Ohio Court Opinion on Oil and Gas Lease Breach of Contract
Summary
The Ohio Court of Appeals affirmed a lower court's summary judgment in a breach of contract case involving an oil and gas lease. The ruling addresses issues of voluntary and statutory unitization under Ohio law.
What changed
The Ohio Court of Appeals, in the case of Chervenak Family Trust v. Ascent Resources – Utica, LLC, affirmed the Guernsey County Common Pleas Court's summary judgment. The appeal concerned a breach of contract and declaratory judgment action related to an oil and gas lease. The court's decision addresses the interpretation of lease provisions concerning voluntary and statutory unitization under Ohio Revised Code Section 1509.28.
This ruling provides clarity on the application of oil and gas lease terms and unitization statutes in Ohio. While this specific case is an appeal of a lower court's decision and does not impose new regulatory requirements, it serves as a precedent for how such disputes will be adjudicated. Companies operating under similar leases in Ohio should review their practices regarding unitization and lease compliance in light of this judicial interpretation.
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March 16, 2026 Get Citation Alerts Download PDF Add Note
Chervenak Family Trust v. Ascent Resources - Utica, L.L.C.
Ohio Court of Appeals
- Citations: 2026 Ohio 886
- Docket Number: 25CA00033
Judges: Hoffman
Syllabus
Oil and Gas Lease - Breach of Contract - Summary Judgment - Voluntary Unitization - Statutory Unitization - R.C. 1509.28
Combined Opinion
by [William Hoffman](https://www.courtlistener.com/person/8104/william-hoffman/)
[Cite as Chervenak Family Trust v. Ascent Resources - Utica, L.L.C., 2026-Ohio-886.]
COURT OF APPEALS
GUERNSEY COUNTY, OHIO
FIFTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
CHERVENAK FAMILY TRUST, JOHN Case No. 25CA00033
E. CHERVENAK, TRUSTEE
Opinion and Judgment Entry
Plaintiff - Appellant
Appeal from the Guernsey County Court of
-vs- Common Pleas, Case No. 25-OG-000052
ASCENT RESOURCES – UTICA, LLC Judgment: Affirmed
Defendant - Appellee Date of Judgment Entry: March 16, 2026
BEFORE: Andrew J. King, William B. Hoffman, David M. Gormley, Appellate Judges
APPEARANCES: Ethan Vessels, Fields, Dehmlow & Vessels, LLC, for Plaintiff-
Appellant; Kevin L. Colosimo, Christopher W. Rogers, Frost Brown Todd LLP, for
Defendant-Appellee
OPINION
Hoffman, J.
{¶1} Plaintiff-appellant Chervenak Family Trust, John E. Chervenak, Trustee,
appeals the summary judgment entered by the Guernsey County Common Pleas Court
dismissing its complaint against Defendant-appellee Ascent Resources – Utica, LLC, for
breach of contract and declaratory judgment.
STATEMENT OF THE FACTS AND CASE
{¶2} Appellant is an Ohio trust which owns the fee minerals of a 115.4-acre tract
of land located in Guernsey County (hereinafter the “subject property”). The subject
property is encumbered by a 1972 oil and gas lease which Appellant’s predecessors,
Charles and Bernice Clary, entered with William Humbleton.
{¶3} Appellee is an oil and gas exploration and production company
headquartered in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. Appellee is the successor lessee of the
lease encumbering the subject property as to deep formations, including the Utica/Point
Pleasant formation.
{¶4} The lease includes the following provision:
The Lessor hereby grants to the Lessee the right to consolidate the
leased premises with other lands to form an oil and gas development unit
of not more than one hundred sixty (160) acres for the purpose of drilling a
well thereon, but the Lessee shall in no event be required to drill more than
one well on such unit. Any well drilled on said development unit, whether
or not located on the leased premises, shall nevertheless be deemed to be
located upon the leased premises within the meaning and for the purposes
of all the provisions and covenants of this lease to the same effect as if all
the lands comprising said unit were described in and subject to this lease;
provided, however, that only the owner of the lands on which such well is
located may take gas for use in one dwelling house on such owner’s lands
in accordance with the provisions of this lease, and provided further that the
Lessor agrees to accept, in lieu of the 1/8 oil and gas royalty hereinbefore
provided, that proportion of each 1/8 royalty which the acreage herein
leased bears to the total number of acres comprising said development unit.
If said development unit shall thereafter be used for gas storage purposes
the well rental or land rental hereinbefore provided for such use shall be
payable to the owners of the parcels of land comprising said unit in the
proportion that the acreage of each such parcel bears to the entire acreage
of said unit.
{¶5} The lease includes no language specifically addressing statutory unitization
pursuant to R.C. 1509.28.
{¶6} The lease was perpetuated beyond its primary terms and into its secondary
terms by continuous production in paying quantities of two conventional, vertical wells:
the Dombroski No. 1 Well and the Dombroski-Rymer No. 1 Well, both drilled in 1982.
{¶7} In July of 2024, Appellee submitted applications to the Chief of the Division
of Oil and Gas Resources Management of the Ohio Department of Natural Resources
(hereinafter the “Chief”) pursuant to R.C. 1509.28. Appellee sought to include the subject
property in three statutory production units, each of which exceeded 160 acres in size.
After holding hearings for each of the three applications and overruling Appellant’s
objections to the statutory unitization of the subject property, the Chief issued three orders
for unit operation which designated Appellee as the unit operator. Pursuant to the orders
of the Chief, Appellee proceeded with plans to drill oil and gas wells to correspond with
the units, including the subject property. Appellee obtained permits in December of 2024,
to drill on each of the three units.
{¶8} Appellant filed the instant action on February 5, 2025, seeking declaratory
judgment and damages for breach of contract. Appellant’s complaint asserts the lease
prohibits the inclusion of the subject property in production units of greater than 160 acres,
and Appellee’s inclusion of the subject property in the units of greater than 160 acres,
which it received statutory authority to drill pursuant to R.C. 1509.28, violates the terms
of the lease.
{¶9} Both parties filed summary judgment motions concerning Appellant’s claim
for declaratory judgment. The parties stipulated to the facts. The trial court granted
Appellee’s motion for summary judgment and denied Appellant’s motion for summary
judgment, finding the portion of the lease quoted above did not prohibit statutory
unitization of the property in units of greater than 160 acres, but only addressed voluntary
unitization. By judgment filed September 11, 2025, the trial court granted partial summary
judgment to Appellee, dismissing Appellant’s claim for declaratory judgment. In a
judgment filed September 17, 2025, the trial court found its September 11, 2025 judgment
rendered Appellant’s breach of contract claim moot, and dismissed the claim. The trial
court entered judgment in favor of Appellee as to all claims of the complaint.
{¶10} It is from the September 11 and September 17, 2025 judgments of the trial
court Appellant prosecutes its appeal, assigning as error:
I. THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN GRANTING SUMMARY
JUDGMENT FOR THE DEFENDANT.
II. THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN FAILING TO GRANT THE
PLAINTIFF’S MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT.
I., II.
{¶11} We address both assignments of error together, as both raise the legal
issue of whether the lease prohibits statutory unitization of the subject property in units of
more than 160 acres. The parties stipulated to the facts, and each party argued it was
entitled to summary judgment.
{¶12} Summary judgment proceedings present the appellate court with the unique
opportunity of reviewing the evidence in the same manner as the trial court. Smiddy v.
The Wedding Party, Inc., 30 Ohio St.3d 35, 36 (1987). As such, we must refer to Civ. R.
56(C) which provides in pertinent part:
Summary Judgment shall be rendered forthwith if the pleadings,
depositions, answers to interrogatories, written admissions, affidavits,
transcripts of evidence, and written stipulations of fact, if any, timely filed in
the action, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and
that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. No evidence
or stipulation may be considered except as stated in this rule. A summary
judgment shall not be rendered unless it appears from the evidence or
stipulation, and only from the evidence or stipulation, that reasonable minds
can come to but one conclusion and that conclusion is adverse to the party
against whom the motion for summary judgment is made, that party being
entitled to have the evidence or stipulation construed most strongly in the
party’s favor.
{¶13} Pursuant to the above rule, a trial court may not enter summary judgment if
it appears a material fact is genuinely disputed. The party moving for summary judgment
bears the initial burden of informing the trial court of the basis for its motion and identifying
those portions of the record demonstrating the absence of a genuine issue of material
fact. The moving party may not make a conclusory assertion the non-moving party has
no evidence to prove its case. The moving party must specifically point to some evidence
which demonstrates the moving party cannot support its claim. If the moving party
satisfies this requirement, the burden shifts to the non-moving party to set forth specific
facts demonstrating there is a genuine issue of material fact for trial. See Vahila v. Hall,
1997-Ohio-259, citing Dresher v. Burt, 1996-Ohio-107.
{¶14} Oil and gas leases are governed by Ohio contract law. "The rights and
remedies of the parties to an oil or gas lease must be determined by the terms of the
written instrument, and the law applicable to one form of lease may not be, and generally
is not, applicable to another and different form. Such leases are contracts, and the terms
of the contract with the law applicable to such terms must govern the rights and remedies
of the parties." Swallie v. Rousenberg, 2010-Ohio-4573, ¶ 61 (7th Dist.), quoting Harris v.
Ohio Oil Co., 57 Ohio St. 118, 129 (1897).
{¶15} “Unitization” refers to the consolidation of minerals or working interest
covering all or part of a common source of supply. Paczewski v. Antero Res. Corp., 2019-
Ohio-2641, ¶ 4 (7th Dist.). “Pooling” is the joining together of small tracts or portions of
tracts for the purpose of having sufficient acreage to receive a well drilling permit under
the relevant spacing laws and regulations, and for the purpose of sharing production by
interest owners in the pool unit. Id. at ¶ 5. R.C. 1509.26 authorizes voluntary pooling
agreements to form drilling units which conform to the applicable minimum acreage and
distance requirements. In the event a voluntary pooling agreement cannot be obtained,
R.C. 1509.27 authorizes the division of oil and gas resources management to issue a
mandatory pooling order. At issue in the instant case, R.C. 1509.28 allows a person who
has obtained the consent of the owners of at least 65% of the land area overlying a pool
or part of a pool to submit an application to the Chief for the operation of the entire pool
or part of the pool as a unit.
{¶16} Appellant argues the trial court erred in granting Appellee summary
judgment and failing to grant Appellant summary judgment based on this Court’s decision
in Am. Energy – Utica, LLC v. Fuller, 2018-Ohio-3250 (5th Dist.). We disagree.
{¶17} In Fuller, the lease provision which allowed unitization was crossed out, and
in its place, the landman representing the oil and gas company wrote, “UNITIZATION BY
WRITTEN AGREEMENT ONLY!” The oil and gas company pursued statutory unitization
without obtaining Fuller’s written agreement. Fuller sued for breach of the lease provision.
The trial court granted the oil and gas company’s motion for summary judgment, finding
R.C. 1509.28 permitted unitization of the lease despite the lease provision prohibiting
unitization without written agreement.
{¶18} On appeal, this Court reversed. We agreed with the trial court’s finding R.C.
1509.28 permitted unitization of the lease despite the language of the lease. However,
we found doing so without Fuller’s written agreement was a breach of the lease
agreement. In so holding, we cited to the Ohio Supreme Court’s decision in Burtner-
Morgan-Stephens Co. v. Wilson, 63 Ohio St. 3d 257, syllabus (1992), in which the court
held pursuant to Section 28, Article I of the Ohio Constitution, R.C. 1509.27(D) regarding
royalties could not be retroactively applied to a pre-existing oil and gas lease. We quoted
Burtner as follows:
In the cause sub judice, the trial court retroactively applied the above
statutes, rules and regulations in order to defeat the clear and unambiguous
language of the 1949 oil and gas lease with regard to the payment of
royalties generated by a producing well. In our view, such retroactive
application clearly violated Section 28, Article II of the Ohio Constitution by
impairing an obligation of contract. See Kiser v. Coleman (1986), 28 Ohio
St.3d 259, 28 OBR 337, 503 N.E.3d 753. The lease involved in this action
was recorded shortly after it was entered into and, therefore, all parties to
this action had at least constructive notice of how royalties were to be
distributed for a producing well on the property in issue. While the state's
police powers permit the General Assembly to enact legislation governing
pooling arrangements, spacing, unitization and other oil and gas drilling
regulations, a provision such as that found in R.C. 1509.27(D) governing
distribution of royalties cannot, under the specific facts of this case,
be used to retroactively impair the obligation of the contract set forth in the
1949 lease. See Goodale v. Fennell (1875), 27 Ohio St. 426. To hold
otherwise would emasculate both the letter and spirit of the Ohio
Constitution. Therefore, we hold that pursuant to Section 28, Article II of
the Ohio Constitution, R.C. 1509.27(D) may not be retroactively applied to
determine distribution of royalties that are provided for in an oil and gas
lease that was entered into and recorded prior to the enactment of the
statutory provision. (Emphasis added).
{¶19} Id. at 260.
{¶20} We applied this holding to conclude use of the statutory unitization
procedure under R.C. 1509.28, without Fuller’s written agreement, retroactively impaired
the obligation of the contract as set forth in the lease. As such, we found the oil and gas
company had breached the lease and remanded the case to the trial court to determine
the appropriate remedy.
{¶21} We recognize Fuller rests on a potentially faulty legal basis. The Burtner
court limited its holding to the facts of the case, which related specifically to a statute
regarding royalties, and not to R.C. 1509.28 regarding unitization. Further, retroactivity
was inapplicable to the lease in Fuller because the lease was entered into after the
effective date of R.C. 1509.28. Therefore, this Court’s holding the statute was
retroactively applied to unconstitutionally impair the lease in Fuller was factually incorrect,
and our reliance on Burtner was misplaced.
{¶22} However, setting aside the problems with the legal underpinnings of our
decision in Fuller, we find the language in the lease in the instant case distinguishable
from the language in Fuller, and therefore conclude a breach of contract action will not lie
in the instant case.
{¶23} Ohio law recognizes two types of unitization: voluntary unitization (R.C.
1509.26) and statutory unitization (R.C. 1509.27, 1509.28). The language in the instant
case is not prohibitive in nature but rather is voluntary and permissive in nature. The
language allows the voluntary unitization of up to 160 acres of land. However, the
language does not restrict the right of Appellee to seek statutory unitization pursuant to
R.C. 1509.28 of more than 160 acres. Despite the fact R.C. 1509.28 was enacted in 1965,
before the lease was executed, the lease does not refer to the statutory right of the State,
in the exercise of its police power, to allow the unitization of the parcel of land, nor does
it attempt to prohibit Appellee from seeking statutory unitization in units greater than 160
acres.
{¶24} In contrast, in Fuller, the representative of the oil company crossed out the
language allowing unitization and hand wrote a prohibition on unitization absent written
agreement. Such language could be construed as a prohibition on all unitization absent
written agreement, statutory and otherwise. The lease in the instant case, rather than
providing “no unitization” except under certain conditions, provides, “The Lessor hereby
grants to the Lessee the right to consolidate the leased premises with other lands to form
an oil and gas development unit of not more than one hundred sixty (160) acres.” The
language grants the lessor a right to unitization rather than prohibiting unitization, and
therefore addresses only voluntary unitization.
{¶25} We find the lease in the instant case is silent as to statutory unitization.
Because the lease is silent as to statutory unitization, we find the trial court did not err in
finding Appellee did not breach the lease by seeking statutory unitization of more than
160 acres. The trial court did not err in overruling Appellant’s motion for summary
judgment and granting Appellee’s motion for summary judgment, dismissing Appellant’s
complaint for declaratory judgment and damages based on breach of the lease.
{¶26} The first and second assignments of error are overruled. The judgment of
the Guernsey County Common Pleas Court is affirmed. Costs are assessed to Appellant.
By: Hoffman, J.
King, P.J. and
Gormley, J. concur
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