ANR Production Co. v. Kerr-McGee Corp.

893 P.2d 698, 1995 Wyo. LEXIS 53, 1995 WL 142374
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedApril 4, 1995
Docket94-167, 94-168
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 893 P.2d 698 (ANR Production Co. v. Kerr-McGee Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
ANR Production Co. v. Kerr-McGee Corp., 893 P.2d 698, 1995 Wyo. LEXIS 53, 1995 WL 142374 (Wyo. 1995).

Opinion

MACY, Justice.

ANR Production Company and Kerr-McGee Corporation each appeal from the order in which the district court entered a judgment against ANR Production and in favor of Kerr-McGee but denied Kerr-McGee’s request for an award of interest at the rate of eighteen percent per annum on the judgment and attorneys’ fees pursuant to Wyo.Stat. §§ 30-5-301 to -303 (1983 & Supp.1994) (the Act).

We affirm the district court’s judgment in all respects.

Issues

ANR Production, as the appellant in Case No. 94-167, presents two issues:

I. Are the trial court’s findings of fact with respect to volumes of First Bench hydrocarbons produced by Appellant ANR Production Company’s South Powell 2-1 well, and hence the trial court’s findings of fact with respect to the damages suffered by Appellee Kerr-McGee Corporation, supported by sufficient evidence in the record?
II. Was Kerr-McGee’s damages claim unliquidated, such that the trial court’s conclusions of law with respect to prejudgment interest were in error?

Kerr-McGee, as the appellant in Case No. 94-168, presents a single issue:

Whether Kerr-MeGee Corporation, as the prevailing party in this action to recover proceeds derived from the sale of First Bench hydrocarbons, is entitled to recover interest and reasonable attorneys’ fees pursuant to W.S. §§ 30-5-301 et seq. .. .?'

Facts

The Wyoming Oil and Gas Conservation Commission (the Commission) gave approval in 1983 for the formation of the Powell Pressure Maintenance Unit (the Unit). The Unit produces hydrocarbons from the First Bench of the First Frontier Formation in Converse County. In the area of the Unit, the First Bench is an excellent hydrocarbon reservoir; however, because of the retrograde condensate nature of the reservoir, its pressure must be maintained above a critical pressure which is known as the dew point. As hydrocarbons are produced from the reservoir, the pressure decreases. If the pressure were to decline below the dew point, producible hydrocarbons would be irretrievably lost. The Unit was formed in order to allow the owners of the oil and gas leaseholds and other inter *700 ests, through the Unit’s designated operator, to inject gas into the First Bench to maintain the pressure above the dew point.

Woods Petroleum Corporation was designated as the original operator of the Unit. ANR Production was one of the nonoperat-ing working interest owners of the Unit and, accordingly, executed the Unit Agreement and the Unit Operating Agreement. Pursuant to those agreements, only the Unit’s operator was authorized to conduct operations on behalf of the Unit in the unitized area of the First Bench.

The agreements provided, however, that individual oil and gas lessees could obtain permission to explore and develop zones other than the First Bench which were located within the same geographical area as the Unit. The Second Bench of the First Frontier Formation is a potentially productive zone which is found approximately forty to fifty feet below the First Bench within the surface boundaries of the Unit. The Second Bench is geologically distinct from the First Bench. In the area of the Unit, the Second Bench is a low quality hydrocarbon reservoir, and Second Bench wells must be completed by using hydraulic fracture treatments in order to artificially stimulate their production.

In September 1986, ANR Production requested permission from Woods Petroleum to drill and complete the South Powell Federal No. 2-1 well (the South Powell well) in order to test the Second Bench within the surface boundaries of the Unit. ANR Production had previously completed the Alford Federal well and the Bozeman Trail well in the Second Bench in the general area of the Unit. In the letter in which it requested permission to drill the South Powell well, ANR Production represented that it would complete that well in the same manner as it had completed the Alford Federal well.

The members of the Unit approved ANR Production’s request. ANR Production drilled the South Powell well in November 1986 and hydraulic fracture treated it in December 1986. ANR Production used a different material to prop the fractures open in the South Powell well than it had used in the Alford Federal well. The South Powell well commenced sustained commercial production in March 1987.

In June 1988, after it had conducted tests and reviewed data which indicated that the South Powell well was producing significantly more hydrocarbons than other Second Bench wells, Woods Petroleum concluded that the South Powell well was in communication with and producing oil and gas from the unitized First Bench. Woods Petroleum informed ANR Production of its conclusion and requested that ANR Production shut-in the production from the well. ANR Production refused.

Woods Petroleum presented an application to the Commission, requesting that the Commission order the South Powell well to be shut-in if the Commission determined that communication existed. After several months of consideration, the Commission concluded that ANR Production’s fracture treatment of the South Powell well had caused substantial communication between the First Bench and the Second Bench and that hydrocarbons were being drained from the First Bench to the Second Bench through the perforations in the South Powell well. In March 1989, the Commission ordered ANR Production to shut-in the production from the South Powell well. This Court affirmed the Commission’s decision to shut-in the South Powell well in ANR Production Company v. Wyoming Oil and Gas Conservation Commission, 800 P.2d 492 (Wyo.1990).

On November 6, 1990, the Unit’s operator, Argent Energy, Inc., which was formerly known as Woods Petroleum, filed a lawsuit against ANR Production. When Kerr-McGee succeeded Argent Energy as the operator of the Unit, it was substituted as the party plaintiff in the case. In its first amended complaint, Kerr-McGee pleaded six claims for relief: (1) conversion of hydrocarbons, (2) trespass, (3) breach of contract, (4) a claim for interest and attorneys’ fees under the Act, (5) punitive damages, and (6) strict liability. ANR Production filed counterclaims against Kerr-McGee which included claims for (1) breach of contract, (2) conversion of hydrocarbons and mineral trespass, *701 and (3) interest and attorneys’ fees pursuant to the Act.

The district court held a bench trial in June 1993. During the trial, the district court dismissed Kerr-McGee’s strict liability claim. At the conclusion of the trial, the district court issued its findings of fact and conclusions of law in a decision letter. The district court generally concluded that ANR Production had trespassed against Kerr-McGee and had converted First Bench hydrocarbons which belonged to the Unit to its own use. The district court determined that ANR Production had breached its contractual obligations to the Unit, and it also held that the Act did not apply under the circumstances of this case. The district court decided that Kerr-McGee was not entitled to receive an award of punitive damages and denied ANR Production’s counterclaim.

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893 P.2d 698, 1995 Wyo. LEXIS 53, 1995 WL 142374, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anr-production-co-v-kerr-mcgee-corp-wyo-1995.