WATT, J.:
¶ 1 We granted certiorari to address a single issue: whether the claims of fraud, deceit, constructive fraud, and punitive damages are appropriate for class certification? The facts reveal that: the majority of the royalty owners appear to be Oklahoma citizens; Mobil made representations as to the appropriate payments in Oklahoma; the representations were made and acted upon primarily in Oklahoma but also in other states; Mobil made the representations in Oklahoma to the royalty owners and to the Oklahoma Corporation Commission (Corporation Commission) in its successful attempt to obtain approval of the Plan of Unitization covering the Putnam Oswego Unit; Mobil did business associated with the production of the oil and gas from the Putnam Oswego Unit in Oklahoma; and the oil and gas products were produced exclusively in Oklahoma from this state's energy reservoirs. Under these facts, we hold that the trial court did not abuse its discretion
¶ 3 This cause has a long and tortured history which has generated a voluminous appellate record. In 1959, minerals began to be produced from the Putnam Oswego Field in west-central Oklahoma. To recover previously flared off products, Mobil built the Putnam Oswego Gas Plant in 1964. The plant is located in Thomas, Oklahoma. Four years later, in 1968, Mobil and other operators filed an application with the Oklahoma Corporation Commission (Corporation Commission) seeking formation of the Putnam Oswego Unit in an attempt to maintain and increase production from the field through secondary recovery operations.
¶ 4 To convince royalty owners of the efficacy of unitization, Mobil sent a letter dated April 11th, 1968 to royalty owners providing in pertinent part:
The same language appears in the Plan of Unitization approved by the Corporation Commission providing in pertinent part:
Thereafter, Mobil adopted the Fiske Formula
¶ 5 The cause was filed in Custer County on May 18, 2001, as a class action on behalf of royalty owners. The class representatives alleged that Mobil's utilization of the Fiske Formula resulted in the underpayment of royalties. Mobil sought removal to federal court. However, in January 2002, the federal court granted a motion to remand where the class representatives were allowed to amend their petition to add additional representative plaintiffs and defendants but were denied the right to add claims for conspiracy and breach of the duty to market. Mobil sought dismissal of a second amended petition which was denied in December of 2004.
¶ 6 During the pendency of proceedings in Custer County, another group of plaintiffs filed a similar class action in federal court on
¶ 7 The order certifying the class was filed on July 31, 2008. As finally defined, the class consists of all persons or entities who own or have owned a royalty interest (as that term is defined by the plan of unitization) in the unit from the effective date of the plan, November 1, 1968 to the present together with their heirs, legatees, beneficiaries, executors, representatives, successors, and assigns. Also included are persons or entities owning or who have owned a royalty interest in a tract included within the unit from which Mobil took and received in kind or separately disposed of all or a portion of the unitized substances allocated to said tract together with their heirs, legatees, beneficiaries, executors, representatives, successors, and assigns. Excluded from the class are: the United States government and its agencies; the officers and directors of the defendants; all subsidies or affiliates under the control of the defendants; legal representatives, heirs, successors, or assigns of any excluded person or entity; overriding royalty interest owners to the extent of their overriding royalty interest; and owners of production payments to the extent of their production payment interest.
¶ 8 The class contains approximately sixteen-hundred (1,600) members. Mobil represents that royalty owners reside in forty (40) different states. However, neither party provides precise data on geographic distribution of the class members' residences. Nevertheless, it appears that Oklahoma citizens constitute a majority of the royalty owners.
¶ 9 The class representatives alleged thirteen theories for relief: 1) breach of fiduciary duty; 2) conversion; 3) actual fraud; 4) breach of contract; 5) breach of the duty of good faith and fair dealing; 6) violation of the Production Revenue Standards Act, 52 O.S. 2001 § 570.10; 7) unjust enrichment; 8) accounting; 9) constructive trust; 10) breach of the Plan of Unitization; 11) deceit; 12) constructive fraud; and 13) punitive damages. After conducting a hearing spanning five days, the trial court issued its findings of fact, conclusions of law and order finding the class to be certifiable pursuant to 12 O.S.2001 § 2023
¶ 10 Oklahoma courts may balance and analyze the interests in multi-state controversies in deciding the applicable law.
¶ 11
¶ 12 The class representatives argue that class certification of the fraud and associated causes of action are supported by this Court's opinion in Black Hawk Oil Co. v. Exxon Corp., 1998 OK 70, 969 P.2d 337 holding that potential weaknesses in fraud claims will not serve as grounds for refusal to certify a class and that where standardized written
¶ 13 Some consideration of the merits is appropriate in a class certification, but only insofar as it informs what individual issues might be a part of the adjudicatory process.
¶ 14 The issue resolved in Black Hawk is similar to the one presented here: whether the oil company properly reimbursed royalty owners for the sale of oil and gas products in their monthly accounting. We held in Black Hawk that potential weaknesses in fraud claims will not serve as grounds for refusal to certify a class and that where standardized written misrepresentations have been made to class members, certification need not be denied. Here, identical letters indicating that unitization would result in no imposition of costs of operation were transmitted to all royalty owners. The same representation was made to the Corporation Commission.
¶ 15 In Ysbrand, we decertified a fraud claim utilizing the factors enumerated in § 148 of the Restatement (2nd) of Conflict of Laws and the comments thereto. In so doing, we determined that where each class member received the alleged misrepresentation involving air bags incorporated in vehicles sold in each of the fifty-one (51) jurisdictions, presumably their state of residence, certification of the fraud claim was inappropriate. Nevertheless, when the same factors considered in Ysbrand are applied here, it is clear that there was no abuse of discretion
¶ 16 Here, as in Ysbrand, we look to § 148 and the comments thereto for direction in resolving the issue of class certification on the fraud-related issues. Subsection 2 of § 148 addresses the situation presented. It provides in pertinent part:
In Ysbrand, the Court looked to the comments to this section and determined that
¶ 17 Here, unlike the situation in Ysbrand, the majority of the members of the class appear to be Oklahoma residents.
¶ 18 In Ysbrand, the representations were made in more than one state. Here, all the representations arose from an attempt by Mobil to obtain unitization of the Putnam Oswego Field. They were made in Oklahoma to a governmental entity, the Corporation Commission, and to the majority of the class members. The commentary to the Restatement provides that, in such situations, this element, in and of itself, is important.
¶ 19 Other Restatement Comments also support allowing the fraud claim to go forward as a class action. The comments provide that where the subject of the transaction is a tangible thing, the place where the thing is situated at the time of the transaction is a significant contact especially where both parties are aware that the thing was situated in this place at that time. Furthermore, the situs of the thing is particularly relevant if it involves an interest in land.
¶ 20 The facts presented, analyzed in the light Black Hawk and Ysbrand along with § 148 and the comments thereto, weigh in favor of certification. Therefore, we hold that the claims of fraud, deceit, constructive fraud, and punitive damages are appropriate for class certification.
¶ 21 On remand, the question to be determined by the trial court is whether Mobil was justified in paying royalties at 85.17% of the gross sale price of minerals extracted
EDMONDSON, C.J., HARGRAVE, OPALA, WATT, COLBERT, REIF, JJ., concur.
TAYLOR, V.C.J., WINCHESTER, J., dissent.
KAUGER, J., Not Participating.