chesapeake to construe the retained-acreage provision, and each side moved for summary judgment. The trial court granted Chesapeake‘s motion, denied XOG‘s, and rendered a final judgment that XOG take nothing. A divided court of appeals affirmed.14 We granted XOG‘s petition for review.15
II
Our opinion today in Endeavor fully sets out the principles that guide our analysis of a retained-acreage provision.16 Such provisions are contractual17 and vary widely because parties are free to contract
proration unit for each well to determine its maximum allowable production.23 An operator must generally file a Form P-15 stating the acreage in a proration unit accompanied by a plat describing its location.24 And as with any contract, the parties to a retained-acreage provision are presumed to know the law and to have stated their agreement in light of it.25
XOG‘s assignment to Chesapeake rather plainly states that at the end of the primary term, all land reverts to XOG except acreage “included within the proration . . . unit of each well“, meaning “the area within the surface boundaries of the proration unit then . . . prescribed by field rules . . . . In the absence of such field rules . . . , each proration unit shall be deemed to be 320 acres“. The Allison-Britt Field rules state that “[f]or allowable assignment purposes, the prescribed proration unit shall be a [320] acre unit“. A unit may be as much as 10% larger with the addition of tolerance acreage. A smaller unit is a “fractional unit“. The “proration unit . . . prescribed by” the Allison-Britt Field rules is 320 acres. Because no field rules apply to the well in the Stiles Ranch Field, the “deemed” proration unit is 320 acres. The acreage in the 6 proration units exceeds the assigned acreage. Therefore, none reverted to XOG.
XOG argues that our interpretation of the retained-acreage provision ignores its limitation to acreage “included within” a proration unit. Only an operator, XOG argues, not the Railroad Commission, can include acreage within a proration unit, and only by filing a Form P-15 and plat for a well. But the provision itself refutes the argument. The provision equates the acreage “included within” a proration unit with that “prescribed” by field rules. The Allison-Britt Field rules expressly “prescribe[]“—the same word—320 acres. Moreover, under the retained-acreage provision, absent field rules, 320 acres are “deemed” to be “included within” a proration unit, regardless of whether the operator has filed a Form P-15.
XOG argues that the retained-acreage provision here should apply no differently
XOG argues that the field rules at issue set only a maximum size for proration units. That is true, but the maximum is 352 acres, not 320 acres. Unless “tolerance acreage” is “allowed“, or a fractional unit is elected by an operator, which might be required given spacing and other considerations, the “prescribed proration unit shall be” 320 acres.
XOG argues that the field rules set the size of proration units expressly “for the purpose of allocating allowable gas production“, not for the purpose of determining the application of a retained-acreage provision. That, too, is true. But XOG and Chesapeake were free to incorporate the field rules’ prescribed proration unit size into their assignment to govern the retained-acreage provision, and that is what they plainly did.
Even if XOG‘s reading of the provision were reasonable, it would operate to further restrict the interest XOG assigned Chesapeake, and we cannot read it to do so unless it is so “clear, precise, and unequivocal that we can reasonably give it no other meaning.”27 For the reasons we have explained, we cannot do so.
XOG contends that the results in this case and Endeavor will generate confusion in the industry. But unquestionably, parties can contract as they will within the law, and when it comes to retained-acreage provisions, they do exactly that. The parties and amici curiae in both cases acknowledge that differences abound. This case and Endeavor apply the same principles and ascribe the words the parties chose their plain meaning. That is not confusing.
We hold that in its assignment from XOG, Chesapeake retained 320 acres included within the proration units for each of 5 wells in the Allison-Britt Field, and another 320 acres deemed included within the proration unit for the well in the Stiles Ranch Field.
* * * * *
The judgment of the court of appeals is
Affirmed.
Nathan L. Hecht
Chief Justice
Opinion delivered: April 13, 2018
Notes
Jason S. Brookner et al., This Land Is Your Land, This Land Is My Land: Farmout Agreements in Bankruptcy, 13 TEX. J. OIL, GAS, & ENERGY L. 23, 27 (2018) (footnotes omitted). Professor John Lowe has written:[I]n a conditional assignment, the farmee acquires title to the property when the agreement is made. That title is subject to either an obligation to re-convey the farmee‘s interest to the farmor if the farmee fails to complete its obligations under the agreement or to automatically terminate the agreement if the farmee does not perform the conditions subsequent. These conditional farmouts often take the form of a term assignment wherein the farmor executes an assignment to the farmee for a specific term, and at the expiration of that term, the farmee retains a certain number of acres around each well drilled under the assignment and re-conveys the remaining acreage to the farmor.
Whatever the term‘s origin, “farmout” has become firmly entrenched in the oil and gas industry, though the courts did not use it until 1957. John S. Lowe, Analyzing Oil and Gas Farmout Agreements, 41 SW. L.J. 759, 763–764 (1987) (quoting C. RUSSELL & R. BOWHAY, INCOME TAXATION OF NATURAL RESOURCES ¶ 7.02 (1986)).The origin of the term “farmout” is not clear. Professor Hemingway has said that the term‘s use goes as far back as ancient Roman times, when the state transferred the right to collect certain taxes to private individuals who received a fee for their services. Other commentators have attributed “farmout” to the term used in baseball:
[I]n the oil and gas industry it has substantially the same connotation as it has in the more familiar baseball vernacular. Like the rookie ballplayer who may be farmed out to a minor league team for further training, an oil and gas lease may be farmed out for development. In baseball, the major league team frequently retains some kind of interest in the player, and the grantor in a farm-out transaction retains some kind of property interest in the oil and gas lease.
