Antero Resources Corp. v. South Jersey Resources Group

933 F.3d 1209
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedAugust 6, 2019
Docket18-1163
StatusPublished

This text of 933 F.3d 1209 (Antero Resources Corp. v. South Jersey Resources Group) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Antero Resources Corp. v. South Jersey Resources Group, 933 F.3d 1209 (10th Cir. 2019).

Opinion

TYMKOVICH, Chief Judge.

Antero Resources Company and South Jersey Gas Company entered into a eight-year contract for Antero to deliver natural gas from the Marcellus Shale formation to gas meters located on the Columbia Pipeline in West Virginia. The parties tied gas pricing to the Columbia Appalachia Index-an index created by a private publisher and widely used in the natural gas industry. During performance of the contract, the price of natural gas linked to the Index increased. South Jersey contested the higher prices, arguing that modifications to the Index materially changed the pricing methodology, and that the Index should be replaced with one that reflected the original agreement.

Antero disagreed. South Jersey then sued Antero in New Jersey state court for failing to negotiate a replacement index, and began paying a lower price based on a different index. Antero then sued South Jersey in federal district court in Colorado, where its principal place of business is *1213 located, for breach of contract for its failure to pay the Index price. The lawsuits were consolidated in the District of Colorado and the case proceeded to trial. The jury rejected South Jersey's claims, finding South Jersey breached the contract and Antero was entitled to $ 60 million damages.

South Jersey argues on appeal that the district court erred in denying its motion for judgment in its favor as a matter of law, or, alternatively, that the court erred in instructing the jury. We affirm the district court. We conclude South Jersey is not entitled to a judgment as a matter of law because a reasonable jury could find South Jersey breached its contract with Antero because the Index was not discontinued nor did it materially change. We further hold South Jersey is not entitled to a new trial based on any defects in the jury instructions.

I. Background

The contract between Antero and South Jersey took effect in October 2011 and will end in October 2019. 1 The contract requires Antero to ship and deliver natural gas to gas meters located in West Virginia, where South Jersey purchases the gas and transports it to customers. South Jersey purchases the gas at a price determined by the Columbia Appalachia Index. But pursuant to the contract, this pricing term can be renegotiated under specific circumstances. Here, Antero delivered natural gas to the agreed-upon gas meters, but South Jersey argues the contract must be renegotiated and South Jersey is no longer bound to pay the price listed by the Columbia Appalachia Index. The three terms of the contract that are significant for purposes of this litigation are the delivery term, the pricing term, and the renegotiation term.

We will address each of these components of the contract in turn.

A. The Delivery Term

The gas meters where Antero delivers the gas fall within the boundaries of The Columbia Pipeline (or TCO Pipeline), which covers parts of Kentucky, Ohio, Pennsylvania, West Virginia, New York, New Jersey, and Virginia. The Columbia Gas Transmission Corporation, which oversees the transportation of gas on The Columbia Pipeline, designated numerous pools, or natural gas storage systems, along the pipeline. These pools allow sellers to aggregate their gas with other sellers prior to sale of the gas.

In addition to physical storage pools, Columbia Gas created a so-called "virtual aggregation pool" called the Interruptible Paper Pool (IPP). 2 Under the Antero-South *1214 Jersey contract, Antero had to deliver the gas to physical meters located in Doddridge County, West Virginia, where South Jersey would take possession. While Antero's meters are part of The Columbia Pipeline, they are outside the IPP pool, meaning the gas delivered by Antero to fulfill this particular contract is not aggregated in the IPP pool.

Because Antero sold its gas to South Jersey outside the IPP pool, Antero only had to deliver the gas to meters in West Virginia. The parties agreed to a discount from the Index price because they recognized that South Jersey would incur costs in transporting gas back into the IPP pool if it wanted to resell some of its gas 3 or incur transportation costs to deliver gas to its customers in New Jersey. Antero's meters were located relatively close to the production site, which made it advantageous for Antero to deliver the gas to the meters outside the pool and for South Jersey to transport any gas it wanted to resell to the pool. At the time the contract was executed, anyone could transport gas to the pool without cost, so South Jersey did not have to pay to transport the gas to the pool.

B. The Pricing Term

Antero and South Jersey needed a way to establish pricing for the duration of the eight-year contract. Like other market participants, they agreed to use a gas price index published by Platts McGraw Hill Financial, an industry leader in collecting and publishing average benchmark daily and monthly prices reflecting market conditions. The benchmark prices allow industry participants to enter long-term purchase agreements and are based on the average price of natural gas trades in a given market. Buyers and sellers in the given market voluntarily share price information with Platts, which then uses it to calculate the daily or monthly index price. Platts's methodologies evolve "to reflect changing market conditions through time," and Platts retains some level of editorial discretion over its Index. App. 1736. The methodology statement for Platts was divided into seven parts that explained the "entire process of producing price values for the specified market period." Id. For their contract, Antero and South Jersey agreed to use Platts's Columbia Appalachia Index minus the agreed upon discount. 4

At the time the contract was drafted and signed, any gas producer could deliver gas to the IPP pool. But due to the success of hydraulic fracking, gas production from the Marcellus Shale formation increased dramatically between 2011 and 2014. Reaching its capacity, The Columbia Pipeline, which previously had accepted gas from all shippers, began limiting access to those shippers with "firm transportation rights"-rights previously negotiated for a fee to guarantee access to the IPP Pool. These shippers 5 thus received a first right of access on the pipeline to move their gas. As a result, the IPP pool became an exclusive club of shippers with firm transportation *1215 rights. Because fewer shippers were able to access the pipeline, more trades occurred outside the pool. South Jersey lacked firm transportation rights for the gas purchased from Antero, so South Jersey was unable to transport gas it purchased from Antero into the pool. In contrast, Antero had purchased $ 15 billion worth of transportation rights and had full access to the IPP pool for its other contracts.

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Bluebook (online)
933 F.3d 1209, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/antero-resources-corp-v-south-jersey-resources-group-ca10-2019.