Chesapeake Energy Corp. CHK +2.41% is pushing Ohio landowners to accept revised lease contracts that would help the cash-strapped driller save money while holding on to its prized oil and gas fields.

The company's actions, documented in scores of property and court records, aren't the first time that Chesapeake has tried to change the terms of lease deals, or walked away from them. Since 2008, more than 100 lawsuits have been filed across the country by landowners, who claim the company breached contracts. In some cases, settlements have been reached, in other cases the litigation continues.

Ohio Department of Natural Resources

The company doesn't dispute that it has sought to renegotiate leases in Ohio. In cases in other states where Chesapeake has walked away from deals, it contends that it had the contractual right to do so.

Chesapeake, the country's second-largest natural-gas producer, has spent about $2 billion to lease the mineral rights to more than a million acres—about 5% of Ohio's land mass—in a bet that Ohio's Utica Shale fields will become a major oil producer. The leases contain deadlines by which the company must drill wells costing millions of dollars apiece or give up rights to the property.

Facing a cash crunch and mounting pressure from activist shareholders to trim spending, Chesapeake is seeking contract changes that would allow it to drill fewer wells while keeping the leases. It is generally required to drill at least one well on a specified group of properties known as a unit; it is trying to bundle leases into much bigger units, which will allow it to drill fewer wells but retain rights to more acreage

The bigger units mean that each landowner's stake of any oil or gas produced is smaller, but they could potentially share in production from more wells.

Chesapeake's agents tell landowners that they will be shut out of the oil and gas boom if they don't agree to the changes, according to landowners interviewed by The Wall Street Journal, which reviewed more than 100 property records in Ohio filed over the past year detailing the changes.

The company says the changes it seeks are minor and that most landowners have been amenable to them.

It says that many of the leases it acquired in Ohio were negotiated by other companies, some going back more than 20 years, and are ill-suited for the horizontal wells needed to extract oil and gas from shale rock; it acknowledges, however, that it stands to save money by combining leases into units that cover two square miles, at least twice the size of most existing units.

"Our objective is to employ the unit size that takes full advantage of breakthroughs in technology, and creates efficiencies in the use of capital," said Michael Kehs, a Chesapeake spokesman. Bigger units, he said, improve landowners' odds of sharing in a productive well.

Chesapeake carries significant clout in Ohio's rustbelt, where some landowners are eager to begin receiving royalties. More than 100 landowners in Carroll County alone have accepted the lease amendments so far this year, property records show.

"They've brought some industry to an area that's definitely needed it," said Byron Shankel, a farmer in Carroll County, southeast of Akron.

Others, though, are rankled.

"It kind of makes you mad," said Karen Hampton, who owns about 10 acres in Carroll County and refused to be part of a larger unit. She is one of eight landowners who last month sued Chesapeake to cancel their leases, alleging the company's agents, known as land men, warned them their property would become a "hole on the map" if they didn't agree to change their leases.

The company declined to comment on litigation. The company, in its legal response, said the plaintiffs failed to allege the specific circumstances in which the "hole on the map" comment was made, and that it was legally insufficient to support a charge of fraud. Chesapeake says in court filings that landowners are looking to cancel valid leases to pursue richer offers.

Chesapeake has recorded more than 3,000 leases in Carroll County since late 2010.

Joel Gingerich and his wife leased their 11 acres, which gave them a 7% stake in their original 160-acre unit. Their interest in the new 1,280-acre unit would be less than 1%.

"We all held out a little bit," he said, speaking of his neighbors. "In the end, I think most of us signed. They said if we don't sign, they'll just go around us, and we'll miss out altogether."

Chesapeake's flood-the-zone approach to leasing has helped the company capture coveted oil and gas fields across the country. But the strategy also saddled it with expensive drilling obligations: By the end of last year, Chesapeake had to drill to preserve the leases on more than half of the 15 million acres it controls, an area three times the size of New Jersey.

With the plunge in natural-gas prices, the amount of cash Chesapeake expects to generate from operations this year is less than half the amount it plans to spend on drilling and leasing. The shortfall has prompted the company to try to sell as much as $14 billion of its assets. It has slashed its annual land-leasing budget to $1.6 billion from $4.8 billion last year.

Amid the global financial crisis in the fall of 2008, Chesapeake tried to delay or walk away from lease deals to conserve cash. The moves triggered lawsuits in the Haynesville Shale in Louisiana and Texas.

A federal judge in Houston ruled last week that Chesapeake must honor a contract to buy leases from three Texas landowners for more than $100 million, a deal the company refused to close in 2008. Chesapeake says it will appeal. The company is also seeking to overturn a $22 million judgment over a 2008 deal on leases in east Texas.

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Thanks, Steve.  I would never revile anyone on this or any other post.

No way of replying to your post above so I'll put it here. You are obviously a "company man" as you indicate with "oil and gas pro" on your avatar. I wouldn't expect you to do anything but regurgitate the company line (as you have been doing). You claim some magical partnership relationship between O&G companies and landowners/mineral right owners and I say that's a crock.

There is a contractual relationship between the parties. Some folks have good relationships based on (or regardless of) and others get screwed. There is no generic "partnership" concept. I live with the terms of the lease agreement I signed and I expect the other party or their assignees to do the same.

As far as your assertion that I only dealt with an independent contractor (now who is putting words in peoples mouths), I also dealt directly with folks (employees) from Chesapeake at various times. They spent close to 3 years trying to get me to sign with them.

Let's consider your assertion that my argument that it is not a partnership because it doesn't cut both ways in terms of how the parties treat each other. I asked for anyone to provide a specific verifiable instance of a landowner requesting a lease modification from CHK and getting it without a quid pro quo being demanded from CHK. That is not asking anyone to agree with me, that is asking for someone (anyone) to provide supporting validation OF YOUR ASSERTION. YOU make a generic assertion about lease modifications "happening all the time "but provide nothing to document your assertion. I know, trust you because you are the "oil and gas pro". We know that because you tell us so.

Go ahead and have the last word because I'm done with this thread. Landowners can read all the posts and make up their own minds. If a landowner buys your arguments then they will simply sign where the CHK rep tells them to sign. As the saying goes, Caveat Emptor.

As far as proof of Modifications-go to any deed room in the country-you will find them quite readily.  I'm not asking anyone to trust me at all, but I do hope that people make decisions based upon facts, not emotions, heresay or blatent untruths.  As far as the "oil and gas pro", I chose that identifier in the interest of absolute clarity and truthfulness, as compared to some who state that they are mineral owners, and are not.  Your curious use of the Latin term, "caveat emptor"-"let the buyer beware", could actually be used by Chesapeake, since they are they buyer of the leases and the Lessor is, technically, the seller, but I'll go you one better-"in vino veritas"-"in wine there is truth", meaning when I'm drinking I'm more apt to tell you the truth.  So, let's not be at loggerheads, let's have a beer one day.  Until then, I wish you the very best.

I'll be there for the vino... but I'm still grappling with Mike's extrapolation of pilots having "god like powers".  I guess all that nonsense I read about training and flight simulators was just bunk!  God trained them to fly!

Don't put words in my mouth.  I have the utmost respect for everyone, and have never advocated that anyone blindly accept anything, whether it be from an O&G company or from the local McDonald's.  What I am saying is that unless you have the expetise, you have to rely on the expertise of others, whether it be your doctor, attorney or the guy who fixes your toilet.  You are owners of the airplane, if you insist on using my example, like Boeing, until you decide to sell or lease that plane to someone else.  If you are receiving a 20% royalty, for example, on your O&G, the producer is receiving 80%, therefore it is up even more critical that they make good marketing decisions.  Companies-like Rex, that you referred to make their own decisions, based on their evaluation of the situations.  My point was, and is, that it is immaterial, whether it is a 1280 acre unit, or 2-640 acre units.  As far as your comment about PA.  You do realize that we're in the middle of a hot summer and there is a glut of CH4 on the market.  A company would be foolish to give away a valuable commodity such as natural gas at this time.  Better to wait until the market is better to market PA gas.  Put their resources in the wet gas areas that are more in demand for industrial applications at this time.  It will all even out over time.  

Ken... perhaps you should had heeded my prior admonition on saving your blood pressure medication expenses!  I too will heed my own advice.   Logic is lost here amidst the animosity that prevails.  Unfortunate when you consider that neither of us are seeking to offer anything other than guidance and insights into how companies operate. 


And as for Mikeh... if we should ever find ourselves on the same flight, please let me know ahead of time if you think you know more about flying the plane than the pilot does. 

I'm with you, Brother.  No good deed goes unpunished.  Take care!

Ken,

Based upon some of the well layouts I have seen and the well logs that indicate horizontal lengths of well over 6,000', with 3 horizontal runs in two directions 180 degrees from each other and covering 1280 acres. I think the 'square mile' you are referring to is the surface area but that it is rectangular in shape. I was told by a petroleum geologist that the lateral spacing of the horizontal runs is about 1,000' and that the outer runs only come within about 500' of the drilling unit.

Notwithstanding that, I have seen well layouts that have 4 horizontal runs in each direction, so there must be variations in the surface dimensions that define the square mile area.

You're correct-I was just using the 640 acres-a section-as a guage, since it is a square mile, and is somewhat easier to explain and visualize.  Thank you for clarifying.

My original lease was with Fortuna, which turned into Talisman.  Now Chesapeake owns it.  I didn't want to agree with having Chesapeake take over my lease because I heard horrible things about dealing with the company but I wanted to give them the benefit of the doubt.  I too have had a landman tell me that if I do not change my lease, I will be left out of a unit and get nothing.  I think I have been MORE than fair but to no avail.  I completely understand the need for larger drilling units and I'm fine with that.  Yes it makes my percentage in a unit smaller but it increases the available gas that I can draw from so for me I had no problem with it.  If that was all Chesapeake wanted, there would be no issue.  The problem is that not only did they want to increase the unit size, they wanted to give me less protections for my water supply, change my primary term from 5 years to 8 years with no secondary term and no additional bonus money, and various other ridiculous demands that had no bearing on the unit size.  They told my O & G attorney that if I didn't sign, they would drop my lease entirely and would develop the land around me which essentially would make my oil and gas worthless.  No other company would lease the donut hole.  I agreed to the majority of the changes (against my better judgement) and just asked in return for a larger percentage in royalties - nothing major.  They turned it down.  Chesapeake wants to change a lease that was negotiated in good faith without giving anything in return.  I even asked my attorney if they would at least consider paying my $1,000 to cover my attorney's fees if I signed and he said they wouldn't.  Chesapeake's position is that it is my choice if I want to hire a lawyer.  I didn't have to.  This is not a company I want to deal with.  I have been more than reasonable but they don't want to hear it.  When you say we just have to rely on them to tell us what is best for us its like putting the fox in charge of the hen house.  Yes there are legitimate business reasons for needing to change a lease however Chesapeake is using this as an excuse to bully people into doing something that might not be in their best interests. They don't want to work with us, they want to roll over on us.  It is no surprise either.  I believe the character of a company trickles down from the top and if you have checked out Aubrey K. McClendon recently you would find that he has serious flaws in his character.  Check out http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/05/02/us-chesapeake-mcclendon-h... and a host of others.  And you want me to just trust these people?  Are you kidding me?  His own shareholders can't trust the person that is running the company! And your comparison to the pilot in the cockpit is inaccurate.  Perhaps a more accurate analogy would be that the pilot is flying the plane and he tells his passengers that he will crash the plane unless they give him what he wants - possessions, land, first-born children etc.  That is the analogy that I see is more fitting.
 

I offer this suggestion for anyone being approached by CHK to increase their unit size from, say 640 to 1280:

Since others above claim that this request for a contract change reflects improvements in drilling technology, then one can assume that an improvement in drilling technology means a reduction in cost to produce.  If that is the case, then the landowner should simply tell CHK that as a quid pro quo for agreeing to the unit size increase you, the landowner, as part of the contract change, also want to include a higher percentage royalty (say, from 15% to 17.5%).  Since cash flow seems to be an issue of current concern with CHK, CHK gets the increased unit size that reduces their short term drilling cost and this increase in royalty essentially costs them nothing AT THIS TIME.  Win - Win!

tried that...they turned it down.  Said sign or loose out - period.  They do not want to compromise.

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