Carbon County v. Union Reserve Coal Co., Inc.

                                          NO.       93-426
               IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA
                                                1995

CARBON COUNTY, a political      subdivision
of the State     of Montana,
            Plaintiff    and Respondent


UNION RESERVE COAL CO., INC.,        a Montana
corporation;     RED-LODGE BEAR CREEK COAL
PARTNERS, a limited     partnership;     and
NORBERT H. KMOCH; et al.,
             Defendants  and Appellants,
         -v-
FLORENTINE EXPLORATION & PRODUCTION, INC.,
a Montana corporation,
           Intervener, Respondent/Cross-Appellant.

APPEAL FROM:          District  Court of the Thirteenth    Judicial                           District,
                      In and for the County of Carbon,
                      The Honorable   Robert W. Holmstrom,    Judge                       presiding.


COUNSEL OF RECORD:

               For   Appellants:

                      Robert       L.   Stephens,       Jr.,      Billings,         Montana

               For   Respondents:
                      Anthony      W. Kendall,    Red Lodge, Montana;         Hon.
                      Joseph       Mazurek,    Attorney    General,        Clay    Smith,
                      Assistant      Attorney    General,  Helena,      Montana;    James
                      P. Healow,         Sweeney    & Healow,    Billings,        Montana
                       (Florentine)

               For   Amicus Department        of State Lands:
                      Tommy    H.     Butler,      Special    Assistant                         Attorney
                      General,    Helena,     Montana
                                                 Heard         and Submitted:            May 16,          1995
                                                                              Decided:    June       27,    1995
Filed:
Justice           James              C. Nelson              delivered             the        Opinion          of     the        Court.


           The      plaintiff,                     Carbon        County,                initiated             this            suit          to          quiet

title       in      all         of     the     mineral           and mineral                  rights,              excluding                 the         coal

and coal            rights,                 on certain             lands           within           the       county.                 Florentine

Exploration                   & Production                    (Florentine)                   was allowed                 to     intervene                   in

the      action,            aligning               itself        with         Carbon           County.              Following                    a bench

trial,           the       District                 Court       for      the           Thirteenth              Judicial                    District,

Carbon           County,              entered          judgment            for          defendant,             Union            Reserve                  Coal

Co.        (Union           Reserve),                awarding            Union               Reserve          nominal                 damages               of

$1.00.           From that                  judgment,           the     defendant                  appeals           and plaintiff                         and

intervenor                 cross-appeal.                       We reverse                   and remand.

           The issues                  on appeal,               as framed                   by this          Court,           are:

           1.        Is       coal          seam methane                gas        a constituent                     part            of     the          coal

estate?

           2.           Did          the      District            Court            err        in     determining                      that              Union

Reserve            has          the        right       to      produce            coal         seam methane                     gas         from           the

coal       lands?

           3.       Do the             1993 legislative                       amendments                to     § 15-l-101,                       MCA and

§ 82-11-101,                    MCA, and the                  enactment                of     § 82-l-111,                MCA, constitute

an unlawful                 taking            of coal          seam methane                   gas from             the        owners             of       coal

or       coal      lands?

           4.             Did         the      District               Court            err     in       not        granting                  punitive


damages            to      Union            Reserve?

                                                            FACTUAL. BACKGROUND

            Prior          to         October          10,       1974,            Carbon           County           became                the      owner,

 through             tax             deed          proceedings,                   of         the      entire             mineral                    estate

                                                                              2
underlying            the          disputed        property.              On November             1,    1984,        Carbon
County         executed              and       delivered             to    Red     Lodge-Bear              Creek        Coal
Partners,           Union           Reserve's          predecessor           in     interest,           a deed which
conveyed           0 [all1         coal     and coal       rights         with    the right            of ingress         and
egress        to     mine and remove the                       same from           the    following               described
acreage        .             .I'
         The deed did                 not make any reference                       to gas in general,                   coal
seam methane gas,                     nor any mineral                or hydrocarbon              other       than      coal.
The deed reserved                     a royalty          of      $.lO      "per     ton     of    2,000       pounds          of
coal     produced              and         saved      from     said        lands."             The deed            made no
reference           to any royalty                 on gas that            might      be produced             and saved,
nor any other                mineral          which     might        be extracted              from the property.
         On August             21, 1990,           Carbon County                 executed        and delivered                to
Florentine            an oil          and gas lease               whereby          Florentine            received         the
right        to operate              for     and produce             from the disputed                 property          "oil
and all        gas including                   coal     seam methane               of whatsoever              nature          or
kind     .            .I'     The lease            was a standard                Producer's            88 lease        form,
which        provided          for         a royalty       of l/8         of the proceeds                from any gas
produced           from the property.                    After        obtaining          the lease         from       Carbon
County,        Florentine              solicited         a protective             lease        from Union Reserve,
but Union Reserve                     refused         to provide           such a lease.
         On December 7, 1990, Carbon County filed                                         a quiet         title       action
against        Union Reserve and various                          other      named defendants,                    asserting
Carbon County's                     claims      to all        of the mineral              and mineral               rights,
excluding            the       coal         and coal          rights,        on the            disputed           property.
Florentine            moved to intervene,                     asserting           that    it     owned the oil            and

                                                                 3
gas     lease          and that                 Union         Reserve               had no estate,                          right       or      claim          in

the     oil      and gas including                             the          coal         seam methane                   gas.           (At      the        time

of     the      lawsuit,                 Florentine                   had drilled                    three           wells,           one      of      which

Was      in      the           coal            owned          by           Union          Reserve.)                     Florentine                    sought
injunctive               relief             and quiet                  title            to    the         coal        seam methane                    gas.

          In     its         answer,             Union         Reserve                 asserted               that      it     was entitled                    to

a judgment              declaring                 that         its         ownership               of the            coal       and coal              rights

included               the         right          to      extract                  the        coal         seam         methane               gas.             1n

addition,              Union             Reserve              sought             a judgment                     canceling              Florentine's

oil     and gas lease                      and monetary                     damages            for        Florentine's                  trespass               on

Union         Reserve's                  property.

          Following                  a July             23,          1992,          bench            trial,            the      District               Court

entered          Findings                  of     Fact         and Conclusions                             of     Law which                 found          that

the      coal          seam         methane              gas          was        part         of          the        coal       estate           and         was

included          in         the      conveyance                 of coal                and coal              rights          by Carbon               County

to Union          Reserve's                    predecessor-in-interest.                                          The court             further             held

that      Florentine                     did     not      acquire                by its             lease            a right           to     drill          and

produce          coal           seam methane                       gas         and that              a trespass                     occurred           which

resulted           in nominal                   damages              of      $1.00.            The court                ordered             Florentine

to     remove            its         casing             from           the         completed                  gas       well          sited           on     the

disputed           property.
          On April                 20,     1993,         the District                        Court         entered             a Final          Judgment

and Decree               consistent                    with          its       Findings              of       Fact      and Conclusions                        of

Law.          Union          Reserve              appealed                 the         District               Court's           judgment              on the

issue         of punitive                  damages.                  Florentine                   appealed             as to the              ownership

of     the      coal           seam methane                    gas.

                                                                                   4
           Subsequent          to    the    District           Court's            judgment           in     this         case,
Senate Bill           294 was introduced                to the 53rd Legislature                           of the State
of Montana proposing                  changes in the statutory                             definitions           of coal,
oil     and gas.           Sections          15-I-101,             MCA, and 82-11-101,                       MCA, were
amended and a new provision,                            5 82-l-111,                MCA, was added.                       These
amendments will                be discussed         later           in this         opinion.
                                                  DISCUSSION
           An explanation            of the nature                of coal         seam methane gas and how
it    is      produced         and extracted             is        necessary          in         understanding             the
issues        presented         in this     case.        This discussion                    is derived             from the
following         sources:           Jeff    L.     Lewin          et     al.,      Unlocking             the      Fire:         A
Proposal        for     Judicial       or Legislative                Determination                 of the Ownership
of Coalbed            Methane,        94 W. Va. L. Rev.                      563 (Spring            1992);          Jeff     L.
Lewin,        Coalbed Methane:              Recent Court                Decisions           Leave Ownership                 "Up
in      the     Air,"          But    New Federal                  and       State          Legislation              Should

Facilitate            Production,           96 W. Va. L.                 Rev.      631 (Spring               1994);        and
NCNB Texas Nat.                Bank, N.A.         v. West (Ala.                   1993),         631 So.2d 212.
           Coal seam methane gas,                  also       called             "coalbed         gas" or "coalbed

methane,"         is formed as a by-product                         of the "coalification"                         process.
Carbon         dioxide         and water          are     incorporated                    into      plants         to      form
various         hydrocarbon-based                 compounds which                    in     turn         decay      to     form
peat.         When peat         is buried         under other                sediments,            the pressure             and
temperature             eventually           convert          it        to    coal,         methane,            and other

gaseous byproducts.
           Although       it     is not a chemical                 part       of coal,            coal     seam methane
gas has a weak physical                     attraction             to coal.           It     can exist           freely       in

                                                              5
the      cracks           or      fractures                    within           the          coal         seam,            but         pressure                 causes

most         of     the         gas        to        be adsorbed                   within                 the        coal,          adhering                   to       the
internal                surface                 of         micropores                   in         the         structure                  of        the          coal.

Hence,            the     coal         acts           as a container                         for         the        gas.          When the               pressure

on the            surrounding                     coal         is       reduced,                the       gas         is     released.

             Highly            combustible                     and poisonous,                            coal         seam methane                       gas          must

be ventilated                      from              coal       mines            to       protect                   miners             from         disastrous

explosions                 or     inhalation.                           Originally                       thought             of        as only                a waste

product            of      the        mining                process,              technological                            developments                         in      the

1980s         and changes                    in       federal                law made the                  gas a commercially                                   viable

alternative                    energy             source.

             Extraction                    of         coal          seam         methane                  gas         from             coal          seams              and

surrounding                     strata                is       generally                     accomplished                         by      one            of          three

methods:            vertical                 degasification                        wells,                horizontalboreholes                                    or gob

wells.             Vertical                degasification                         wells             are         drilled             from        the           surface

directly                into          an        unmined              coal          seam             to     extract                 the         gas            that           is

trapped            or      collected                   there.                 The release                      of     coal         seam methane                         gas
from         the        coal           seam            into          the        well            may        be         increased                     by        various

methods            of      "fracturing'F                       the       coal         seam near                     the    bottom              of        the         well.

Hydrofracturing                         is           the      forcing             of         fluids             under             pressure                into          the

well         so as to                 cause           a fracturing                        of       the         coal        seam.               This           process

creates            fractures                    in the          coal          which            serve           as conduits                 through                   which

gas      can        flow         to     the           well's            shaft.
             A horizontal                       borehole                is     a hole              bored            into         the     coal            seam from

a point             within            the            coal      mine           itself.                 The coal                seam releases                            some

of     its        adsorbed              or           trapped            gas       into          the        borehole                 where            the        gas          is


                                                                                      6
then      captured                 and extracted.

          Finally,                 a gob well                  is        a well              drilled           from         the      surface                  to    an
area          near      the         coal             seam.               During              the       longwall              mining             method,                  a
machine              grinds          into            the       wall            of       the          coal       seam         tearing                away           the

coal.               As the     machine                 grinds             further              and further                   into         the        wall,          it

leaves               behind          it         a      void          into             which            the         ceiling               of         the        mine

collapses               creating                 a "gob"                 of     rubble.                 Large           quantities                    of       coal

seam methane                  gas collect                     in this               area.             The collapse                  of        the     ceiling
of      the          mine      also             leaves              the         overlying                   strata           unsupported,                          and

gravity              causes          it         to     subside                 and       to         fracture            as well,                releasing

more gas.               Gas from                 the       gob may travel                           upward         into       non-coal                strata,

where          it     may be collected                          and extracted                           through             the      gob well.
          While              the          ownership                 of,          and          right           to      develop,                  coal           seam

methane              gas are questions                         of first                 impression                  in Montana,                  courts             in
other         jurisdictions                         have      struggled                      with      this         issue         for         more         than          a

decade.               A brief             examination                     of     some of               these         cases          is        appropriate

in     resolving              the         issues            presented                   in      the     case         before              us on appeal.
          In         1983,          the         Pennsylvania                        Supreme            Court         was confronted                            with

determining                  the      ownership                of coal                 seam methane                  gas in United                         States

Steel           Corp.          v.         Hoge             (1983),              468          A.Zd           1380.            In      Hoqe,                a    1920

severance                deed             conveyed                  to         United               States           Steel           Corporation's

predecessors                   in     title            "all         of the             coal"          contained              in     tracts             of      land

owned by Hoge's                       predecessors                        in        title.             The deed              conveyed                the       coal

"[tlogether                  with         all        the      rights             and privileges                      necessary                  and useful
in      the         mining         and removing                     of         said          coal,          including                               the       right

of ventilation                       . .             .II      Hoge's            predecessors                       retained              the        "right            to
drill        and operate                        through              said         coal           for         oil         and gas without                              being

held       liable             for         any             damages."

           The Pennsylvania                                 Supreme             Court            quieted                title             to     the         coal         seam

methane            gas        in      United                    States         Steel             Corporation,                         the            owner          of     the

coal.            The court                 concluded                     that      any gas present                                   in        the      coal             "must

necessarily                   belong                 to     the     owner          of       the         coal,             so long                as it          remains

within            his         property                     and      subject                 to         his         exclusive                         dominion              and

control."                Hoqe,             468 A.2d                 at     1383.                 (Emphasis                 omitted.)                         The court
determined               that         Hoge owned only                             the           coal         bed gas that                        migrated                 into

his      property              surrounding                         the         coal.

           The court                 in         Hoqe did                 not      attempt                to        determine                     the         intent          of
the      parties          by looking                            to the         plain        meaning                 of      the           grant.              Instead,

the      court          considered                         the      characteristics,                                origins                    and      history              of

coal       seam methane                         gas.              While         this            analysis                 may be appropriate                                  in
Pennsylvania,                        in         Montana,                   when            construing                           a    phrase                  within              a

contract,               "the         intention                     of      the     parties                   is     to          be ascertained                            from

the      writing              alone             if         possible                    .    . .'I            Section                 28-3-303,                  MCA.

           In Hoqe,                 the     reservation                        of the            right             to drill                    for     oil      and gas

is      clear.           However,                     the        court         went         beyond                the      plain               meaning              of     the

reservation                   and determined                            that      the parties                       could            not         have         intended

to      reserve               what         was             considered,                     at      the            time          of        the          conveyance,

merely           a waste             product.                     While         coal            seam         methane                gas was considered

a waste             product                in             1920,      its         value            was         certainly                        established                   by

1984,            the      time            of              the     conveyance                     to      Union                  Reserve.                      Thus         the

rationale                of        ~oqe              is     distinguishable                             from         the            case             before           us     on

appeal.

                                                                                       8
          MOreOVer,                    while          a reservation                        of     the        right            to     drill              for        oil

and      gas          is        not        found         in        the        deed         to     Union         Reserve,                 the            express
grant      of one specific                            mineral                 does not           imply         the       grant          of all                other

minerals               not        referred             to      in         the         grant.           The maxim                   exoressio                  unius
est      exclusio                alterius              (the         expression                  of one thing                   is     the          exclusion

of     another)                 is     routinely               cited             in       Montana           case        law.         See Matter                      of

Estate           of        Donovan              (19761,             169 Mont.                   278,        282,        546 P.2d                   512,        514;

Teters          v.         Montana            Eastern              Pipe        Line        Co.     (1945),              117 Mont.                  477,        482,

159 P.2d              515,            517;      Berne         v.         Stevens               (1923),         67 Mont.               254,             258,        215

P. 803,          804.                Furthermore,                   this         principle              has been directly                               applied

to     mineral               law        in     Smoot          v.        Consolidated                    Coal       Co.         (1904),                 114 111.

App.      512,             517.

          Additionally,                          in decidinq                    Hoqe,          the Pennsylvania                       Supreme                 Court
considered                   the        characteristics                           of      coal         seam methane                    gas             in     situ,
but      Montana                law          currently              and historically                           has       provided                      that        the

determination                         of      whether              or      not         a substance                 is    considered                          gas     is

made       "at         the           wellhead."                    See 5 82-l-111(2),                              MCA (1993);                         § 82-ll-

101(6)      , MCA (1983);                            and § 60-126,                        RCM (1947).

           Four            years             after       Hoqe,             United              States        Steel            Corporation                          (now

USX Corp.)                  again            found        itself              embroiled                in    a case            to     determine                    the
ownership                  of     coal         seam methane                      gas.           In Rayburn               v.        USX Corp.                   (N.D.

Ala.       1987),                 No.         CIV.A.85-G-2661-W,                                1987        U.S.         Dist.           LEXIS                6920,

aff'd       844 F.2d                   796,          (11th         Cir.          1988),          a 1960 warranty                        deed granted

to      USX Corp.                     "the      minerals                 and mining                rights,              except               oil         and gas

and       the          right            to      explore                 for      and       remove            the        same.                      .    .'         The

grantors               also           covenanted                   that         all       coal      seams            "shall           be encased                         or

                                                                                      9
grouted      offW during                 the exploration                   for     or production                 of oil      and
gas unless          specifically              exempted by LJSXCorp.                         in writing.
          The court              in     Ravburn          looked          to      the    language            of     the     deed
regarding         encasing             and grouting               off     the      coal     seam as well                 as the
intention         of the parties                   and did             not determine            whether           coal      seam
methane gas is part                     of the coal.               The court           determined            that        "[tlhe
clearly      expressed                intention          is that         the methane in the coal bed not
be available              to any well             drilled          by the grantors                who reserved               the
'oil      and gas'        or to their              assigns."             Ravburn,         1987 U.S. Dist.                  LEXIS
6920,      at *a.
          The court         also        determined              that     in 1960 when the warranty                          deed
was granted,          coal seam methane gas was not considered                                             "commercially
recoverable."               Ravburn,              1987 U.S.             Dist.      LEXIS 6920,              at *9.          Once
again,      while         the value          of coal            seam methane gas may not have been
known in 1960,              it        was certainly               considered           a valuable            resource             by
1984 when Carbon County granted                                   the coal         and coal           rights        to Union
Reserve.          And, unlike              the deed in Ravburn,                        there     is no language                   in
the deed to Union Reserve regarding                                      "encasing         and grouting             off"     the
coal      seam if         wells        were to be drilled.
          There      is     also         no language               in      the     deed        from        Carbon        County
granting       "other        minerals"             to Union Reserve as was the case in Vines
v. McKenzie Methane Corp.                            (Ala.        1993),         619 So.2d 1305.                   In Vines
                                                                                                                      -,
McKenzie Methane argued                           that     it     held        a leasehold         interest           for      the
coalbed       methane gas pursuant                          to a lease             executed           in    1902 between
the landowners               and the previous                     mineral         owner,        USX Corp.            Through

subsequent           assignments,                 McKenzie              held     the      leasehold            interest           in

                                                                 10
"all      of     the         coal,          iron          ore,             and         other             minerals,                        in,       under,                and
upon"      Vine's            property.                   Vines , 619 So.2d                                    at        1306.
         The       Supreme             Court              of          Alabama                  engaged                       in       a     plain           meaning

analysis           and        held          that          "the             ownership                     of         methane                 gas,         with             the

accompanying                 rights           to        drill              for         this         substance,                            was necessarily
included           in        the       mineral                   estates                  granted                       in          the         instruments."

Vines,          619 So.2d             at      1309.

         Based          on this             grant         of          "other            minerals,"                           the      Supreme             Court             of

Alabama          did     not       feel          it     necessary                      in Vines                    to        address             the      issue             of

whether          coal        seam methane                    gas is              part          of the                   coal         estate            or part              of

the     gas      estate.             However,                   the        court             was faced                       with         addressing                     this

very     issue          a few months                    later           in NCNB Texas                              Nat.             Bank,        N.A.       v.          West

(Ala.       1993),           631 So.2d                 212.

           1n m,              two almost                  identical                     deeds            from            1953 and 1954 granted

to West's           predecessors                        "all          of the              coal,               and mining                    rights.                 .           .I8

The deeds              reserved             in        favor           of        the       Bank's               predecessors                         everything

that      was not            conveyed,                 including                      "all          of        the            oil,         gas,      petroleum,

and sulphur.                          .I'

           The     Supreme            Court             of       Alabama                held             that            the          coal         owners                have

the      "exclusive             right"                to produce                  and own coal                           seam methane                     gas from
horizontal              boreholes                and vertical                      degasification                                   wells         drilled                into

the      coal      seam.             NCNB
                                     -I               631 So.2d                   at         229.                  Additionally,                         the            court

held      that         the    gas estate                  has the                 right             to recover                       coal         seam methane

gas from          the        gob area                 above       the            coal         seam.                 m,                631 So.2d                at        229.

           In     reaching                this          conclusion,                           the         Supreme                    Court          of      Alabama

determined               that        the         language                  of      the         deed            was unambiguous                                 and did

                                                                                 11
not      require        it      to       resort         to     arbitrary             rules      of     construction           to
determine          what the parties                     intended.              m,           631 So.2d at 222.                The
court      stated:
          We can find no scientific       or legal basis to support the
          proposition    that coalbed methane gas should be treated      as
          a resource separate and distinct         from other natural gas,
          or from any other gas. The fact that the coalbed methane
          gas is produced by, and stored within,           coal seams does
          not require      the conclusion    that a grant of "all coal"
          includes    coalbed methane gas, nor does it require         the
          conclusion     that  a reservation      of "all    gas" does not
          include coalbed methane gas.
NCNB 631 So.2d at 222-23.
-r
          Although           this        statement           would appear to favor                     the owner of the
gas estate,             the         court         concluded            that         since      Alabama         follows       the
nonownership                 theory         of    oil        and gas,           the     coal         seam methane            gas
belonged       to       the         owner of            the     coal       estate.             The court          explained
that:
          The nonownership     theory  of gas ownership,     because it
          recognizes   the migratory  nature of oil and gas, requires
          actual possession to establish     ownership of the resource,
          and the right    held by the landowner is "the right          to
          reduce the oil and gas to possession        or to sever this
          right   for economic consideration."
NCNB 631 So.Zd at 223.
-I
          Unlike        Alabama,            Montana            is   an ownership-in-place                        state,      and
oil      and gas,         as long as they                    remain      in the ground,                are part           of the
realty.            Stokes           v.     Tutvet            (1958),       134 Mont.            250,      255,     328 P.2d
1096,      1099.             Montana         also       recognizes              the     rule      that     the     title      to
mineral       interests              in land,           including             oil     and gas interests,                  may be
segregated           in       whole         or in        part        from       the     rest      of     the     fee      simple
title.        Stokes,               328 P.2d at 1099.                    This        difference          in theories          of

ownership          of        mineral         interests              distinguishes               NCNB from           the     case
                                                                    12
before             us on appeal.

           The           most         recent               judicial             determination                          of      the         ownership                       of
coal       seam methane                         gas actually                    requires                 us to          look         as far                back            as

1907,         when President                           Theodore                Roosevelt                 ordered              the         Department                       of

Interior                 to    withdraw                from         public            entry             and settlement,                             lands            that

contained                 "workable                  coal"         and to            suspend             issuance              of patents                     on the

lands         withdrawn.                        Southern            Ute        Indian           Tribe           v. AMOCO Production                                   Co.

(D.Colo.                 1995),             874         F.Supp.               1142.                In      1909             and      1910,             Congress

passed             the        Coal        Lands         Acts        which            reserved             to the             United             States               "all

coal"          contained                   in        the      withdrawn                lands             upon         which          entry             had been

made.              In     1938,            the        federal            government                     restored              much of                 this           land
to the             Southern               Ute        Indian         Tribe            along         with         the         reservation                      of      "all

coal."
           In -I
              Ute                the        tribe            claimed            ownership                  of      the        coal             seam methane

gas on the                    Southern               Ute     Indian           Reservation                   in        southwestern                      Colorado

based          on the                premise               that       the       land         restored                 to      the         tribe            in        1938

containing                     the        reservation                    of     coal         included                 a reservation                           of       the

coal          seam methane                       gas.             The United                 States              District                 Court            for         the

District                 of    Colorado                concluded               that         this         reservation                      of        coal        by the

United             States            in     the        Coal         Lands        Acts           did       not         include             a reservation

Of       coal             seam            methane                 gas.               Ute,          874           F.         Supp.              at       1151-52.

Consequently,                         the        court            held        that        the       tribe             did     not         acquire                  title

to      the        gas when the                       coal        was restored                     to     the         tribe          in        1938 because

title          to the           gas had previously                              been conveyed                         to homesteaders                              under

the      Coal            Lands            Acts        of      1909        and 1910.                     Ute,          874 F.Supp.                     at        1152.

              In        arriving                at     its        decision,                 the         court          in     Ute         looked                to     the


                                                                                     13
plain      meaning                of the            words             "coal"            and "gas"               to determine                        the        intent
of     Congress             at         the     time            the        Acts      were           introduced.                        After             examining
various          dictionary                    and statutory                            definitions                   of        coal         and gas,                       the

court      determined                    that           "common sense                         dictates               that        in       1909 and 1910,

Congress          intended                    'coal'             to mean the                       solid           rock         substance."                         Ute,
874 F.Supp.                  at         1153-54.                     In      addition,                   the       court              examined                 a 1981
decision          of        the         Solicitor                    of     the     Interior                   Department                   of     the         United

States           wherein                     the          Solicitor                     reached                a       similar                   conclusion.

Ownership              of         and         Right             to         Extract                Coalbed             Gas            in      Federal                    Coal
Deposits           (1981),                   88 I.D.             538.

          Although                 the        Ute         case            dealt         with         federal              statutes,                     a similar

analysis          can be applied                                to        the      case            before            us on appeal,                        in            that

the     plain       meaning                   of        the      language                    of    the      deed          must            be examined                        to

determine              the         intent               of     the         parties.
                                                                                ISSUE         1

          Is      coal             seam            methane                 gas          a     constituent                      part           of         the            coal

estate?
          The District                        Court            concluded,                    as a matter                  of     law,            that      'I [cl oal

seam methane                      is     part             of     the         coal            and     of        the      coal              estate.              .        .     .II

Our      standard                of      review                relating                 to        conclusions                   of        law       is     whether

the      trial         judge's                 interpretation                                of     the        law        is     correct.                      Steer,

Inc.      v.      Department                       of        Revenue              (l.990),            245 Mont.                      470,         474-75,                   803

P.2d       601,        603.
          Union         Reserve                 argues               that         the        owner         of the              coal        estate          is           also

the       owner         of             the         coal         seam            methane              gas        because                   the       gas            is         an

incident           to            the         formation                     of      coal            and      reposes                  within              the            coal

                                                                                    14
structure.                Florentine            contends              that         since         coal         seam methane               gas is

not     a chemical              part      of     coal,          it         is     potentially                 severable              from        the
coal         estate

         An examination                    of      definitions                      from         various         sources              reveals

that         coal       and      gas      are      mutually                     exclusive           terms.              The        American
Heritage              Dictionary          285      (2d C. ed.                     1985),          defines         coal         as:

              [al natural    dark-brown      to black   solid     used as a fuel,
             formed from fossilized       plants   and consisting     of amorphous
             carbon with various      organic    and some inorganic     compounds.
              [Emphasis   added.]

Gas is          defined         as:

              [tlhe     state     of matter     distinsuished         from the solid         and
             liquid        states       by very       low    density      and     viscosity,
             relatively         great    expansion      and contraction       with     changes
             in pressure           and temperature,           the ability       to diffuse
             readily,          and     the    spontaneous          tendency      to     become
             distributed         uniformly     throughout        any container.
              [Emphasis       added.]

American              Heritage           Dictionary                   549         (2d       C.     ed.         1985).             As        these
definitions               illustrate,              coal     is        a "solid"              and gas is              "distinguished

from         the      solid."

             A statutory              definition           of         coal          existing             at    the      time         the      coal

and coal              rights       were        conveyed              to         Union      Reserve            can be found                  at

§ 82-4-203(17),                    MCA (1983).                  This             section          provides:

             "Minable    coal"              means that     coal  which    can be removed
             through  strip-               or underground-mining      methods adaptable
             to the location                that  coal is being mined or is planned
             to be mined.

Since          coal         seam        methane           gas             is      not      mined           through             "strip-            or

underground-mining                        methods",              it            cannot       be considered                   part         of      the

coal          that        was      conveyed           to        Union              Reserve           under           this        statutory

definition.

                                                                           15
           In         addition                to      the         statute              defining                 "minable                coal,         "         a
statutory                   definition               of      gas        existed             at      the         time         of         the      deed.
"'Gas'             means all               natural          gases        and all            other         fluid         hydrocarbons                      a~

produced               at     the      wellhead             and not            defined             as oil         .     . . .I'                Section
82-ll-101(6),                       MCA (1983)              (emphasis               added).             Since      coal           seam methane

gas      is         a fluid            hydrocarbon                 and         is     produced             at      the        wellhead,                    it

falls              within           this       statutory                definition                 of     gas         and         again          it        is

distinguishable                        from         coal,         a solid            hydrocarbon.

           The         Montana               Department                 of     State          Lands          has         had        regulatory

definitions                   of      coal         and gas         since            1980.          In     the     regulations,                        coal
is      defined              as:

            [al black or brownish-black           solid    fossil    fuel which has
           been subjected       to the natural        process     of coalification
           and which    falls     within    the classification             of coal  by
           rank: I, anthracite;        II, bituminous;       III,   sub-bituminous;
           IV, lignite.

26.3.302(l)                  (g),          ARM (emphasis                     added).               Gas     is      defined                in      these

regulations,                       along      with        oil,      as:

           all hydrocarbons       and other substances        and elements      which
           are present      in the earth     in a gaseous or liauid        form and
           produced    therefrom.     It shall     not include    coal,   lignite,
           oil  shale or similar       solid    hydrocarbons.

26.3.202(7),                       ARM (emphasis                  added).

           In         addition,              the     Montana             Department                of     Natural            Resources                    and

Conservation                       defines          gas as "all                natural             gases        and all            other          fluid

hydrocarbons                       as produced               at    the        wellhead             and not             defined            as oil

. .           I!      36.22.302(31),                      ARM (emphasis                  added).                As these             regulatory

definitions                    illustrate,                  gas    is        a fluid          or        gaseous         hydrocarbon                       and

does       not         include              coal

              Furthermore,                   the      Solicitor               of     the      Department                of        the      Interior

                                                                              16
has     concluded                 in        two         separate                opinions               that          coal         seam methane                       gas
is    distinct              from            coal         and is                therefore               potentially                     severable                    from

the      coal         estate.                     Rights             to        Coalbed            Methane                  Under          an Oil                   & Gas
Lease      for         Lands           in        the     Jicarilla                 Apache              Reservation                     (1990),                98 I.D.

59;     and Ownership                            of     and Right                  to    Extract                Coalbed                Gas in             Federal

Coal      Deposits                 (1981),                  88 I.D.             538.

          Accordingly,                           we conclude                    that       coal          seam methane                        gas         is        not      a
constituent                 part            of        coal     and,            thus,       it      may be severed                            from        the        coal

estate.
                                                                               ISSUE       2

          Did      the           District                   Court         err       in     determining                       that         Union               Reserve

has the          right            to produce                   coal            seam methane                    gas from                the     coal            lands?

          The District                           Court         concluded                 that           coal          seam methane                        gas         was
included              in     the            conveyance                    of     "coal           and coal                  rights"             from            Carbon

county           to         Red             Lodge             Bear-Creek                   Partnership,                           Union             Reserve's

predecessor                  in        interest.                      In         addition,                the         court            concluded                    that

Florentine                 did         not        acquire                 a right           to         drill          and produce                        the         coal
seam      methane                 gas            when         it          entered               into           the         oil         and      gas            lease.

Again,          our         standard                   of     review              relating                to         conclusions                    of         law        is

whether           the        trial                judge's             interpretation                            of     the          law        is        correct.

Steer,          Inc.        v.     Department                      of Revenue                   (1990),              245 Mont.                470,            474-75,

803 P.2d              601,         603.

          Florentine                        argues                 that          the       District                    Court             erred                in         not

considering                  the            plain            meaning              of     the           words          in         the     deed            to        Union

Reserve          and that,                       applying             the        plain           meaning              rule,            Union        Reserve's

ownership              of        "coal            and coal                rights"          includes                  only         coal        and does not


                                                                                    17
include             coal         seam methane                     gas.             Additionally,                                  Florentine                     contends
that      the        absence              of     any            royalty             on oil,                  gas            or         any      mineral                  other
than         coal          strongly             implies                  the        exclusion                         from              the      grant              of        any

other        mineral              including                 gas which                may be produced                                    or saved                 from         the

coal      formation.

          Union            Reserve             argues             that         the      term         "coal                       rights"             includes                 the

rights          to     coal             seam methane                     gas        and that                      one of                 the       incidents                    of

the      ownership                 of     coal         is         the        necessity,                      not            merely              the         right,              to

vent      coal         seam methane                        gas in            the     course                  of        coal            mining              activities

for      safety            reasons.              In addition,                        Union          Reserve                        contends                that          it     is
important               for        the         coal             mine         operator               to            have                sufficient                  control

over      the        drilling             of wells                    into     the       coal         to minimize                               the        disruption

to     the      mining            process              caused                by the        well.

             In reaching                 its     conclusions,                        the        District                         Court          focused                on the
physical              properties                  of             coal          and       gas         without                           dealing                  with           the

language              of         the     grant,                 the      intent            of        the               parties,                  or         title              and

severance              questions.                     "The words                   of a contract                                 are to be understood

in      their         ordinary                 and popular                      sense           .        .        .        .II         Section                  28-3-501,

MCA; Moore                  v.     Swanson                 (1976),             171 Mont.                      160,                165,         556 P.2d                  1249,

1252.               We have              already                 determined                   that,                   in           their           ordinary                    and

popular              sense,             coal          is         a solid                and         gas               is          a     fluid              or       gaseous

substance.                        Hence,          9s I                 including                 coal                  seam              methane                 gas,            is

separate               from            coal      and             is      not         a constituent                                     part           of        the           coal

estate.

             When construing                          a phrase                  within              a contract,                                the         court              must

determine                  the         intent              of     the          parties              from                   the          writing                  alone           if


                                                                                   18
possible.                     Section                28-3-303,              MCA;          Glacier           Campground                v.        Wild
Rivers,             Inc.       (1978),               182 Mont.            389,      394-95,            597 P.2d          689,        692.         See
also      § 70-20-202,                     MCA; New Home Sewing                            Mach.          Co. v.         Songer         (1931),

91 Mont.              127,         132,         7 P.2d          238,       239-40.               The plain           language              of     the

deed      says             "coal         and coal            rights."               The grant              does     not      mention              gas

of     any      kind.

          In        addition,                  5 28-3-202,                MCA, provides:

          Effect to be given    to every part of contract.            The whole
          of a contract    is to be taken       together      so as to give
          effect  to every    part    if reasonably      practicable,      each
          clause helping   to interpret     the other.

When looking                   to        other          parts        of     the        deed      as prescribed                  by     § 28-3-

202,      MCA, we see that                            the       deed provided                 only        for     a per      ton       royalty

on coal             but      did         not     provide          for       a royalty              on the         coal      seam methane

gas.           It     is      not         a reasonable                    assumption              that      Carbon          County           would

have      conveyed                 its         rights        to    the       coal         seam methane               gas,       a valuable

resource,                 without              some sort           of      compensation.                    Moreover,             the           rules

of     statutory               construction                     prohibit            such         an interpretation.
          Contract   restricted       to its   apparent  objects.   However
          broad may be the terms of a contract,          it extends only to
          those things     concerning    which it appears that the parties
          intended   to contract.

Section              28-3-305,                 MCA.

             Contrary               to         the      testimony             of       Donald            Blackburn           and       Norbert

Kmoch          that         Union          Reserve              received            the       entire        mineral          estate              that

Carbon              County          acquired               through          the     tax       deed,        including            silver             and

gold,         Union          Reserve             only       acquired             the      coal      and the         incidental                  right

to      mine          and          remove            the     coal.            No other                 hydrocarbon              or         mineral

resource              was conveyed                      under     the       narrow          language            used by the                parties

                                                                             19
in       the     deed.
           Montana                is      an ownership-in-place                                   state            with      regard                to oil,                 gas

and other               minerals.

           Both petroleum   and gas, as long as they remain                                                                                    in the
           ground,   are a part  of the realty.      They belong                                                                               to the
           owner of the land,   and are a part of it as long                                                                                  as they
           are on it or in it,   or subject    to his control.

Stokes           v.     Tutvet                  (1958),            134 Mont.                 250,         255,        328 P.2d                     1096,             1099.
In        addition,                     title           to         the         mineral                  interest                  in         land                  may        be

segregated                in           whole           or     in        part           from        the         rest          of         the         fee             simple

title.            Stokes,                 328 P.Zd             at 1099.                 Under            the        language                 of         its         grant,

Carbon           County,                 as owner                 of      the      land,             conveyed                the            coal              to     Union

Reserve,               but             retained              ownership                  of        all         other          mineral                     interests

including               coal             seam methane                     gas.

               Union      Reserve                    argues            that      the         owner            of     the      coal                estate             needs

to protect               its            miners          and to do so,                        it    must            control              the        gas estate.

Union            Reserve's                       executives                     testified                     that           they                 feared                  that

extraction                of           coal          seam methane                 gas enhanced                       by stimulation,                                  i.e.,

hydrofracturing,                                in     advance            of     mining              will          damage              the         roof             of      the

coal           seam,      rendering                    entire            tracts          of        coal            unminable                 due to                 safety

concerns.                However,                     testimony                presented                 by experts                     at trial                    showed

that            coal           seam                  methane             gas           extraction                     does                  not          harm               the

marketability                          or the          minability                 of         coal.             Rajen         Puri,                an expert                   in

coal           seam       methane                     gas      recovery                 projects,                    testified                      that             it       is

beneficial                   to         the          coal     estate              to     rid            the        mine       of            dangerous                     coal

seam methane                       gas prior                 to        mining           the       coal.              Additionally,                                 Philip

Malone,               president                  of     GeoMet,               a geologic                 consulting                     firm,             testified

that           hydrofracturing                              does        not       affect                the        safety              of         the         mine          and
                                                                                   20
that,           if        degasification                     is     done         in       advance            of         mining,              it        makes             the
mine      safer.

           It             has      long         been         the         law         of      Montana                that          the             grant             of         a

particular                       interest              in     property                tacitly                carries                  with             the         grant

those           incidents                 without            which         the         grant           would            be of          no avail.                         See
§     70-l-520,                    MCA;          Yellowstone                    Valley                Co.          v.      Associated                         Mortg.

Investors                   (1930),             88 Mont.            73,        80-81,            290 P. 255,                     257.              Similarly,

the      transfer                   of      a mineral               interest                 includes,                   by      implication,                            the

incidental                      rights         reasonably                necessary                 to extract                    the mineral.                            See
Hurley               v.    Northern               Pacific           Railway                Company             (1969),                 153 Mont.                    199,

202,       455 P.2d                    321,       323.            While         we recognize                       the         need          and right                    of
the      coal              owner         to      extract            and         capture               coal          seam methane                             gas         for

safety               purposes               during           the         mining            process             as         such          an incidental

mining                right,             the      existence                of         that          right               does          not,             without                 a

specific                   grant,              also         encompass                 either               actual             title               to         the         gas

estate               or     the        right          to     produce            it        for      commercial                    purposes.

           Moreover,                     the     evidence                at trial               clearly             demonstrated                         that            the

owner            of        the      gas        estate          can        also            safely           extract               and produce                         coal

seam        methane                    gas       either             in      advance                   of      or         during               coal             mining

operations.
           Accordingly,                         we hold            that        as the              lessee           of        Carbon              County,                the

owner                of the            gas estate,                Florentine                    has the            right          to     drill                for        and

to produce                       the     coal         seam methane                    gas        at        issue          here.              We also                 hold

that       Union                Reserve          has a mutual,                        simultaneous                       right          to extract                       and

 to     capture                  such          gas     for        safety             purposes,                incident                  to         its         actual

 coal      mining                 operations.

                                                                                     21
          We leave                 to         the     agreement               of         the         parties          or      to       some          future

case       the         issue             of     whether,              and          if         so,      to      what         extent,                the     gas
estate          owner             or     lessee             is    entitled               to         be compensated                     by      the        coal

owner          for     gas         extracted                 and captured                      incident          to        the        coal         owner's

mining          operations.

                                                                      ISSUE              3

          Do the              1993        legislative                 amendments                      to     § 15-l-101,                MCA, and

§ 82-11-101,                      MCA, and the                   enactment               of         § 82-l-111,              MCA, constitute

an unlawful                  taking            of     coal        seam methane                      gas from          the        owners            of     coal

or      coal         lands?

          Prior             to     1993,            there        was no specific                           reference             in    the         Montana

statutes              to      coal            seam methane              gas,             however,              "gas"         was defined                    at

§ 82-ll-101(9),                          MCA (19911,                  as      "all             natural           gases           and         all         other

fluid          hydrocarbons                     as produced                  at         the     wellhead              and not            defined              as
oil.       .          .'I

           In 1993,                the        Montana            Legislature                   deleted          the        definition                   of gas

from       5 82-11-101,                        MCA, and added                      a new section                      that         defines               coal,

gas      and oil.                  Section             82-l-111,              MCA, provides:

                            'I Coal"
                            (1)          means a combustible              carbonaceaous        rock
           formed       from the compaction                and induration          of variously
           altered        plant      remains.         Coal does not include:
                    (a) methane gas or any other natural                       gas that may be
           found in any coal formation;
                    (b) oil         shale;     or
                    (c) gilsonite.
                    (2)      "Gas" means all              natural      gases    and all      other
           fluid      hydrocarbons,             including       methane      gas or any other
           natural        gas found in any coal formation,                      as produced        at
           the wellhead             and not defined           as oil     in subsection        (3).
                    (3)       "oil"      means crude           petroleum       oil    and other
           hydrocarbons,             regardless        of gravity,      that are produced          at
           the     wellhead           in    liquid       form     by ordinary         production
           methods         and that        are not the result              of condensation         of
           gas before           or after       it leaves       the reservoir.

                                                                              22
         In       addition,             the     legislature                       inserted          a new section                      into         the
Montana       Code to                insure      that           all      instruments                regarding                coal,          oil     and

gas are       interpreted                    according                 to 5 82-l-111,                MCA.            Section           l-4-110,

MCA, provides:

                 When used in any instrument,                                              unless  the clear                           and
         express     terms   of the instrument                                          provide   otherwise,                           the
         terms     "coal",    "gas",  and "oil"                                          must be construed                               as
         defined     in 82-l-111.

         The legislature                       also         inserted                definitions                of     gas       and natural

gas into           f3 15-l-101,               MCA.              Section             15-1-101(g),                 MCA, now provides:


          [tlhe    terms    "gas"  and "natural       gas" are synonymous        and
         mean gas as defined          in 82-l-111(2).          The terms   include
         all    natural      gases   and all     other     fluid   hydrocarbons,
         including       methane gas or any other         natural    gas found in
         any coal formation.

         Union           Reserve             argues             that         these         legislative                amendments                   were

simply        regulatory                and did             not         affect         Union         Reserve's                ownership               of

the    gas.             In     the      alternative,                     Union         Reserve           argues            that        if         these

amendments               serve          to     remove              ownership                from     Union            Reserve               without
compensation,                   then         there         is      an unconstitutional                              taking

          Florentine                  contends             that         these         legislative                   amendments               merely

clarified               the     existing              law.              In     addition,             Florentine                 argues             that

contrary           to        Union      Reserve's                claim         that        removal          of      coal       seam methane

gas      destroys              or     eliminates                  the        rights         enjoyed            by the           coal          estate

owner,        the        extraction                  of    coal          seam methane                 gas           actually           enhances

the      value          of     the     coal      estate                by eliminating                    a safety              hazard.

            These        amendments              to        Title             82 of      the        Montana            Code do not                  take

away        any      rights            a coal             owner          may        have      to     coal           seam methane                   gas.

Senate        Bill            294 was prospective                              in     nature.             It        provided            that         the


                                                                             23
"rights          and duties               that      matured,          penalties              that       were     incurred,              or
proceedings                 that        were       begun         before         [the        effective           date       of      this
act]    " are         not     affected.               In     the     case       before         us on appeal,               we have
held      that        there         was     a severance               of      the      gas      estate          from      the      coal

estate,          hence,           the     owner      of the        coal       estate         did     not    have        a right         to
the    coal       seam methane                 gas under           the     plain        language           of the        grant      and

the     question             of    taking          without         compensation                is    necessarily                moot.

                                                                 ISSUE 4

          Did     the       District             Court     err     in not           granting         punitive          damages          to
Union      Reserve?

          Because            we reverse             and remand               this      case        on the       central           issue

of     ownership             of     the     coal         seam methane                gas,      the      issue      of     punitive

damages          is     necessarily                moot.

          Reversed            and remanded                 for     further           proceedings            consistent             with

this      opinion.



We Concur:




                                                                     24