The Austin Court of Appeals Determines that PSA Wells Do Not Require Pooling Authority
Horizontal drilling in the last decade materially altered oil and gas production in Texas. Horizontal wells allow producers to unlock vast mineral resources otherwise inaccessible to traditional vertical drilling.1听Commentors have even credited horizontal drilling as the 鈥渉eart鈥 of a 鈥渞evolutionary reorientation in global energy markets, decreasing the United States鈥 energy dependence on foreign suppliers.”2听While technology for, and development of, horizontal drilling rapidly matured, the law lags behind.3听Important questions about horizontal drilling remain unanswered by Texas courts. Among them: can a mineral lessee may drill a horizontal well that crosses lease lines without pooling authority?
According to the Austin Court of Appeals in R.R. Comm鈥檔 of Tex. & Magnolia Oil v. Opiela, No. 03-21-00258-CV, 2023 WL 4284984 (Tex. App.鈥擜ustin June 30, 2023, no pet. h.), the answer is 鈥測es.鈥
Background: Pooling vs. Allocation Wells and Production-Sharing Agreements (PSA)
Neighboring tracts are sometimes pooled together so that drilling operations on any particular tract are treated as occurring on all the tracts within the pooled unit. Importantly, before an operator can drill on pooled tracts, the Texas Railroad Commission (the 鈥淐ommission鈥) must determine whether the operator has both a valid lease and pooling authority.
Horizontal wells often cross lease lines. Like vertical wells, operators may pool multiple tracts for horizontal wells. This presents a problem when a lessee is unable to form a pooled unit. Texas does not allow compulsory pooling outside of limited exceptions. Without an exception to the pooling requirements, the lessee may be at a dead-end. The Commission has responded to this concern by permitting horizontal wells that cross lease lines without pooling authority. These non-pooled horizontal wells fall within two categories: (1) wells under production-sharing agreements (鈥淧SAs鈥) and (2) allocation wells.
PSAs are simply agreements between lessees and royalty owners that determines how production will be allocated among the tracts.4听At least 65% of the mineral and working interest owners must consent to the PSA for the Commission to issue a permit. An allocation well, on the other hand, horizontally crosses lease boundaries that have not been pooled and where no agreement exists among the royalty owners for production sharing.5听Both PSA-wells and allocations wells have become prevalent throughout Texas.
While the Commission permits these alternatives to pooling, Texas courts have not yet fully addressed whether these wells are legal under Texas law. Opponents of PSAs and allocation wells argue that drilling a horizontal well that crosses lease lines is an act of pooling regardless of what one calls it.6听The lessors in Opiela argued that these actions were pooling, such that the Commission would need pooling authority to issue a permit to drill.
The Austin Court of Appeals Finds No Pooling Requirement Necessary for PSA wells
Specifically, the lessors in Opiela filed suit challenging a permit that allowed Magnolia Oil & Gas Operating LLC (鈥淢agnolia鈥) to drill a horizontal well into a tract with minerals leased, in part. The lessors argued that the Commission erred by failing to consider their lease鈥檚 anti-pooling clause, which prohibited pooling 鈥渋n any manner whatever.鈥 Since the lessors did not consent to pool or to a PSA (and thus lacked pooling authority), lessors urged the Commission should not have permitted Magnolia to drill. This placed squarely before the Court whether a PSA well should be treated as pooling under Texas law.
The trial court reversed the Commission鈥檚 order denying plaintiff鈥檚 complaint, finding that the Commission erred by (1) finding that Magnolia showed a good-faith claim to drill, (2) adopting and applying rules for PSA wells without complying with the requirements of the Administrative Procedure Act, and (3) failing to consider the pooling clause in the plaintiff鈥檚 lease.7
The court first answered whether the Commission has the power to issue permits for multi-tract horizontal wells without pooling authority.8听After considering the history and relationship between pooling and PSAs, the court determined that PSA wells are not the same as pooling and, therefore, do not require pooling authority.9听To do so, the Court evaluated property interests involved, as well as production divisions between PSAs and pooled wells.
For pooling, the court determined the lessee cross-conveys property interest to the tracts within the pool. Finding 鈥渁 portion of the royalty interest from each of the other tracts in the pool.”10听In other words, 鈥減roduction from any tract in the pool is treated as production from every tract in the pool.”11听鈥淧roceeds from production from one of the pooled tracts are shared by all owners of the tracts听in proportion to the individual tract鈥檚 proportion of the pooled acreage.”12
The court reasoned PSA wells, by contrast, do not have a cross-conveyance of interest. Nor do PSA wells have to follow the production allocation requirements for pooled tracts. Instead, parties reach private agreements in PSAs for how production will be shared.13听For these reasons, the court found that PSA wells and pooling are not the same and, therefore, the Commission did not err by failing to consider the plaintiff鈥檚 lease鈥檚 anti-pooling clause.14
Next, the appellate court found the evidence failed to show that 65% of the interest owners agreed to the PSA. Without evidentiary support for the threshold requirements for a PSA, the appellate court affirmed the trial court鈥檚 conclusion that the Commission erred in finding that Magnolia showed a good-faith claim of right to drill.15听Because the appellate court determined remand was necessary, it did not reach the question of whether the Commission violated the Administrative Procedure Act.16
Finally, Magnolia requested in the alternative that the appellate court render a judgment granting the permit as an allocation well.17听Magnolia contended that, even if the record lacked evidence to show that 65% of the interest owners joined the PSA, the well could still meet all requirements of an allocation well. The court noted that it did not have the power to make such a ruling since the Order on appeal does not pertain to an allocation well permit.18
Impact
While the Austin Court of Appeals did not answer all the questions surrounding PSAs and allocation wells, the case represents a major step forward for providing legal framework around horizontal drilling. And the appellate court鈥檚 decision should put operators鈥 minds at ease at least for now, as the holding preserves the Commission鈥檚 current approach to PSAs and hints that allocation wells will be treated in the same manner.
1 Ernest E. Smith, Applying Familiar Concepts to New Technology: Under the Traditional Oil and Gas Lease, A Lessee Does Not Need Pooling Authority to Drill A Horizontal Well That Crosses Lease Lines (Reprint, First Published 2017), 3 Oil & Gas, Nat. Resources & Energy J. 553, 554 (2017).
2 Benjamin Holliday,听New Oil and Old Laws: Problems in Allocation of Production to Owners of Non-Participating Royalty Interests in the Era of Horizontal Drilling, 44听ST. MARY鈥橲听L. J. 771, 773 (2013), cited in Brief of Amicus Curiae Pioneer Natural Resources Co., in Support of Appellants.
3 Smith, 3 O.N.E. J. at 554鈥55.
4 Smith, 3 O.N.E. J. at 564.
5听R.R. Comm鈥檔 of Tex. & Magnolia Oil v. Opiela, No. 03-21-00258-CV, 2023 WL 4284984, at *1 (Tex. App.鈥擜ustin June 30, 2023, no pet. h.) (citing Clifton A. Squibb,听The Age of Allocation: The End of Pooling As We Know It?, 45 Tex. Tech L. Rev. 929, 930 (2013)).
6 Smith, 3 O.N.E. J. at 556.
7听Opiela, 2023 WL 4284984, at *1.
8听Id. at *7.
9听Id.
10 Smith, 3 O.N.E. J. at 561.
11 Smith, 3 O.N.E. J. at 561.
12 Opiela, 2023 WL 4284984, at *7.
13听Id. at *8.
14听Id.
15听Id. at *12.
16听Id. at *10.
17听Id. at *12.
18听Id.