Court of Appeals Rules That Oil and Gas Company Has Ongoing Obligation to Restore Property Despite General Release of Damages in Surface Use Agreement

On April 11, 2022, the Fourth District Court of Appeals issued a significant decision in Zimmerview Dairy Farms, LLC v. Protégé Energy III LLC establishing that a general release of damages signed in connection with a pad site surface use agreement did not release the oil and gas company from its ongoing obligations to remediate and restore damage to a landowner’s property.

In the Zimmerview case, Plaintiff Zimmerview Dairy Farms (“ZDF”) signed a surface use agreement with Defendant Protégé Energy III LLC (“Protégé”) permitting Protégé to construct and operate a pad-site for Utica Shale wells on a portion of the ZDF farm. The agreement consisted of three documents: a recorded surface use agreement (favorable to Protégé); a confidential supplemental agreement (with terms favorable to ZDF); and a damage release under which ZDF released Protégé from the anticipated damages already paid for by Protégé. This three-document structure is typical, especially for pipelines easements, and one which many oil and gas companies insist on. Often, the damage release is explained by landmen as an unimportant formality and that the company is still going to fix the land as required under the unrecorded agreement. However, what a landman says, what an agreement says and what a company does can differ dramatically.

In Zimmerview, Protégé proceeded to construct and operate its pad-site without adequately remediating, restoring and reseeding the areas disturbed during construction, including the slopes of the pad-site. Over several years, Protégé’s failure to remediate resulted in significant topsoil damage, invasive weed infestations and ongoing erosion, which rendered large portions of the ZDF farm unusable. Protégé refused to pay or fix the ZDF farm, claiming that the damage release signed by ZDF released Protégé from any obligation to remediate or pay for damages caused to the ZDF farm. When ZDF filed suit and won at trial, Protégé appealed.

On appeal, Protégé once again argued that ZDF had released Protégé from all damages resulting from construction and operation of the pad-site including damages from not remediating the ZDF farm. Despite the broad language of the release, however, the Court of Appeals rejected Protégé’s argument on the basis that the damage release, signed when the surface use agreement was executed, could not have been intended to release Protégé from damages that resulted from the ongoing obligations and requirements Protégé had just agreed to under the surface use agreement. Accordingly, the Fourth District affirmed the trial court judgment (and $800,000 verdict for damages) against Protégé. Given the common use (and abuse) of similar damage releases by both operators and pipeline companies, this decision is a welcome addition to Ohio caselaw and should assist (and hopefully encourage) Ohio landowners to insist on producers and pipeline companies meeting their construction and remediation obligations.

©2022 Roetzel & Andress
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Today’s Tip for Commercial Litigators: Making a Legal Argument Versus Being Argumentative

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Trials are the culmination of extensive discovery and oftentimes unsuccessful attempts to resolve matters out of court. Parties can spend significant resources preparing for trial; they have a lot to gain or lose; and they expect a great deal from their attorneys. As a result, the tension can get thick between opposing attorneys during trial.

Keep in mind that no matter what your feelings may be about opposing counsel by the time of trial, demeaning a lawyer in court never helps your client’s case. Similarly, stay cool if opposing counsel acts disrespectfully towards you for the following reason—juries may not understand the nuances of a legal argument, but they know a cheap shot when they see it.

The same holds true for cross-examination, which can be sufficiently aggressive to fit the purpose. Yet an overly aggressive cross-examination can backfire when an attorney’s apparent hostility towards a witness becomes more prominent than the substance of the questions and answers.

For example, suppose you represent a plaintiff in a breach of contract action. The civil defendant’s mother is testifying about a conversation she alleges took place between the parties. Your goal during cross-examination is to undermine her testimony by showing that she is inherently biased. Instead of attacking the mother, perhaps cross-examination could consist of the following, “Ma’am, it is true that you love your son, correct? You are aware that your son is being sued for breaching a contract with my client, correct? Are you are aware that if your son is found to be in breach of the contract, he would owe my client a significant amount of money? Is it fair to say that you don’t want to testify in a way that would hurt your son?”

At this stage, most reasonable juries are going to discount whatever the mother says. However, if you simply go on the attack, the cross-examination will be more about disrespecting someone’s mother than showing the witness’ bias. The point is that zealous advocacy for a client does not translate into exhibiting hostility towards opposing counsel or an adverse witness.

Article by:

Stephen C. Shannon

Of:

Odin, Feldman & Pittleman, P.C.