LARRY JOPLIN, Chief Judge.
¶ 1 Plaintiffs/Appellants Cyanostar Energy, Inc., Oxley Resources L.L.C., Tom Hoefling, Lowry Exploration, Inc., Richard Garmaker and John Wilson (individually, by name, or collectively, Plaintiffs) seek review of the trial court's order granting the motion for summary judgment of Defendant/Appellee Chesapeake Exploration, L.L.C. (Defendant) on Plaintiffs' claims for declaratory judgment and breach of contract, and Defendant's counterclaim for a declaratory judgment construing the parties' contract. In this appeal, Plaintiffs assert the trial court erred as a matter of law and fact in granting the motion for summary judgment of Defendants.
¶ 2 There is no dispute of the basic material facts. Plaintiffs and Defendant executed an Exploration Agreement dated November 15, 2004. The Exploration Agreement recognized an "area of mutual interest" (AMI), and, with respect to the leasing of acreage within the AMI, the Exploration Agreement provided:
¶ 3 Defendant subsequently acquired acreage within the AMI. On February 18, 2011, Chesapeake offered the leasehold acreage within the AMI, Section 10, to the other parties. On March 8, 2011, Chesapeake offered the leasehold acreage within the AMI, Sections 11 and 14, to the other parties.
¶ 4 Plaintiffs elected to accept their proportionate shares of the acreage offered by Chesapeake. Penn Virginia, a partner to the agreement, elected to decline the offer of its proportionate share of the acreage offered. Chesapeake did not subsequently offer shares of Penn Virginia's declined acreage to Plaintiffs.
¶ 5 Plaintiffs then commenced the instant action, seeking a declaration of rights under
¶ 6 Plaintiffs filed a motion for summary judgment. Plaintiffs asserted the existence of parol evidence demonstrating the parties' intent that declined acreage within the AMI be offered to the remaining parties. Defendant objected, and filed a motion for summary judgment, arguing the express provisions of the AMI did not require the offer of declined acreage to the remaining parties, and parol evidence was not admissible to modify or add to the unambiguous terms of the AMI as to grant rights not expressed by the plain language of the agreement.
¶ 7 The trial court granted the motion for summary judgment of Defendant, and denied the motion for summary judgment of Plaintiffs, holding:
(Citations omitted.) Plaintiffs appeal, and the matter stands submitted on the trial court record.
¶ 8 "Summary judgment is appropriate only where there are no material facts in dispute and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law." Wathor v. Mutual Assur. Adm'rs, Inc., 2004 OK 2, ¶ 4, 87 P.3d 559, 561. (Citation omitted.) "Where a controversy is resolved by summary judgment, the appellate courts review the entire summary judgment record independently and without deference to a lower court," that is, de novo. Lowery v. Echostar Satellite Corp., 2007 OK 38, ¶ 11, 160 P.3d 959, 963. "Summary judgment will be affirmed only if the appellate court determines that there is no dispute as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law." Id. "Summary judgment will be reversed if the appellate court determines that reasonable men might reach different conclusions from the undisputed material facts." Id.
Pitco Production Co. v. Chaparral Energy, Inc., 2003 OK 5, 13, 63 P.3d 541, 545-546. (Footnotes omitted.)
¶ 10 Whether a contract is ambiguous, and whether extrinsic evidence is necessary to resolve an ambiguity, constitute questions of law for the courts. See, e.g., GEICO General Ins. Co. v. Northwestern Pacific Indem. Co., 2005 OK 40, 115 P.3d 856. "In the absence of accident, fraud, or mistake of fact, when the language of a written contract is complete, unambiguous and free from uncertainty as to the parties' intentions, parole evidence of prior representations, contemporaneous agreements or understandings tending to change, contradict, or enlarge the plain terms of the written contract are inadmissible." First Nat. Bank and Trust Co. of Vinita v. Kissee, 1993 OK 96, ¶ 13, 859 P.2d 502, 506-507. (Footnote omitted.)
¶ 11 In the present case, the AMI provision expressly requires that, when one of the parties acquires leasehold acreage outside the "drillsite," but within the "area of interest," the leasehold acreage acquired by one of the parties within the "area of interest" "be offered to the other Parties and those Parties shall have the option to take their proportionate share of the interest based on the percentages in Article I by paying their proportionate share of actual acquisition costs to the other parties in the proportion of their ownership." The AMI provision, however, is entirely silent on the consequences of a rejection of the offer by any of the parties, i.e., whether the offeror is required to offer the rejected acreage to the other parties.
¶ 12 The AMI provision permits, but does not require, any party to accept the offer to purchase any additional leasehold acres. Because the parties were not required to accept any offer of additional acreage, and the parties were free to reject any offer of acreage within the AMI, the very real possibility that additional leasehold acres within the AMI might become available to purchase upon the rejection of any offer is inescapable. This being so, if the parties had intended to require the "re-offer" of rejected acreage, they could have easily provided. The fact is, however, they did not.
¶ 13 Given this silence, and in the presence of clear and express language requiring only the offer of leasehold acreage within the AMI to the other parties, but permitting the rejection of any offer, any attempt to read into the agreement some requirement of a "re-offer" of rejected acreage would, as the trial court aptly recognized, "add an option that did not exist and to read into the contract words that it does not contain." We therefore hold the trial court did not err in construing the language as unambiguous, and particularly, the language of the AMI provision Exploration Agreement, as not requiring the re-offer of rejected leasehold acreage to the other parties to the Agreement.
BELL, Acting P.J., and MITCHELL, J. (sitting by designation), concur.