OPINION BY DONOHUE, J.:
Appellants David A. and Sandra A. Nolt ("the Nolts") appeal from the June 20, 2013 order denying their motion for summary judgment and granting the motions for summary judgment filed by Appellees Anadarko E & P Co., LP ("Anadarko") and Chesapeake Appalachia, LLC ("Chesapeake") (collectively, "Appellees"). We affirm.
This case involves a 77-acre parcel of property in Bradford County ("the Property"). The facts underlying this appeal are best understood when set forth chronologically. In August 2002, Joseph Cullen transferred a large parcel of land containing the Property to his son and daughter-in-law, Patrick and Karen Cullen. Although the parcel of land they received is located wholly within Bradford County, Patrick and Karen Cullen had the deed evidencing this transfer recorded in neighboring Sullivan County.
In January 2006, Joseph Cullen signed an oil and gas lease for a 98-acre parcel of land that encompasses the Property with T.S. Calkins ("Calkins"). In July of the same year, the Oil and Gas Memorandum memorializing this agreement was recorded in Bradford County. Four months later, in November 2006, Calkins assigned its interest in the lease to Anadarko.
In January 2007, the deed transferring the land from Joseph Cullen to Patrick
In 2009, the Nolts filed the underlying quiet title action, alleging that the oil and gas lease was invalid and created a cloud on the title of the Property. In 2012, the Nolts, Anadarko, and Chesapeake all filed motions for summary judgment. In these motions it became clear that a central issue in this case was the nature of the interest created when Cullen signed the oil and gas lease with Calkins and the applicable statute of frauds. The Nolts asserted that the oil and gas lease was a lease subject to the Landlord and Tenant Act of 1951, 68 P.S. § 250.202 ("Landlord and Tenant Act"), and that the statute of frauds thereunder requires a lease to be signed by both the lessor and the lessee to be valid. Because Calkins did not execute the lease, the Nolts argued, it was rendered a year-to-year lease, and the term had expired. They also argued that Calkins did not acquire a valid leasehold because at the time of the lease's creation, Calkins failed to exercise due diligence in determining whether Cullen possessed title to the parcel, despite having constructive notice of his prior transfer to Patrick and Karen Cullen.
Anadarko and Chesapeake argued in their motions for summary judgment that the oil and gas lease is not a lease governed by the Landlord and Tenant Act, but rather a transfer of realty subject to the statute of frauds codified at 33 P.S. § 1 ("general statute of frauds"). They further contended that Calkins was a bona fide purchaser without notice of the prior conveyance from Joseph Cullen to Patrick and Karen Cullen, such that his right to the property cannot be defeated on the basis of that previous conveyance where the deed was filed in Sullivan County and not Bradford County, the situs of the property.
The trial court denied the Nolts' motion for summary judgment and granted summary judgment in favor of Appellees. On July 5, 2013, the Nolts filed the instant appeal, wherein they raised the following issues:
Appellants' Brief at 4.
Considering these issues, we adhere to the well-established scope and standard of
McCausland v. Wagner, 78 A.3d 1093, 1099-1100 (Pa.Super.2013).
The Nolts first argue that the statute of frauds contained in the Landlord and Tenant Act "bars the enforcement of the oil and gas lease beyond a year to year term, which has since expired." Appellants' Brief at 17.
In making this argument, the Nolts turn a blind eye to case law rejecting the notion that oil and gas leases are governed by landlord/tenant legal principles. See Derrickheim Co. v. Brown, 305 Pa.Super. 173, 451 A.2d 477, 479 (1982) ("[O]il and gas leases are not controlled by normal landlord and tenant law."). Although the interpretation of oil and gas leases has proved to be "troublesome" for the courts of this Commonwealth, Szymanowski v. Brace, 987 A.2d 717, 719-20 (Pa.Super.2009), the law has developed to provide that an oil and gas lease, despite the use of the term "lease," actually involves the conveyance of property rights:
McCausland, 78 A.3d at 1100 (Pa.Super.2013) (citing Jacobs v. CNG Transmission Corp., 332 F.Supp.2d 759, 784 (W.D.Pa.2004)). The law of this Commonwealth provides that
T.W. Phillips Gas & Oil Co. v. Jedlicka, 615 Pa. 199, 42 A.3d 261, 267 (2012) (citations omitted).
Joseph Cullen executed the oil and gas lease at issue to Calkins. This transaction did not create a lease, but rather a transfer of a property right in the oil and gas. Id. Accordingly, this conveyance is subject to the general statute of frauds, not the statute of frauds contained in the Landlord and Tenant Act, and so the Nolts' argument fails. Moreover, we note that the general statute of frauds requires only the signature of the grantor, Joseph Cullen. Trowbridge v. McCaigue, 992 A.2d 199, 201 (Pa.Super.2010); Long v. Brown, 399 Pa.Super. 312, 582 A.2d 359, 361 (1990) ("The Statute of Frauds instructs that a purported transfer of an ownership interest in real property is not enforceable unless evidenced in writing and signed by the parties granting the interest.") (citing 33 P.S. § 1). Joseph Cullen signed the instrument granting the oil and gas lease in Calkins' favor; therefore there is no violation of the applicable statute of frauds.
The Nolts next argue that Calkins did not exercise due diligence when obtaining the oil and gas lease, and that its failure to do so means that it did not acquire valid title from the lease.
Lund v. Heinrich, 410 Pa. 341, 189 A.2d 581, 585 (1963) (internal citations omitted). Accordingly, a purchaser fulfills his or her due diligence requirement when he or she examines the documents recorded in the county or counties in which the property is situated
It is undisputed that at the time Calkins entered into the oil and gas lease with Joseph Cullen, the deed evidencing the transfer of the property to Patrick and Karen Cullen had not been recorded in Bradford County. The landman for Calkins, Patricia Hawkins ("Hawkins"), testified that she checked the Bradford County Courthouse to verify that Joseph Cullen had clear title to the land Calkins wanted to put under lease. N.T., 4/23/12, at 28, 38-39. Hawkins further testified that she went to the property, knocked on the door of the house there, Joseph Cullen answered the door, and that he told her he owned the property in question. Id. at 11, 15. Joseph Cullen admitted that when he entered into the lease with Calkins, he believed that he owned all of the land that Calkins sought to lease. N.T., 7/24/12, at 25.
The uncontroverted facts establish that Calkins sufficiently executed the due diligence requirement attendant with the conveyance of an interest in land. Hawkins searched the property records in Bradford County, spoke with the owner of record and the possessor, Joseph Cullen, who told her that he owned the property she sought to lease on Calkins' behalf. This investigation revealed no indication of a possible defect in Joseph Cullen's title. We conclude that as a matter of law, Calkins met its due diligence obligation.
Order affirmed.
MUNDY, J. concurs in the result.
However, the fact that the right here did not ripen into a fee simple determinable and that the property right did not vest does not diminish the fact that our law has evolved to unequivocally establish that rights to oil and gas are to be treated as transfers of estates in property and not leaseholds. As such, we adhere to the long tradition of treating oil and gas leases as the sale of an estate in land subject to the general statute of frauds codified at 33 P.S. § 1. This conclusion is bolstered by this Court's determination that the assignment of an oil and gas lease must be in writing. See Szymanowski, 987 A.2d at 725 (quoting Stockdale v. Sellers, 102 Pa.Super. 447, 157 A. 30 (1931) ("[T]he interest in gas well number one ... is real estate and title could only pass under the Statute of Frauds by an assignment or deed in writing.")).