American Exploration Co. v. Columbia Gas Transmission Corp.

779 F.2d 310, 42 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 1218, 89 Oil & Gas Rep. 598, 1985 U.S. App. LEXIS 25685
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJuly 30, 1985
DocketNo. 85-3227
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 779 F.2d 310 (American Exploration Co. v. Columbia Gas Transmission Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Exploration Co. v. Columbia Gas Transmission Corp., 779 F.2d 310, 42 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 1218, 89 Oil & Gas Rep. 598, 1985 U.S. App. LEXIS 25685 (6th Cir. 1985).

Opinion

MERRITT, Circuit Judge.

In this diversity action under Ohio law, the plaintiffs, a group of Ohio corporations and partnerships who are owners, operators and producers of natural gas wells located in the Clinton standstone formation in eastern Ohio, seek a preliminary injunction prohibiting defendant Columbia Gas Transmission Corporation (Columbia) from implementing a plan to purchase only 25% of the gas produced by these wells during 1985 under a long-term “take or pay” contract between the plaintiffs and Columbia. The District Court declined to issue a preliminary injunction because it found that the plaintiffs are unlikely to succeed on the merits because the contract allows Columbia to curtail its purchases in the proposed manner. For the reasons stated below, we affirm.

I.

Beginning in 1981, the plaintiffs entered into gas purchase contracts with Columbia for the wells at issue here which provide that the plaintiffs must sell to Columbia and Columbia must buy from plaintiffs all the gas produced by these wells for the productive lifetime of the well. See sections 1.1 and 2.1 of the contract, Plaintiffs’ Exhibit FF, Appendix, 22-52. In addition, section 10.1 of the contract provides that Columbia will pay the maximum lawful price under federal gas regulations, and under section 6.2, a “take or pay” clause common in oil and gas contracts, “seller will sell and deliver to buyer, and buyer will purchase and take from seller, or pay for if available and not taken during each contract year ... an average quantity of gas equal to seventy-five per cent of seller’s delivery capacity.”

The basic structure of the contract is thus that of a fixed-price output contract with Columbia obligated to take or pay for later a fixed percentage of the plaintiffs’ gas in any given year. The contract provides clear benefits to the producers, and [312]*312was offered by Columbia at a time of gas shortages to attract producers and secure greater supplies. However, Columbia’s actual obligation to purchase and take gas during any given year is severely limited by clear language in several other provisions of the contract. First, section 6.1 provides that although Columbia, “insofar as it can consistently do so having regard for its other related interests, (promises) to take all the gas the seller has available during the term of this contract at the full flow of said gas from seller’s pipeline into buyer’s pipeline ...”

[I]t is further expressly understood and agreed that Buyer may restrict the flow or discontinue the taking of the gas temporarily, when and for such length of time as in its judgment it is deemed expedient so to do, Buyer’s judgment being based upon consideration of market demand, its then existing pipeline facilities, the line pressure it deems necessary to maintain, and the competitive and other conditions in the various fields in which it is purchasing or producing gas.

In addition, section 6.4 of the contract provides that “[i]t is recognized that buyer may not be able to take and need not take gas from seller hereunder ... during any definite period,” and section 6.5 provides that so long as the volume of gas specified in the take or pay clause is taken or paid for, “all gas delivered hereunder may be taken in whatever manner and at such times as will best suit the convenience of the Buyer.”

The record established at the hearing on the preliminary injunction held before the District Court shows that Columbia has exercised its rights under these clauses granting it the power to curtail production frequently in the past several years, as market conditions have changed and supply shortages have lessened and demand has fallen off. Columbia “shut-in” — that is, closed access to the transmission pipelines and stopped production — plaintiffs’ wells for sixty days in 1981, for five months in 1982, and for six months (alternating on and off) in 1983. In 1984, Columbia demanded a reduction in the price of plaintiffs’ high-priced Clinton formation gas, which then had a maximum price under federal law of $6.00 per standard unit, to $4.50 per unit. When plaintiffs refused to modify the price term in their contracts with Columbia and agree to this lower figure, Columbia announced that it would shut-in all gas, both high and low priced, produced by the plaintiffs for six months in 1984, this despite plaintiffs’ complaints that it was unreasonable for Columbia to shut-in both low and high priced gas because plaintiffs would not agree to lower the price on high priced gas.

After plaintiffs brought suit and secured a temporary restraining order, the parties reached a settlement agreement covering 1984. On November 30, 1984, Columbia announced an explicitly price-based purchase schedule for 1985, proposing to purchase 100% of all gas priced at $3.00 per unit, 75% of all gas priced at $3.00 to $3.50 per unit, and 25% of all gas priced over $3.40 per unit. In January, 1985, the plaintiffs brought the present action seeking to enjoin implementation of the 1985 purchase plan.

Plaintiffs claim that Columbia’s proposed restrictions will severely damage the output capacity of their wells, due to the geologic nature of the sandstone into which they are drilled, and that Columbia’s plan is not a permissible curtailment under section 6.1 of the contract because its extent — purchasing only 25% of available supplies during the year — exceeds that which is permissible under section 6.1 and because the curtailment is not based on “market demand” as that term has come to be understood in the course of performance under the contract. Plaintiffs thus claim that Columbia’s plan represents a bad faith attempt to coerce a modification in the price term of the contract.

The District Court found that the plaintiffs’ wells would be irreparably damaged by Columbia’s plan, but denied the motion for a preliminary injunction because it found that the plaintiffs had not demon[313]*313strated a likelihood of success on the merits. The court found that section 6.1 expressly allowed Columbia to discontinue taking gas for “such length of time as it deemed expedient,” because of considerations of market demand, and it rejected plaintiffs’ contention that “market demand” does not include price considerations but only seasonal variation in demand in the following terms:

It is rudimentary economics that supply and demand are by their very nature relative to price. Indeed, it is meaningless to speak of demand for a product except at a given price. Further, it appears that plaintiffs’ contention fails in light of the facts developed at trial. The evidence indicated that in fact there was no market for $6.00 gas and that market demand for gas fell with rising prices. Tr. 246, 287, 333.

A. 81-82.

On plaintiffs’ claim of bad faith modification, the District Court found that there was “no doubt that there has been a change in the market for natural gas” and that “such a market shift provides a legitimate reason for seeking a modification of the price of goods to be purchased,” and that although Columbia’s tactics were severe, it had acted within its contractual rights to curtail purchases, and “so long as a party seeking modification stays within its legal rights under the contract, it may bring economic pressure to bear to seek a modification.” A. 87. The court thus found that plaintiffs were unlikely to succeed on either claim, because Columbia had the contractual right to curtail production to the proposed extent.

II.

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779 F.2d 310, 42 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 1218, 89 Oil & Gas Rep. 598, 1985 U.S. App. LEXIS 25685, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-exploration-co-v-columbia-gas-transmission-corp-ca6-1985.