Apache Corporation v. W & T Offshore, Incorporated

930 F.3d 647
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJuly 16, 2019
Docket17-20599
StatusPublished
Cited by55 cases

This text of 930 F.3d 647 (Apache Corporation v. W & T Offshore, Incorporated) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Apache Corporation v. W & T Offshore, Incorporated, 930 F.3d 647 (5th Cir. 2019).

Opinion

PATRICK E. HIGGINBOTHAM, Circuit Judge:

This dispute arises from a successful plugging and abandonment operation of three offshore oil and gas wells in the Mississippi Canyon area of the Gulf of Mexico. Apache Deepwater, LLC performed the operation and seeks payment from its non-operator partner, W&T Offshore, Inc. A jury awarded $43.2 million to Apache for W&T's breach of the Joint Operating Agreement. W&T challenges the district court's application of the Louisiana Civil Code and interpretation of the contract. Alternatively, W&T contends that it is entitled to an offset in damages because of Apache's bad faith. Finding no error, we affirm.

I.

In May 1999, Apache and W&T's predecessors entered into a Joint Operating Agreement ("JOA") that governed the operation of three offshore deepwater oil and gas wells (the "Wells") in the Mississippi Canyon area of the Gulf of Mexico. This dispute arises from operator Apache's plugging and abandonment ("P&A") of the Wells.

In 2012, Apache attempted to P&A the Wells with an intervention vessel called Uncle John with the consent of W&T, but that operation was unsuccessful. Following that failure, Apache contracted to use a different intervention vessel, the Helix-534 (" Helix "). An internal figure by Apache estimated that the cost to P&A the Wells with the Helix was approximately $56,350,000. In June 2014, W&T contacted Apache to set up a status conference in July discussing the P&A operation, confirming that W&T knew "that the Helix 534 is contracted for the project." At that meeting, W&T learned that Apache proposed using two drilling rigs for the project instead of the Helix , the Ocean Onyx (" Onyx ") and Ensco-8505 (" Ensco ").

W&T and Apache offered to the jury competing explanations for the switch from the Helix to the Onyx and Ensco drilling rigs. By W&T's telling, Apache's decision to use the Onyx and Ensco was a simple matter of cost: W&T contends that Apache entered into a contract for the two drilling rigs for the purpose of drilling new deepwater wells, but abandoned that project in 2014 and was left with exorbitant stacking costs for the idle rigs (approximately $1,000,000 per day). W&T asserts that Apache's decision to use the rigs instead of the Helix was an attempt to recoup on the costs of contracting for the *651 unused rigs because Apache had been unsuccessful in unloading the rigs onto another operator. Prior to the July meeting, Apache prepared estimates for the use of the rigs which totaled between $81 and $104 million. W&T points to an internal presentation in which Apache was weighing the costs of using the Helix against the rigs and determining that with the stacking costs Apache was paying for the idle rigs, the use of the rigs would be cheaper because the cost would be split with W&T. Apache cancelled the Helix contract. W&T claims that although Apache purported to rely on written evaluations explaining the technical reasons the rigs were necessary (including that the Helix no longer complied with government regulations), Apache refused to provide those analyses to W&T.

Apache rejects W&T's economic explanation and argues that the Helix was not a safe option after the Deepwater Horizon spill and the government regulators would not have approved the Helix for the P&A operations. Apache put on evidence that it had discussed the risks of using the Helix with W&T, and demonstrated that technical difficulties posed by the Wells would make the "open water" operations of the Helix environmentally risky, that the Wells were "high risk," and that the drilling rigs were able to conduct the P&A operations with safeguards mitigating the risk of oil spills. Apache also claimed that the federal Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement ("BSEE") advised Apache that it was no longer approving the type of open-water operations that Helix would need to perform to complete the P&A task. In Apache's version, W&T began "actively resisting" the P&A plan using the rigs because the Helix operation would be far cheaper for W&T and W&T was disregarding the environmental risk. 1 Apache argued to the jury that W&T ignored the fact that Helix would have had operational issues that would have increased the costs of the operation past the initial estimates and that the use of the rigs was "reasonably necessary."

Amid their dispute over the appropriate intervention vessel, Apache sought W&T's approval for use of the rigs through an Authorizations for Expenditure ("AFE"), but W&T decided not to approve the use of the rigs, 2 and rejected two other requests for AFEs. Apache decided to use the rigs for the P&A and the work was successfully completed in February 2015 for a total cost of $139,900,000. Apache billed W&T for its contractual 49% share, or $68,570,000. W&T decided to pay $24,860,640, which represented 49% of the estimate for use of the Helix , contending that "Apache's insistence on using a drilling rig unnecessarily and unreasonably increased the costs of this work," and determining that it was not obligated to pay the full billed amount because it had not approved the AFEs.

*652 Apache sued for breach of contract in Texas state court in December 2014 and the case was removed by W&T in January 2015. Prior to trial, W&T moved for summary judgment on Apache's breach of contract claim, arguing that the JOA was unambiguous in requiring the operator (Apache) to obtain an approved AFE before expending over $200,000. The parties' argument turned on the reading of two provisions in the JOA: § 6.2 governing authorizations for expenditures and § 18.4 governing abandonment operations required by the government:

6.2. Authorization for Expenditure: The Operator shall not make any single expenditure or undertake any activity or operation costing Two Hundred Thousand Dollars ($200,000) or more, unless an AFE has either (1) been included in a proposal for an activity or operation and is approved by the Participating Parties through their Election to participate in the activity or operation, or (2) received the approval of the Parties as a General Matter. When executed by a party, an AFE grants the Operator the authority to commit or expend funds on the activity or operation in accordance with this Agreement for the account of the Participating Parties....
18.4. Abandonment Operations Requirement by Governmental Authority:

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Bluebook (online)
930 F.3d 647, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/apache-corporation-v-w-t-offshore-incorporated-ca5-2019.