DALLAS (AP) — More than 400 lawsuits have been consolidated in Texas, where energy drilling giant Chesapeake Operating Inc. is accused of withholding more than $1 billion in royalty payments from about 25,000 property owners.
“The vast majority are just smaller landowners, even some folks who own bigger tracts who really were not familiar with the oil and gas industry,” attorney Dan McDonald whose Fort Worth firm is handling the bulk of the cases, tells The Dallas Morning News. “Most of them signed leases presented to them by a (corporate) landman.”
The lawsuits accuse Oklahoma City-based Chesapeake of deliberately cheating them by improperly calculating the price of gas and by wrongly deducting expenses after the gas was transmitted.
In court filings, Chesapeake and related companies have described the theories of the plaintiffs as “legally irrelevant.”
McDonald contends in the lawsuits that from 2009 to 2013 Chesapeake was in a “desperate struggle for financial survival” because of heavy debt and declining gas prices and sold 25 percent of its Barnett Shale interests in 2009 to the French conglomerate Total.
Then two years later, under what the plaintiffs say was pressure from Total, Chesapeake notified nearly 19,000 royalty owners that their checks might decrease because of a change in calculating post-production costs.
That’s when payments dropped off sharply, according to the lawsuit.
- Posted September 23, 2015
- Tweet This | Share on Facebook
Lawsuits over unpaid royalties combined
headlines Macomb
- Fall family fun
- MDHHS announces enhancements to improve substance use disorder treatment access
- Levin Center looks at congressional investigation of torture and mistreatment of war detainees
- State Unemployment Insurance Agency provides tips on how to stop criminals from stealing benefits
- Supreme Court leaves in place Alaska campaign disclosure rules voters approved in 2020
headlines National
- Professional success is not achieved through participation trophies
- ACLU and BigLaw firm use ‘Orange is the New Black’ in hashtag effort to promote NY jail reform
- ‘Jailbreak: Love on the Run’ misses chance to examine staff sexual misconduct at detention centers
- Utah considers allowing law grads to choose apprenticeship rather than bar exam
- Can lawyers hold doctors accountable for wasting our time?
- Lawyer suspended after arguing cocaine enhanced his cognition