Cubic Energy, Inc. F/K/A Roseland Oil & Gas, Inc. v. Clifton H. Kees, Jr.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 16, 2004
Docket11-03-00313-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Cubic Energy, Inc. F/K/A Roseland Oil & Gas, Inc. v. Clifton H. Kees, Jr. (Cubic Energy, Inc. F/K/A Roseland Oil & Gas, Inc. v. Clifton H. Kees, Jr.) 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.

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Cubic Energy, Inc. F/K/A Roseland Oil & Gas, Inc. v. Clifton H. Kees, Jr., (Tex. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

                                                             11th Court of Appeals

                                                                Eastland, Texas

                                                             Memorandum Opinion

Cubic Energy, Inc. f/k/a Roseland Oil & Gas, Inc.

Appellant

Vs.                   No. 11-03-00313-CV -- Appeal from Palo Pinto County

Clifton H. Kees, Jr.

Appellee

All that remains in this case are issues surrounding claims for attorneys= fees and expenses which the trial court ruled that Cubic Energy, Inc. f/k/a Roseland Oil & Gas, Inc. owed to Clifton H. Kees, Jr.[1]  We modify and, as modified, affirm.

In early 1999, Roseland Oil & Gas, Inc., sued Regal Petroleum Services, Inc., Larry G. Bradford, William G. Vanderver, Margaret Vanderver, Richard Ganders, and Clifton H. Kees, Jr. In the lawsuit, Roseland alleged that William G. Vanderver was the president of Roseland during the time pertinent to this lawsuit, that Margaret Vanderver was an officer of Roseland and was married to William G. Vanderver during that time, and that Richard Ganders was Roseland=s secretary during that time.  Larry G. Bradford was the president of Regal.

Roseland alleged that Calvin Wallen, III, not named individually in this lawsuit, became interested in buying a controlling interest in Roseland.   On July 11, 1997, Mr. Vanderver and Wallen entered into a letter agreement covering the transaction.  As a part of what is referred to as a preliminary AStandstill Agreement,@ the parties agreed to maintain the status quo on Roseland properties between the time of the Standstill Agreement and the completion of the transaction.  The transaction was completed on December 1, 1997.


Roseland also alleged that, during the time covered by the Standstill Agreement, Mr. Vanderver sought Wallen=s consent to enter agreements to reenter and rework a well owned by Roseland.  Wallen did not agree, but Mr. Vanderver entered the agreements anyway.  The allegations were that these agreements were contrary to the provisions of the Standstill Agreement.  Some of the agreements were between Roseland and the Vandervers, between Roseland and Ganders, and between Roseland and Regal, as well as others not parties to this suit.  In its petition, Roseland charged Mr. Vanderver and Ganders with various acts of malfeasance, fraud, breach of fiduciary duty, and negligence.  Roseland further claimed that Bradford, Regal, and Mrs. Vanderver knowingly and actively conspired with Mr. Vanderver and Ganders in order to commit fraud upon Roseland and thereby to fraudulently acquire assets from Roseland.  The only allegations in the petition as far as Kees is concerned are that in some of the challenged agreements it is mentioned that the conveyances are subject to a one percent overriding royalty interest owned by Kees and that Kees knowingly and actively conspired with Mr. Vanderver and Ganders in order to commit fraud upon Roseland and thereby to fraudulently acquire assets from Roseland.  Kees alleged in his counterclaim that he acquired his overriding royalty interest in exchange for geological services performed upon the subject property as well as geological services performed upon other property.

From the inception of this lawsuit, George S. Henry and his associates represented all of the defendants.  On July 25, 2000, Henry and his associates filed a motion to withdraw from representation of the Vandervers.  On July 31, 2000, the trial court granted the motion.  The trial court entered an agreed order of dismissal as to Mr. Vanderver on October 11, 2000.  On October 26, 2000, Roseland, joined by the Vandervers, filed a motion requesting that the trial court find that Henry and his associates were disqualified from representing the remaining defendants due to certain conflicts of interest which arose when they no longer represented the Vandervers.  On November 29, 2000, the trial court denied the joint motion to disqualify.


On December 15, 2000, Roseland filed an original mandamus proceeding in this court in Cause No. 11-00-00400-CV in which it sought a writ directing the trial court to set aside its November 29 order refusing to disqualify Henry and his associates and also directing the trial court  to enter an order finding that Henry and his associates were disqualified from representing the remaining defendants.  While the writ was pending, a new sitting judge came to the trial court; and, because mandamus is personal to the judge, we abated the proceeding until the new trial judge could consider the motion for disqualification.  See Jampole v. Touchy, 673 S.W.2d 569, 572 (Tex. 1984)(orig. proceeding).  The new trial judge also denied the motion for disqualification, and this court conditionally granted the relief sought by Roseland.  Henry and his associates subsequently withdrew from the case.  Dee Ann Smith was then hired in the place of Henry and his associates.

 As we have earlier noted, at some point in time after the original transaction was finally closed and during the pendency of this lawsuit, Roseland shareholders agreed to merge Roseland into Cubic Energy, Inc.  During the process of this litigation, Roseland or Cubic settled with all of the defendants other than Ganders, and the trial court granted Ganders=s motion for summary judgment and granted Kees=s motion for partial summary judgment quieting Kees=s title to the overriding royalty interest.  Cubic nonsuited its fiduciary and civil conspiracy claims against Kees.  Therefore, the only issues left in the case at that point were those between Cubic and Kees concerning Kees=s claims for attorneys= fees and for expenses.

On September 25, 2002, the trial court heard the issue of attorneys= fees and expenses.  At the conclusion of the hearing, the trial court took the matter under advisement.  The parties agree in their briefs that, after some eight months, the trial court indicated that, in order to make an appropriate and fair award, it wanted to hear additional testimony on the issues of segregation,  attorneys= fees, and expenses.  Kees filed a motion to reopen. The motion to reopen was filed on June 3, 2003.  On June 5, 2003, the trial court granted the motion and set June 19, 2003, as the trial date for the presentation of any additional testimony on the issues of attorneys= fees and expenses.

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Cubic Energy, Inc. F/K/A Roseland Oil & Gas, Inc. v. Clifton H. Kees, Jr., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cubic-energy-inc-fka-roseland-oil-gas-inc-v-clifto-texapp-2004.