My family is leased by Chesapeake and is having problems getting a response about an increase in deductions from our royalties. CHK recently went back to the first of the year and made additional adjustments to gas prices we believe are already way below market value.
We have now noticed an increasing spread between natural gas spot prices at the Henry Hub and our gas price. Using the spot price as listed on the eia.gov website the difference we have received has increased over the past few months. The difference in June was $.88, July was $1.05, and August was $1.28.
All of our email inquiries about the deductions have been ignored. Can a demand letter be used to get them to provide details on what they are deducting? Would it be better to use an attorney to do this?
Tags:
John, does your lease include a No Cost Royalty clause? The monthly NYMEX - Natural Gas Contract Settlement Price History is better than spot prices for comparison but neither takes into account all the costs attributable to a specific lease and point of sale. Chesapeake is swamped with requests like yours. You can send a certified letter asking for answers to your questions however it's quite possible that a response may take some time. Chesapeake has made serious staffing cuts.
Yes, CHK did sell gas through an affiliate in the early years of the HS. That affiliate later sold their pipeline gathering systems when CHK needed to raise money. So the question of an arms length transaction is moot for sales after the date of sale. The deductions involving cost to treat and transport are complex. Not to mention the possibility that CHK charged customers for costs that are not generally acceptable deductions such as the cost to build those gathering systems. There is more data being uncovered as law suits go through their discovery phase. It's like pulling teeth to get the raw data and to get depositions to interpret that data. The law moves slowly and tends to favor the industry more often than not but I'm hearing some reports of interesting information that will certainly be included in trial transcripts if the cases every go to trial.
Not in Louisiana. The LA courts have stringent requirements for defining a class. And no judge has seen fit to grant class status regarding deductions from royalty issues. There are individuals, companies and small land owner groups that have filed suits. CHK has settled some of those cases so there is no ruling to set a precedent. Some plaintiff will have to stay the course and get a ruling before there will be any case law on the issue.
We've discussed the possibility of legislative action in regard to mineral code reform a number of times and the general opinion seems to be that legislators do not wish to get involved with the issue. Nixon, if you can get one or more legislators to file such a bill I am sure we would all be willing to contact our state representatives and senators to encourage their support. A lobby battle with the energy industry and their allies would be an uphill fight of epic proportions.
I'll look forward to developments, Nixon.
IRieley,
Maybe you can explain something for me that I've never understood.... It would seem to me that "market price at the wellhead" is the value of the gas when it comes right out of the ground. Is that right? If so, that gas is dirty, wet, and has not been transported to market. So how does that price correspond to a cost-free royalty, where I interpret a cost-free royalty to be the price I would receive for the gas that is sold into the pipeline? Am I making sense in this question?
Dion,
The reason I asked this question is that my lease addendum (which was provided by one of the recommended attorneys on this site) says royalties shall be based on "market value at the mouth of the well." To me, this would mean market value at the point gas comes out of the ground and that I should get a lousy price for my gas. But my attorney combined it with the words that I won't pay for treating, dehydration, compression, etc. And that worked -- I am getting cost-free royalties. But I never really understood it, and still don't -- it seems contradictory.
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