Crosby-Mississippi Resources, Ltd., Plaintiff-Appellant/cross v. Prosper Energy Corporation, Defendants-Appellees/cross

974 F.2d 612, 120 Oil & Gas Rep. 505, 1992 U.S. App. LEXIS 25469, 1992 WL 232769
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedOctober 8, 1992
Docket91-1486
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 974 F.2d 612 (Crosby-Mississippi Resources, Ltd., Plaintiff-Appellant/cross v. Prosper Energy Corporation, Defendants-Appellees/cross) 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
Crosby-Mississippi Resources, Ltd., Plaintiff-Appellant/cross v. Prosper Energy Corporation, Defendants-Appellees/cross, 974 F.2d 612, 120 Oil & Gas Rep. 505, 1992 U.S. App. LEXIS 25469, 1992 WL 232769 (5th Cir. 1992).

Opinion

JOHN R. BROWN, Circuit Judge:

Crosby-Mississippi Resources, Ltd. (CMR) brought this action to recover royalty payments alleged to be due pursuant to a joint operating agreement (JOA) executed between CMR and the defendants (collectively Prosper). Following a bench trial, the district court, finding that Prosper had committed a unilateral mistake in its interpretation of the agreement, rescinded the JOA and dismissed CMR’s complaint for damages. CMR appeals this judgment, and Prosper cross-appeals the district court’s denial of its alternative affirmative defense of mutual mistake. We affirm.

Royalty interest dispute

CMR owns unleased mineral interests in numerous sections of the Poplarville Field in Pearl River County, Mississippi. Prosper 1 sought to develop several gas wells in the Poplarville Field and, as early as 1979, began negotiating with CMR and Exxon 2 to reach an agreement securing their participation in the Prosper venture. These negotiations ultimately proved unsuccessful. On December 20, 1984, however, Prosper obtained an order from the Mississippi Oil & Gas Board allowing the forced integration of CMR’s interest in the first of several wells to be drilled by Prosper in the Poplarville Field, the Southern Mineral 27-7 well (27-7 well). The JOA for this well is the subject of this action. 3 Because CMR refused to participate in Prosper’s continued development of the Poplar-ville Field, Prosper, on a well-by-well basis, obtained orders from the Mississippi Oil & Gas Board force pooling eight other wells in which CMR owned mineral interests. Under Mississippi statutory law, a non-consenting owner of unleased mineral interests, as CMR is here, is not entitled to receive payments from production until 250% of costs and expenses of drilling and completing the well have been recovered out of that non-consenting owner’s share of production. Miss.Code Ann. § 53-3-7(2)(a), (g) (1990). 4 Ultimately, CMR chose to participate as a working interest owner in seven of these nine wells, choosing to pay its proportional share of drilling and completing costs in exchange for receiving an immediate share of production payments, free from the 250% penalty. 5

*615 Although CMR was obligated to pay its share of expenses for the seven wells in which it was a participating working interest owner, CMR withheld payment until a JOA could be executed to govern the well operations. The parties initially sought to enter into a single JOA covering all nine wells and, unable to come to terms on such a comprehensive agreement, ultimately executed nine separate JO As, one for each well. 6

Although the forced pooling order for the 27-7 well was entered on December 20, 1984, it was not until April 20, 1987 that the negotiations over this well culminated in the JOA. The effective date of the JOA, however, was pre-dated to November 20, 1984, a date approximately one month before the forced pooling order was entered. 7

Under the final draft of the 27-7 well JOA, CMR was not to receive a share in the working interest of the well until 250% of its, the nonconsenting owner’s, share of production costs had been recovered. 8 The JOA, however, contains no such provision governing royalty payments; the language of the JOA, in fact, does not condition CMR’s receipt of royalties at all. That is, under the JOA, CMR is entitled to royalties from the effective date of the agreement and upon the first sales of gas, free from the statute’s 250% penalty. Yet despite being immediately entitled to royalty payments under the agreement, CMR sent its first claim for past due royalties to Prosper on December 15, 1988, some nineteen months after executing the 27-7 well JOA. Prosper refused to honor CMR’s claim, and, in response, CMR filed this action.

After CMR filed its complaint seeking royalty payments, Prosper asserted the affirmative defense of unilateral mistake in its second amended answer, seeking rescission of the JOA. 9 The district court “unreservedly conclude[d] that Prosper intended and believed that under the JOA, royalty payments would not be payable to CMR until 250% payout had been reached.” The court then found that Prosper’s failure to find and correct the error in the JOA was at most “an oversight” and not the result of gross negligence. 10 Because the *616 27-7 well “never, or only barely, reached payout, and has been plugged and abandoned,” the court ruled that rescission of the JOA would restore the parties to status quo. CMR appeals from a final judgment dismissing its complaint and granting rescission of the JOA. Additionally, Prosper cross-appeals the district court’s refusal to reform the JOA due to the parties’ mutual mistake.

Unilateral mistake

We review the district court’s findings of unilateral mistake for clear error under F.R.Civ.P. 52(a). Mississippi law governs this diversity action, and Mississippi courts require that unilateral mistake, like mutual mistake, be proven beyond a reasonable doubt. Terre Haute Cooperage v. Branscome, 203 Miss. 493, 35 So.2d 537, 540 (1948) (claim of unilateral mistake must be proven by same standard of proof as that for claim of mutual mistake); see Sprow v. Hartford Ins. Co., 594 F.2d 418, 422-23 (5th Cir.1979) (claim of mutual mistake must be proven beyond a reasonable doubt).

CMR contends that the district court erred in finding that Prosper had met its burden of proving beyond a reasonable doubt that it was mistaken about the JOA’s effect on royalty payments.

The district court, however, “unreservedly conclude[d]” that Prosper intended that the JOA retain the same effect as that of the forced pooling statute: namely, that royalty payments would not be payable to CMR until reversion. The court also found that “the matter of royalty payments was never discussed between the parties.”

Because this action proceeded as a bench trial, the court heard testimony from the actual negotiators of the JOA. The court found Prosper’s witnesses “stated without equivocation and credibly that Prosper never even considered the possibility of making royalty payments to CMR prior to reversion and certainly never had any intention of paying CMR any royalty payments prior to reversion.” 11 The court also heard testimony from CMR’s general partner and signatory to the JOA, Stewart Gammill, who stated that CMR fully expected to receive royalties from the effective date of the JOA. The court, however, was not persuaded by Gammill’s testimony.

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974 F.2d 612, 120 Oil & Gas Rep. 505, 1992 U.S. App. LEXIS 25469, 1992 WL 232769, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crosby-mississippi-resources-ltd-plaintiff-appellantcross-v-prosper-ca5-1992.