When is a contract binding? – The Law

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Published: January 24, 2002

You’ve negotiated a surface lease with an oil company. After

protracted talks you’ve agreed that the surface lease does not grant

the company the right to put pipelines through the site at a later

date.

Nevertheless, a court decides that in spite of the contract, the

surface lease gives the company the right to install pipelines. Is this

fair?

This is a question that some landowners are facing as a result of a May

2000 Saskatchewan Court of

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Appeal decision. I first dealt with this issue in my Oct. 4, 2001

column. It produced many calls from Saskatchewan landowners who wanted

to know if this decision could be changed.

The Court of Appeal ruled that the provisions of the Surface Rights

Acquisition and Compensation Act overruled specific provisions of the

lease agreement. In the case in question, Best Pacific vs. Wheatland

Farming, the company sought to connect two well sites on the same land

to a battery site elsewhere on the land. The company had a surface

lease for both well sites. The lease in question provided that the well

site not be used for a pipeline without the landowner’s prior approval.

When the company and the landowner couldn’t reach an agreement to

install pipelines, the matter went to the Surface Rights Board. That

board made two compensation orders. One was to compensate for the flow

line outside the well sites. The other was to compensate for that portio

  • of the flow line within the well site that was covered by the surface

rights lease.

On appeal the court overruled the Surface Rights Board order that

provided compensation for the pipeline within the well site. The court

concluded that once surface rights had been acquired, whether by lease

or board order, all rights were acquired. Further, the court stressed

that the act intended to avoid double compensa-tion. If an oil company

needed subsequent perm-ission, it would mean double compensation.

The impact of this decision was seen in a subsequent decision of the

Surface Rights Board in Meota Resources vs. Backman. As board chair

Richard Gibbons concluded, “the surface rights to construct a flow line

or service line on a well site is now deemed included in a private

agreement despite an apparent attempt to exclude the right in the

private dealings between the parties.”

One can disagree and criticize the court’s decision. In my opinion, it

was open to the court to come to the opposite conclusion. One can also

query as a matter of public policy whether courts should be able to

overturn private contracts. As a matter of law, courts have always held

that illegal or immoral contracts would not be enforced, but this case

does not fall into those guidelines. Nevertheless, this decision is

binding law in Saskatchewan. While there are landowners unhappy with

this decision, the options available to challenge this decision are

limited.

Only the Supreme Court of Canada can overrule the Saskatchewan court.

This particular case was not appealed to that court. Another

Saskatchewan case on this point would face an uphill legal battle to

get beyond the appeal court level. A Saskatchewan court would simply

rule that the issue has been settled.

However, the Saskatchewan decision is not binding in other provinces.

An Alberta court would undoubtedly consider the Saskatchewan case but

would not be bound by it. So an appeal on this point to the Supreme

Court could come from another province. However, there are differences

in legislation between provinces, so a Supreme Court decision on

Alberta’s legislation might not apply in another province.

The other alternative would be to lobby for changes to the Surface

Rights Acquisition and Compensation Act to ensure that contract

provisions take precedence. Parliament and provincial legislatures have

amended laws to overturn court decisions.

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