J-A29035-19
NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37
DONALD AND SHIRLEY WILSON, : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
JAMES AND MARIE WILSON AND : PENNSYLVANIA
LARA S. WILSON SHIELDS :
:
Appellants :
:
:
v. :
: No. 734 WDA 2019
:
SNYDER BROTHERS, INC., :
PENNENERGY RESOURCES, LLC, :
WINFIELD RESOURCES, LLC :
Appeal from the Order Entered March 6, 2019
In the Court of Common Pleas of Armstrong County Civil Division at
No(s): No. 2018-0788-Civil
BEFORE: BENDER, P.J.E., KUNSELMAN, J., and PELLEGRINI, J.*
MEMORANDUM BY PELLEGRINI, J.: FILED JANUARY 3, 2020
Donald Wilson, Shirley Wilson, James Wilson, Marie Wilson and Lara S.
Wilson Shields (collectively, “the Wilsons”) appeal the March 6, 2019 order of
the Armstrong County Court of Common Pleas (trial court) sustaining the
preliminary objections of Appellees, Snyder Brothers, Inc. (“Snyder”),
PennEnergy Resources, LLC (“PennEnergy”), and Winfield Resources, LLC
(“Winfield”). The order on review concerns the disputed validity of several oil
and gas leases between the parties, as well as the sufficiency of the Wilsons’
allegations. We affirm.
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* Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court.
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I.
A.
The facts pertinent to this appeal are taken from the Wilsons’ amended
complaint and its exhibits. In June 2003, Donald and Shirley Wilson entered
into two agreements with Snyder to lease land in Armstrong County,
Pennsylvania. The first lease concerned a 253-acre tract (“DS Wilson Lease
1”) and the second lease concerned a 140-acre tract (“DS Wilson Lease 2”).
James and Marie Wilson entered a similar agreement as to another 80-acre
tract with Snyder in July 2003 (“JM Wilson Lease”). These leases permitted
Snyder to enter onto the Wilsons’ respective properties, engage in drilling
operations, and extract oil and natural gas.
All three of the above agreements contained identical provisions as to
the lease term and the payment Snyder would owe for delays in beginning its
drilling operations. The agreements provided in identical language that
Snyder would have the right to (a) drill within 180 days of the date the lease
terms began (the primary term); and (b) extend the lease period by making
annual delay rental payments if drilling did not begin during that primary
term:
Lessee has the right to enter upon the Property to drill for oil and
gas at any time within 180 days . . . from the date hereof and as
long thereafter as oil or gas or either of them is produced from
the Property or as operations continue for the production of oil or
gas, or as Lessee shall continue to pay Lessors $3.00 dollars per
acre per year as delayed rentals, or until all oil and gas has been
removed from the Property, whichever shall last occur.
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Amended Complaint, Exhibits 1, 2 and 3, at Paragraph 3.
Snyder did not begin drilling operations on any of the subject properties
until 2010 after the primary terms had elapsed. Accordingly, between 2003
and 2010, Snyder timely paid the Wilsons annual delay rental payments. Id.
at Paragraphs 31-37. The Wilsons accepted those payments and did not
dispute the validity of their respective leases throughout that period. Had the
Wilsons wanted to dispute the validity of their leases, the notice and cure
provisions of their agreements required them to alert Snyder of the alleged
breach within 60 days from the date of its occurrence. See Amended
Complaint, Exhibits 1, 2 and 3, at Paragraph 11.
In May 2010, Snyder obtained a permit to drill a vertical well on the
property subject to the DS Wilson Lease 1. Weeks later, Donald and Shirley
Wilson entered into an amended agreement with Snyder, which provided in
pertinent part that all the terms of the original DW 1 Lease were ratified:
Ratification. Lessors hereby ratify the Lease as being in full force
and effect and not in breach, and that the said Lease will remain
in full force and effect in accordance with its terms as amended
by this Oil and Gas Lease Amendment Agreement.
Amended Complaint, Exhibit 5, at Paragraph 4. The original terms of the DS
Wilson Lease 2 were never amended or affected by amendments to the DS
Wilson 1 Lease. James and Marie Wilson entered into a substantially similar
amended agreement at around the same time, ratifying all the terms of the
original JM Wilson Lease from 2003 and stipulating that Snyder was not in
breach. See Amended Complaint, at Paragraph 43 (citing Exhibit 6).
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In 2010, Snyder began drilling the vertical well (the Well) on the
property governed by the amended DS Wilson Lease 1. Id. at Paragraph 57.
Soon after those operations began, in July 2010, Snyder recorded a Unit
Operation Designation to “unitize” the Well, including the properties subject
to the amended agreements between Snyder and the Wilsons. The unitized
area also included surrounding properties that were not subject to the Wilsons’
leases. The total area of the unitized properties totaled 614 acres (unitized
area). The Wilsons’ original leases permitted unitization, and the terms of the
DS Wilson 1 Lease and the JM Wilson Lease were ratified by the 2010
amendments. See Amended Complaint, Exhibits 1 and 3, at Paragraph 4
(permitting unitization); see also Amended Complaint, Exhibits 5 and 6, at
Paragraph 4 (ratifying terms of original leases).
In 2012, Snyder assigned to Winfield its amended lease agreements
with the Wilsons. See Amended Complaint, at Paragraph 60. Simultaneously,
through its managing member (Snyder), Winfield assigned 64% of those lease
agreements to PennEnergy. Id. at Paragraph 61. In the PennEnergy
assignment, Snyder reserved the right to the Well and “the area adjacent to
and within a 250-foot radius around the wellbore that has been or may be
stimulated by fracture or otherwise[.]” Id. at Paragraph 63. Winfield also
cross-assigned some of its interests to PennEnergy, resulting in Winfield and
PennEnergy “retaining a 19.93% and 80.07% interest in the Wilson Lease
Agreements, respectively.” Id. at Paragraph 65.
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Snyder continued to extract gas from the Well and pay royalties to the
owners of property throughout the unitized area. Id. at Paragraph 68. The
Wilsons aver that from 2011 to the present day, the Well has only produced
gas located on the property immediately surrounding it, within the tract
governed by the DS Wilson 1 Lease. Id. at Paragraph 69.
In 2017, PennEnergy requested Donald and Shirley Wilson to ratify and
amend the previously amended agreement from 2010. Id. at Paragraph 70.
They declined the proposed amendment and ratification because they believed
that all their previous lease agreements had already terminated. Id. at
Paragraphs 71-72.
In 2017, the Wilsons demanded that PennEnergy and Snyder/Winfield
vacate their property and cease producing gas from the Well. Id. at Paragraph
74. In 2018, the Wilsons repeated those demands and further demanded that
Snyder stop paying royalties to other property owners within the unitized area
but laying outside of Snyder's reserved 250-foot radius around the Well.
Nevertheless, the Well remained in operation. Snyder continued to pay
monthly royalties for gas produced from the Well as to all acreage located
within the unitized property, including property owners other than the Wilsons.
Since 2017, the Wilsons have refused to accept royalty payments for gas
produced from the Well.
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B.
The Wilsons filed suit, alleging in their amended complaint that none of
their leases were valid. Specifically, in Counts I, V, VII, IX, X and XI, XII,
XIII, XIV of their amended complaint, the Wilsons sought declaratory
judgments that the original DS Wilson Lease 1 and the original JM Wilson
Lease had terminated because drilling operations did not commence until
2010, years after the primary term of 180 days had elapsed. They also alleged
in those counts that from 2011 to the present, their leases terminated due to
impermissible “shut-in” periods:
Upon information and belief, the . . . Well has intermittently
produced gas for approximately seven (7) years and has never
continuously produced gas for any consecutive calendar year since
production began in or around June 2011.
Id. at Paragraph 50. The Wilsons asserted that the breach occurred “at
various times.” Id. at Paragraph 55.
In Counts II and VIII, the Wilsons alleged trespass because drilling
operations continued on their property after the leases terminated. The
Wilsons alleged a claim of conversion in Count III based on the continued gas
production on their property without consent. In Counts IV and VI, they
alleged a breach of the covenant of good faith and fair dealing and “bad faith
unitization.”1
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1 According to the Wilsons, Snyder’s remaining interest in the leases consists
of a 250-foot radius around the Well, which sits on the property subject to the
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Snyder/Winfield and PennEnergy filed several preliminary objections to
the Wilsons’ amended complaint. Snyder/Winfield and PennEnergy objected
in the nature of a demurrer2 to the Wilsons’ declaratory judgment claims,
asserting that the original leases did not terminate from 2003 to 2010
because:
The Wilsons accepted delay rental payments in all of the
intervening years;
The Wilsons ratified the leases in 2010, and accepted royalty
payments after drilling had commenced; and
The Wilsons never gave required notice that they considered the
leases to be void or terminated.
Finding that the Wilsons had failed to allege facts showing that their
original leases had terminated, the trial court dismissed the Wilsons’ request
for declaratory judgments to that effect. See Trial Court Opinion, 3/6/2019,
at 11-12.
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DS Wilson Lease 1, divesting Snyder of rights to any gas outside of that radius.
See Amended Complaint, at Paragraphs 65-66. The Wilsons claim that the
unitization of such property was done in bad faith because no owner of
property outside of the 250-foot radius is entitled to royalties. Id.
2 A preliminary objection in the nature of a demurrer may be sustained if it
“appears from the face of the complaint that recovery upon the facts alleged
is not permitted as a matter of law.” Am. Express Bank, FSB v. Martin,
200 A.3d 87, 94 (Pa. Super. 2018) (quoting Kelly v. Kelly, 887 A.2d 788,
790-91 (Pa. Super. 2005)). An appellate court applies that same standard on
review of a trial court’s order sustaining a demurrer. See Ins. Adjustment
Bureau, Inc. v. Allstate Ins. Co., 905 A.2d 462, 468 (Pa. 2006).
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As to the Wilsons’ requests for declaratory judgments that their
amended lease agreements had terminated due to shut-ins, the trial court
sustained a preliminary objection that the claims lacked sufficient specificity.3
Id. at 8-10. The Wilsons were given leave to re-plead their allegations so as
to include more specific dates on which the shut-ins occurred, but the Wilsons
declined to amend their pleadings or obtain any pre-complaint discovery. Id.
at 9-10. Necessarily, the trial court dismissed the trespass and conversion
counts because they were resolved by the determination that the subject
leases were valid.4 Id. at 12-13. The Wilsons timely appealed, and both the
Wilsons and the trial court complied with Pa.R.A.P. 1925.5
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3 “The material facts on which a cause of action or defense is based shall be
stated in a concise and summary form.” Pa.R.C.P. No. 1019(a). “Insufficient
specificity in a pleading” may be grounds for a preliminary objection.
Pa.R.C.P. No. 1028(a)(3). A preliminary objection of this type may be granted
if the defendant has not been given enough information to ascertain “without
question upon what grounds to make his defense.” Rambo v. Greene, 906
A.2d 1232, 1236 (Pa. Super. 2006) (quoting Ammlung v. City of Chester,
302 A.2d 491, 498 n.36 (Pa. Super. 1973; 1 Goodrich-Amram § 1017(b)-9)).
4 The trial court also overruled the preliminary objections regarding the breach
of the covenant of good faith and improper unitization, but that ruling is not
at issue here because the Wilsons have since voluntarily dismissed those
claims.
5 The Wilsons appeal from the trial court’s order entered March 6, 2019, which,
in part, granted them leave to amend their shut-in claims after sustaining
preliminary objections. Such a ruling is typically interlocutory and not
immediately reviewable. See Mier v. Stewart, 683 A.2d 581 (Pa. Super.
1996). However, this Court has appellate jurisdiction because the Wilsons
declined to amend their pleadings, and by its order dated April 25, 2019, the
trial court dismissed without prejudice all other remaining claims, deeming its
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II.
A.
The Wilsons now contend that the trial court erred in holding that the
DS 1 Wilson Lease and the JM Wilson Lease remained in effect from 2003 to
2010. The key facts are undisputed. In 2003, the Wilsons agreed to allow
Snyder to drill for oil and gas on their property. For seven years, they
accepted annual delay rental payments which purported to extend the leases
under their agreements’ terms. Crucially, in 2010, the Wilsons ratified their
original leases, stipulating to those agreements “being in full force and
effect[.]”
In making their argument that their original leases nevertheless
terminated after the primary terms elapsed, the Wilsons rely on one case –
Hite v. Falcon Partners, 13 A.3d 942 (Pa. Super. 2011), where this Court
held that delay rental payments alone do not extend the primary term of an
oil and gas lease if drilling has not yet commenced. We found in Hite that
such an arrangement would be “inconsistent with the established rulings
grounded in public policy” that lessees should not be able to “postpone
development indefinitely by a payment of delay rentals.” Id. at 948 (quoting
Jacobs v. CNG Trans. Corp, 332 F.Supp. 2d 759, 790 (Pa. E.D. 2004)).
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earlier order of March 6, 2019, to be a final reviewable order. See Pa.R.A.P.
341. A 1925(a) opinion was not filed, as the trial court relied on the
memorandum attached to the subject order.
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Unlike the lessors in Hite, the Wilsons ratified their original leases
beyond the primary term and did not seek to void their amended leases until
years after drilling had already begun. As a purely contractual matter, the
Wilsons waived any claim they may have had to dispute the validity of the
subject leases based on non-production from 2003 until the 2010 ratification
in their amended agreements. Those circumstances materially distinguish this
case from Hite because in that case, drilling had not begun as of the date suit
was filed, and there was no ratification of the original lease beyond the primary
term.
Accordingly, the trial court properly ruled as a matter of law that the
Wilsons’ original leases remained in effect from the time they were entered
until the date of their ratification in the amended agreements.
B.
The trial court also correctly determined that the Wilsons’ pleadings
lacked sufficient specificity with respect to the alleged non-continuous gas
production (or shut-ins) after drilling began.6
The Wilsons vaguely alleged that periods of shut-in occurred from 2010
to 2017, violating their leases’ requirement of “actual and continuous gas
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6 The standard of review is whether the trial court misapplied the law or
abused its discretion. See Rambo v. Greene, 906 A.2d 1232, 1235 (Pa.
Super. 2006) (“[T]his Court will reverse the trial court’s decision regarding
preliminary objections only where there has been an error of law or abuse of
discretion.”).
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production.” See Amended Complaint, at Paragraphs 50-56. Yet, the Wilsons
never identified the length of the alleged shut-ins or why they believe they
occurred; nor did they attempt to gather pre-complaint discovery as to those
missing pieces of their allegations. See Pa.R.C.P. No. 4003.8(a) (“A plaintiff
may obtain pre-complaint discovery where the information sought is material
and necessary to the filing of the complaint and the discovery will not cause
unreasonable annoyance, embarrassment, oppression, burden or expense to
any person or property.”).
Without a more precise description of the alleged shut-ins,
Snyder/Winfield and PennEnergy cannot determine whether any potential
defenses are applicable, such as the Wilsons’ failure to give timely notice of a
breach. Thus, the Wilsons’ shut-in claims lacked the required specificity, and
the trial court did not err in sustaining preliminary objections on that basis.
Regardless, the Wilsons accepted royalty payments from 2011 until 2017.
Therefore, even if the Wilsons could sufficiently assert a shut-in period during
that time, their acceptance of payment and lack of notice of a breach would
establish that their leases remained valid during that time frame.7
Order affirmed.
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7 The trial court declined to rule on the validity of the disputed unitization of
areas surrounding the Wilsons’ property, the validity of the DS Wilson 2 Lease,
and any other issues related to the adequacy of the Wilsons’ royalty payments.
See Trial Court Opinion, 3/6/2019, at 12 n.2. As a result, those issues are
not now before us and our decision here has no bearing on such claims.
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Judgment Entered.
Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
Prothonotary
Date: 1/3/2020
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