Allen Drilling Acquisition Company and ADAC II, Inc. v. Crimson Exploration Inc. and Crimson Exploration Operating, Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 7, 2018
Docket10-15-00277-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Allen Drilling Acquisition Company and ADAC II, Inc. v. Crimson Exploration Inc. and Crimson Exploration Operating, Inc. (Allen Drilling Acquisition Company and ADAC II, Inc. v. Crimson Exploration Inc. and Crimson Exploration Operating, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allen Drilling Acquisition Company and ADAC II, Inc. v. Crimson Exploration Inc. and Crimson Exploration Operating, Inc., (Tex. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

IN THE TENTH COURT OF APPEALS

No. 10-15-00277-CV

ALLEN DRILLING ACQUISITION COMPANY AND ADAC II, INC., Appellants v.

CRIMSON EXPLORATION INC. AND CRIMSON EXPLORATION OPERATING, INC., Appellees

From the 278th District Court Madison County, Texas Trial Court No. 12-12991-278-06

MEMORANDUM OPINION

This appeal involves the construction of a series of agreements relating to the

development of oil and gas interests in Madison and Grimes Counties. Crimson

Exploration, Inc. and Crimson Exploration Operating, Inc. (collectively “Crimson”) sued

Allen Drilling Acquisition Company and ADAC II, Inc. (collectively “ADAC”) for breach

of contract for not paying its share of the costs of developing the project. ADAC counterclaimed that Crimson had failed to convey all of the leases required under the

agreements. The trial court denied ADAC’s motions for summary judgment and granted

summary judgment in favor of Crimson. To decide whether the trial court properly

granted summary judgment, we must determine which agreements are applicable to the

parties’ dispute, the mineral formations to which they apply, and the remedies to which

the parties were entitled under the agreements. Because the trial court erred in

construing the agreements, we reverse the trial court’s judgment, in part, and remand the

case to the trial court.

I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND

ADAC and Crimson are engaged in the oil and gas business in Texas and other

locations. Originally, they formed an entity called Elgin Holdings LLC to jointly acquire

and develop leases in Madison and Grimes Counties, but soon dissolved Elgin and

restructured their relationship through a series of agreements. The principal agreements

at issue include:

 The Overall Agreement dated March 2006 (Overall Agreement);

 The Original Joint Operating Agreement dated March 2006 (the Original JOA);

 The Ecco Participation Agreement dated June 2006; and

 The Ecco Joint Operating Agreement dated June 2006 (Ecco JOA).

A. The Overall Agreement

Allen Drilling Acquisition Co., et al. v. Crimson Exploration Inc., et al. Page 2 The Overall Agreement restructured the parties’ relationship such that Crimson

owned 77.5% and ADAC owned 22.5 % of the leases listed in attachment 1 to Exhibit A

previously owned by Elgin. Crimson also assigned to ADAC an undivided 22.50%

working interest in additional leases within an Area of Mutual Interest identified on a

Plat covering a surface area in Madison and Grimes Counties. The Overall Agreement

also provided that the parties would enter into a joint operating agreement that is

described in detail below.

Important to ADAC’s breach-of-contract claim against Crimson are the

representations and warranties made in the Overall Agreement and corresponding

assignments. Crimson represented and warranted that the leases listed in Attachments

1 and 2 to Exhibit B of the Overall Agreement constitute “all oil and gas leases or other

ownership interests in lands to which Crimson or its Affiliates have any right, title or

interest at the time of Closing within the Area of Mutual Interest (“AMI”) which is the

area denoted on Exhibit ‘C’ . . . hereto.” Exhibit C is the same plat attached to the Original

JOA as A-1 that is pictured below. ADAC’s counterclaim is based on the breach of this

representation and warranty and the failure to convey numerous leases it owned in the

AMI area at the time of closing (the “Excluded Leases”).

B. The Original JOA

The Original JOA governed the exploration and development in the Contract Area

defined as the “Oil and Gas Leases and/or Oil and Gas Interests in the land identified in

Allen Drilling Acquisition Co., et al. v. Crimson Exploration Inc., et al. Page 3 Exhibit ‘A.’”1 Article II of the Original JOA provides that Exhibit A “shall” include

“[r]estrictions, if any, as to depths, formations, or substances” and the “Oil and Gas

Leases and/or Oil and Gas Interests subject to this agreement.” Exhibit A included an

extensive list of leases2 but only one lease has a depth restriction.

The Overall Agreement and the Original JOA included an Area of Mutual Interest

(“AMI”) that identified the area within which should either party obtain an interest

during the term of the agreement, it must offer the other party a ratable share of the

interest. The location of the AMI was identified on a plat attached as Exhibit A-1 to the

Original JOA and included land in both Madison and Grimes Counties. The

“Madisonville (Rodessa) Project Area” was the targeted location for drilling the initial

well under the Original JOA.

C. Ecco Participation Agreement

Shortly after Crimson and ADAC entered into the Original Agreement and JOA,

they learned Ecco Petroleum, Inc. (“Ecco”) owned a small portion of lease acreage near

the target area. Crimson negotiated an agreement with Ecco to obtain an interest in the

leases held by Ecco necessary for drilling the initial wells. The Participation Agreement

established a new proportionate interest in the leases amongst the parties. The surface

The Original JOA was based on the American Association of Petroleum Landmen Model Form 1

Operating Agreement 610-1989.

2The leases listed in the attachments to the Original Agreement were reformatted and included as Exhibit A.

Allen Drilling Acquisition Co., et al. v. Crimson Exploration Inc., et al. Page 4 area of the AMI is smaller than the AMI in the Original JOA and specifically limited to

the Rodessa formation. The Ecco Participation Agreement also provided for a new JOA

governing the drilling in the Prospect Area.

D. Ecco JOA

The parties entered into a JOA that governed the exploration and development of

oil and gas interests in the Contract Area described in Exhibit A. The provisions were

largely the same as those contained in the Original JOA. The differences between the

Original JOA and the Ecco JOA relate to the depth restriction of the leases contained in

Exhibit A and the smaller surface area identified as the AMI in the Plat.

Crimson, the operator, began drilling wells pursuant to the Ecco Participation

Agreement and JOA. Three wells were drilled and costs for drilling were allocated to

Ecco, ADAC, and Crimson in accordance with their working interest. The cost of the

initial wells skyrocketed over the original estimates, and both ADAC and Ecco defaulted.

ADAC disputes the billings it received from Crimson. In January 2008, Crimson

demanded costs and expenses for drilling in the amount of $436,349 from ADAC. When

ADAC failed to pay, Crimson deemed ADAC non-consenting.

II. PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Crimson originally filed suit against ADAC for its breach of the Original JOA. The

sequence of the claims and counterclaims made are important to the determination of

Allen Drilling Acquisition Co., et al. v. Crimson Exploration Inc., et al. Page 5 Crimson’s argument that ADAC’s counterclaims are barred under the statute of

limitations.

 March 14, 2012: Crimson sued ADAC for breach of the Original JOA by failing to pay costs associated with the wells under the Original JOA.

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Allen Drilling Acquisition Company and ADAC II, Inc. v. Crimson Exploration Inc. and Crimson Exploration Operating, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allen-drilling-acquisition-company-and-adac-ii-inc-v-crimson-exploration-texapp-2018.