Colorado Interstate Gas Co., a Delaware Corporation v. Hufo Oils, a Partnership

802 F.2d 133
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedNovember 19, 1986
Docket85-1664
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 802 F.2d 133 (Colorado Interstate Gas Co., a Delaware Corporation v. Hufo Oils, a Partnership) 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
Colorado Interstate Gas Co., a Delaware Corporation v. Hufo Oils, a Partnership, 802 F.2d 133 (5th Cir. 1986).

Opinion

PATRICK E. HIGGINBOTHAM, Circuit Judge:

Hufo Oils appeals a summary judgment declaring that “white oil” or “natural gasoline” extracted from natural gas may not be used to adjust the ratio of oil to gas in a well in order to classify it as an oil well under an operating agreement governed by Texas statute. We affirm.

I

This case involves gas and oil rights on acreage in the Texas Panhandle Field that have been divided and leased respectively to Colorado Interstate Gas and Hufo Oils. Although numerous issues are raised in this appeal, they all revolve around Colorado Interstate’s concern that Hufo will infringe its gas rights under the guise of producing oil. Under Texas law, a drill site is classified as an oil well or a gas well according to the ratio of oil to gas produced by the well. 1 Colorado Interstate fears that Hufo will use a “low temperature extractor” or LTX to liquefy gas at the well site 2 in order to manipulate the ratio of oil to gas and qualify what would otherwise be a gas well as an oil well, thereby enabling Hufo to sell Colorado Interstate’s gas. Though Hufo has not yet used an LTX or attempted to count condensed liquids as crude petroleum oil for well classification purposes, Colorado Interstate argues that the question of whether an LTX can be used for such purposes must be decided in order to resolve an immediate contractual dispute between the parties. To explain the dispute, we set forth the history of the current leases, the obligations of the parties under them, and the facts from which the present dispute arises.

-A-

In 1928, the Amarillo Oil Company assigned to the Canadian River Gas Company “all gas, gas rights, and gas privileges” under ten oil and gas leases, dated from 1916 to 1928, on land owned by Lee Bivins. The oil rights under the leases, which Amarillo retained, reverted to the descendants of Lee Bivins when Amarillo later released them.

In 1939, the Bivins and Canadian River entered an agreement that consolidated the gas rights previously conveyed to Canadian River with gas rights to another 6,320.7 acres of land. In 1949 Canadian River and the Bivins entered into an operating agreement that set forth the parties’ “respective rights and obligations in connection with future operations for the production of oil and gas to be conducted upon the premises covered by said consolidated lease agreement.” In the agreement, the Bivins as “Oil Operator” agreed to plug and abandon any well that produced oil and casinghead gas in a ratio that would bring it within the classification of a gas well as defined by Texas law. 3 The operating agreement pro *135 vided that it “shall be co-extensive with the term of [the 1939] consolidated lease agreement.”

In 1951, Canadian River merged with Colorado Interstate and assigned all of its rights under the 1939 consolidated lease and the 1949 operating agreement to Colorado Interstate. In 1954, Colorado Interstate and the Bivins executed a “New Consolidated Lease,” which replaced the 1939 Consolidated Lease and applied to the same acreage. 4

For nineteen years, Colorado Interstate and the Bivins coexisted as gas and oil operators under the 1949 operating agreement and the 1954 lease. In 1983, the Bivins granted an “Oil and Casinghead Gas Lease” to Hufo Oils on some of the land within the geographical scope of the operating agreement. Hufo’s rights under the lease were expressly made subject to the terms of the 1949 operating agreement. 5 Hufo then applied to the Texas Railroad Commission for permission to drill eight wells on property where Colorado Interstate already owned and operated a gas well.

After Hufo submitted its application, Cabot Pipeline Corporation offered to purchase Hufo’s future casinghead gas production from the acreage. Under the terms of the operating agreement, however, Colorado Interstate had a right of first refusal on Hufo’s casinghead gas production from the property. 6

Cabot’s final purchase proposal included the following provision:

The gas shall be delivered without prior processing for production extraction except that Seller may extract by use of a *136 lease separator or LTX unit a maximum of .63 gallons of heavy hydrocarbon liquids per MCF to maintain the gas-oil ratio of each lease.

Hufo executed a “Casinghead Gas Purchase and Processing Agreement” with Cabot and forwarded the agreement with a letter to Colorado Interstate, stating that Colorado Interstate

shall have in accordance with said paragraph 11 [of the operating agreement] thirty (30) days from receipt of this notice in which to exercise your option to purchase the casinghead gas production from Hufo Oils’ lease on the same terms and conditions as set forth in the enclosed offer.
Colorado Interstate responded:
Please be advised that Colorado Interstate Gas Company hereby accepts your offer to sell “casinghead gas” (as “casinghead” gas is defined in Paragraph 10 of the Operating Agreement) from the above-described acreage only, under the terms of the Cabot Agreement to the extent the terms of the Cabot Agreement are not violative of the provisions of the August 18, 1949, Operating Agreement or the laws, rules or regulations of any governmental agency having jurisdiction herein. For example, the use of gas processing units such as LTX units to maintain or adjust a well’s gas/oil ratio is not permitted by the Operating Agreement, (emphasis added)

Finally, Hufo met this response as follows: The Operating Agreement does not prohibit the use of gas processing unite. Your letter of December 22, 1983 is a rejection of the above referenced agreement. Hufo Oils declines to accept your counter-offer as set forth in said letter.

-B-

Colorado Interstate brought a declaratory judgment action pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2201, seeking, inter alia, a declaration whether Colorado Interstate had accepted Hufo's offer insofar as it did not violate the operating agreement, and whether Hufo could use hydrocarbon liquids condensed from gas with an LTX unit to classify a well as an oil well under the agreement and Texas statute. 7

Ruling on Colorado Interstate’s motion for summary judgment, the district court held that liquids condensed from a stream of natural gas by an LTX unit could not be counted as “crude petroleum oil” to classify a well as an “oil well” under Texas law.

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Bluebook (online)
802 F.2d 133, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/colorado-interstate-gas-co-a-delaware-corporation-v-hufo-oils-a-ca5-1986.