Reagan Marble to Present “Oil and Gas Case Law Update”

March 2, 2021 | Speaking Engagements



Jackson Walker attorney Reagan Marble will present an analysis of 2020 Texas Court of Appeals and Supreme Court oil and gas cases, including recent cases addressing ethical conundrums for oil and gas lawyers and their clients.

Event Details

“Oil and Gas Case Law Update”
Thursday, March 11 at 12 p.m. CT
Register here »
1.0 hour of participatory CLE credit; 0.25 of ethics credit
AAPL Members: This program has been accredited for 0.75 RL, RPL or CPL recertification credit(s) (CEU), and 0 CPL/ESA, and/or 0.25 Ethics credit(s) (CEU Ethics), for a total of 1 credit(s).

Reagan MarbleMeet Reagan

Reagan M. Marble focuses on complex energy litigation and transactions throughout Texas and New Mexico. In his energy litigation practice, Reagan regularly represents oil and gas operators, mineral and royalty buyers, high‐net‐worth family trusts and partnerships, and renewable energy developers in their litigation matters throughout South and West Texas. Reagan’s extensive experience in the field ranges from achieving summary dismissal of multimillion-dollar title disputes in the Eagle Ford Shale and Permian Basin to favorably resolving renewable energy contract disputes along the Gulf Coast.

Related Insights:

What the Uptick in Litigation Means for Oil & Gas Producers and Land Owners »
As a result of plunging oil prices, unstable markets have led to an uptick in litigation. Reagan Marble discusses what that means for contracting parties in the oil and gas industry as they get creative in enforcing and invalidating contracts to protect their individual positions.

Crude awakening: Oil patch lawsuits shift into high gear »
Oil patch lawsuits between landowners and producers ramp up with clockwork predictability when the price of West Texas Intermediate dramatically sinks. But when the price of crude crashed into the negative range on April 20, oil and gas litigation took an especially sharp turn. Now, oil and gas companies are trying to save themselves as landowners try to protect their royalty income. (A subscription may be required to view)

Oil companies prepare to defend drilling rights — or rights not to — in court »
As oil companies encounter lawsuits from mineral rights holders, Reagan Marble spoke with the San Antonio Business Journal about the unusual defense that shut-in wells were out of the hands of the oil companies. In the article, Reagan notes: “Instead of your run-of-the-mill production and paid quantity disputes, you are seeing some really creative ways that operators are seeking to either permanently deter or temporarily deter their obligations in a lease. And the first one we have seen that has been fairly prominent are fights over force majeure clauses in oil and gas leases.” (Subscription required)


In This Story

Reagan M. Marble
Partner, San Antonio

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