Horob v. Zavanna, LLC

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Sandra Horob, Steven Poeckes, Steve Shae, Mike Shae and Paul Shae, the successors to the interests of John and Bernice Shae ("Horob plaintiffs"), appealed the grant of summary judgment deciding ownership of an oil and gas lease in favor of the successors to the interest of the William Herbert Hunt Trust Estate (collectively "defendants") and declaring the lease did not terminate and remained in effect. The Horob plaintiffs argued the Shae lease expired under the cessation of production clause because production from the well on the interest at-issue ceased, and additional drilling or reworking operations were not commenced within 60 days of the cessation. The district court concluded the lease did not expire because the cessation of production clause was not triggered. The court alternatively concluded the lease did not expire because: (1) it remained in effect under the terms of a communitization agreement with the United States; and (2) the Horob plaintiffs ratified the lease by accepting royalty payments after the lapses in production. After review, the North Dakota Supreme Court concluded the Shae lease's cessation of production clause was triggered, however, the lease remained in effect under the terms of the communitization agreement. View "Horob v. Zavanna, LLC" on Justia Law