Cameron International Corporation F/K/A Cooper Cameron Corporation v. Vetco Gray Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 31, 2009
Docket14-07-00656-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Cameron International Corporation F/K/A Cooper Cameron Corporation v. Vetco Gray Inc. (Cameron International Corporation F/K/A Cooper Cameron Corporation v. Vetco Gray 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
Cameron International Corporation F/K/A Cooper Cameron Corporation v. Vetco Gray Inc., (Tex. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

Affirmed and Memorandum Opinion filed March 31, 2009

Affirmed and Memorandum Opinion filed March 31, 2009.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

____________

NO. 14-07-00656-CV

CAMERON INTERNATIONAL CORPORATION F/K/A COOPER CAMERON CORPORATION, Appellant

V.

VETCO GRAY INC., Appellee

On Appeal from the 129th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 2003-61873

M E M O R A N D U M   O P I N I O N

This is a contract interpretation case.  Appellant, Cameron International Corporation f/k/a Cooper Cameron Corporation, appeals the trial court=s confirmation of an arbitrator=s award and the granting of summary judgments construing the language of an unambiguous contract.  Finding no error, we affirm.

Factual and Procedural Background

A Christmas tree is a device, made up of a series of valves and pipes, which regulates the flow of oil and gas produced by subsea wells.  There are four primary manufacturers of subsea Christmas trees worldwide: appellant, appellee, Vetco Gray Inc.,  Kvaerner Oilfield Products, Inc. (AKvaerner@), and FMC Technologies, Inc. (AFMC@).  Originally, Christmas trees were vertical.  Maintenance on subsea wells was an expensive and time-consuming process because the entire vertical Christmas tree had to be removed first.  In 1996, appellant patented a new design of Christmas tree, a horizontal tree, which appellant called the SpoolTree.  The SpoolTree design was superior to the old vertical tree design because it allowed maintenance to be performed while the tree remained in place and provided better protection against leakage that could endanger workers and harm the environment.

After it patented the SpoolTree, appellant sent notice of its patent to its three competitors: appellee, Kvaerner, and FMC.  In addition, appellant invited each of the three competitors to negotiate a license to use the SpoolTree design.  Of the three competitors, only appellee entered into negotiations with appellant for a license.  Kvaerner and FMC entered into litigation with appellant over the design.  In 1997 appellee=s negotiations with appellant were successful and they entered into a contract, the Cross-License Agreement.  Pursuant to the Cross-License Agreement, appellee agreed to pay appellant a royalty rate of 6.5 percent of all revenue obtained from selling products covered by appellant=s patents retroactive to August 1996.  In addition, appellee gave appellant a cross-license for several of appellee=s products and received a $3 million credit to be applied to its royalty payments to appellant.  In addition, to protect appellee=s status as the first to obtain a SpoolTree license, the Cross-License Agreement includes a Amost-favored licensee@ clause that requires appellant to promptly notify appellee of any SpoolTree licenses appellant might grant to a third party.  In addition, paragraph 5.2 of the Cross-License Agreement provides:


In the event the ROYALTY TERMS of such third-party license are, as a whole, more favorable to the other PARTY than are provided in this CROSS LICENSE AGREEMENT, then for so long as the third-party license is in effect, the other PARTY shall be entitled to elect the more favorable ROYALTY TERMS from the date of notice to the third party or the date of marking, whichever is earlier.

To address the possibility that future SpoolTree licenses might not have an explicit royalty percentage such as appellee=s 6.5 percent, the parties included paragraph 5.6 in the Cross-License Agreement, which provides:

In the event the PARTIES cannot agree on the ROYALTY TERMS of a third party license, the PARTIES shall select within fifteen (15) days after written request by a PARTY one economic evaluator by mutual agreement, which agreement shall not be unreasonably withheld.  The PARTIES shall submit in writing to the economic evaluator the issue of the ROYALTY TERMS for the third party license.  Each PARTY shall be allowed one written submission and neither party shall be allowed a responsive or other written submission unless specifically requested in writing by the economic evaluator.  There shall be no ex parte contact with the economic evaluator concerning the subject matter.  The economic evaluator=s decision, which must be made within one month of the final submission, shall be binding upon the PARTIES.  The PARTIES shall share the cost of the economic evaluator.


Eventually, appellant resolved its litigation and negotiated license agreements with both Kvaerner and FMC.  The Kvaerner license involved a fixed sum royalty for each Christmas tree sold using appellant=s patents as well as two supply agreements.  On August 22, 2003, appellee sent appellant notice of its election of the Kvaerner royalty rate.  In response, appellant refused to acknowledge appellee=s election, threatened to terminate appellee=s license by declaring appellee in default, and refused appellee=s requests to take the matter to an economic evaluator.  Appellant then initiated the current litigation asking the trial court to declare, among other things, (1) that any election by appellee of the Kvaerner royalty rate must be based upon the economic value exchanged as a whole, and (2) the determination of the effective percentage rate of the Kvaerner royalty rate must take the economic value appellant received from the two Kvaerner supply agreements into account.[1]

While the current litigation was in progress, appellant, on March 7, 2004, entered into a license agreement with FMC (the A2004 FMC License@).  The 2004 FMC License required FMC to make a lump sum payment of $6 million to appellant.  In addition, the 2004 FMC License included a cross-license granting appellant a license to certain FMC patents and a supply agreement.  Under the 2004 FMC License, once it had paid the $6 million lump sum, FMC had no royalty obligations going forward.  After reviewing the 2004 FMC License, appellee notified appellant of its election of the 2004 FMC License=

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Cameron International Corporation F/K/A Cooper Cameron Corporation v. Vetco Gray Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cameron-international-corporation-fka-cooper-camer-texapp-2009.