Lawsuit Claims Alphabet Soup Companies (you know who) Stiffed Ohio Landowners

This is interesting because the Plaintiffs, apparently, named the Okies' stooges as co-conspirators, i.e.,  the stooges styling themselves "brokers."

Every dog has his day.  I really believe that.

Aubrey McClendon's American Energy Facing Lawsuit for Failure to Pay Lease Signing Bonuses in Ohio

From NGI:
Nearly 60 landowners in southeast Ohio have filed a lawsuit against American Energy Partners LP (AELP), one of its affiliates and a land services company that worked on its behalf over claims that the companies owe more than $ 9.2 million in overdue lease signing bonuses and attorney fees. 
The plaintiffs, including a school district and five towns, filed the lawsuit in Jefferson County Common Pleas Court. It is seeking payment of the $ 9.2 million, plus $ 25,000 or more for each plaintiff in compensatory and punitive damages for breach of contract and unjust enrichment. 
The complaint alleges that shortly after AELP was formed in 2013, it contracted with land services company Great River Energy LLC to acquire leasehold for its Appalachian affiliate American Energy Utica (AEU) LLC in southeast Ohio, including Jefferson County. Acting as a land agent for AEU, Great River entered into leases for the company that were then assigned to it, according to the complaint. 
The leases in question were signed in 2013 and 2014 for a five-year primary term. Their order of payment required Great River to pay lease signing bonuses and fees within 120 days of the signing or identify title defects. According to the lawsuit, Great River It could only surrender the lease upon existence of a title defect and the lessor's inability to cure it within 90 days.

Certain plaintiffs, the lawsuit says, did not receive payment within 120 days and were not notified of any title defects. Another group did not receive payment within 120 days and the lawsuit alleges that afterward, Great River tried to identify title defects later than what was required under the lease agreements.
I found it interesting to note how American Energy responded to questions about the lawsuit:
Great River could not be reached to comment. When asked about the lawsuit, an AELP spokesman said the lawsuit involves Ascent and not AELP and added that it was important to note that distinction. 
"American Energy Utica LLC and American Energy Partners LP deny the allegations and should not have been named as parties in this meritless lawsuit," the company said in a statement.
That is a very slippery little answer, since the only reason there is a distinction to be made between American Energy and Ascent Resources is that American Energy Partners just announced in a press release 3 days ago that American Energy Appalachia Holdings had changed its name to Ascent Resources and was "transitioning to a standalone operating company, fully independent of the broader American Energy Partners, LP (AELP) platform."  Perhaps this lawsuit helps to explain that decision.  The transition to a standalone company is not going to be complete until the end of the year, that same press release stated, so it seems rather disingenuous for AELP to pass this lawsuit off as if it has nothing to do with them.

What can be said is that just a couple of short years after Aubrey McClendon emerged with this new company and jumped right back into the shale game with both feet, American Energy Partners is beginning to encounter some financial and legal struggles that stir up memories of the turmoil surrounding McClendon's ouster as Chesapeake Energy's CEO.

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"River Boat Gambler", "Brilliant ceo", "Business Genius", or "Thief", all describe these lawless/greedy Oil & Gas ceos. They belong in prison, not in Forbes magazine as top money earners.

The only thing that separates a common man from a ceo is that the common man has enough sense to know Greed will never take a man or woman where he/she wants to go in life, and even worse where they don't want to go during the "Great Transition" when their time on earth ends. I hear some religions make you do a repeat of life until you get it right.

O&G ceos can steal from the landowners but they had better pay up when it comes to local governments, since that money is reserved to pay for schools. And maybe to pay for educators, school administrators, expensive buses & fuel for the buses, and retirements for the educators, administrators, and to pay for county politicians & workers, and their retirements.

I didn't mention hlthcare ( a link keeps popping in when HC is written out) for all those educators, administrators, politicians and workers. hlth care has skyrocketed due to government intervention lately. Maybe getting hlth care costs under control before passing a law requiring everyone to participate would have been a wise thing to do. Washington forgot that hlth care ceos are among the greediest in the US.

Good luck getting that release from Great Rivers. Matter of fact there is absolutely no contact info for them anywhere. What we have found is that you have to contact Orange Energy ( the Texas Office) if you want any information on a lease signed by Great Rivers

What is the stupid part?

The Plaintiffs are alleging bad faith. 

The oil company created the expectation that it would pay for the lease unless title failed.  It's alleged that the  oil company couldn't come up with the money so they fabricated title issues.  Whether it's legal or not, doing so makes them complete dirt bags.

It's not the first time the defendants have been accused of the same.  Harold Hamm had to sue CHK when it pulled the same thing on Continental in Michigan several years ago.  Range has an extensive history of cold drafting landowners and then fabricating title issues.

I've purchased many leases over the years and paid for 90% using 3 or 7 day drafts.  The other 10% got certified checks at signing.  I represented real oil companies, not frauds who have no idea what they are doing.

If Marcellus and Utica  mineral owners want to get rid of the oil companies staffed with these trashy, trashy people---stop taking drafts.

These 120 and 180 day drafts are a disgrace to our industry.  If you tried to pay for a lease, in Texas, with a 120 draft you would get punched in the mouth. 

Des?   Oh Des?   Where are youuuuu?????

Some more savvy landowner groups (including this one, I believe) write their contract with the O&G to prevent cherry picking and only allow non-payment for title defects that are unable to be resolved in a set amount of time. We did this with the Smith-Goshen signing and we got paid.

AELP, or whatever name they're going by this month willfully ignored that part of the contract and cherry picked anyway. It all depends upon whether you're presented with a faux lease (time-option to lease - think back to the Wishgard debacle a few years ago on SE OH) by the O&G or their leasing arm, or you develop your own lease as a group and then search for a partner in the O&G industry to produce your acreage.

Call them and ask for a release ?
I don't think so Matt. notification by certified mail is the only way to go. It states it in every companies lease. You can call and have them give you every excuse in the book. And usually you have to let them know you will sue them for slander of title if they do not file a release of lease at the recorders office in the county where the property is located. CERTIFIED MAIL and always save the green receipt card you get back when they sign for it. Also make sure you keep copies of all letters you send for future use if need be

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