DOMINION EXPLORATION & PRODUCTION v. Waters

972 So. 2d 350, 2007 WL 4225778
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 14, 2007
Docket2007-CA-0386, 2007-C-0287
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 972 So. 2d 350 (DOMINION EXPLORATION & PRODUCTION v. Waters) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
DOMINION EXPLORATION & PRODUCTION v. Waters, 972 So. 2d 350, 2007 WL 4225778 (La. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

972 So.2d 350 (2007)

DOMINION EXPLORATION & PRODUCTION, INC.
v.
Kenneth M. WATERS, III, Fluids Management, Ltd., Borehole Control L.L.C. and K.W. Management, L.L.C.
Dominion Exploration & Production, Inc.
v.
Kenneth M. Waters, III, Fluids Management, Ltd., Borehole Control L.L.C. and K.W. Management, L.L.C.

Nos. 2007-CA-0386, 2007-C-0287.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.

November 14, 2007.

*353 James E. Wright III, Jones Walker Waechter Poitevent Carrere & Denegre, L.L.P., New Orleans, LA, for Plaintiff/Appellant.

Richard T. Simmons, Jr., John Shea Dixon, Hailey McNamara Hall Larmann & Papale, L.L.P., Metairie, LA, David J. Calogero, Davidson, Meaux, Sonnier & McElliogott, Lafayette, LA, and Mickey P. Landry, Landry & Swarr, L.L.C., New Orleans, LA, for Defendants/Appellees.

(Court Composed of Judge DENNIS R. BAGNERIS, SR., Judge MAX N. TOBIAS, JR., and Judge LEON A. CANNIZZARO, JR.).

MAX N. TOBIAS, JR., Judge.

The plaintiff, Dominion Exploration and Production, Inc. ("Dominion"), appeals the trial court's granting of an Exception of Prescription in favor of Defendants, Fluids Management, Ltd. ("FML"), Kenneth M. Waters, III ("Waters"), Borehole Control, L.L.C. ("Borehole"), and K.W. Management, L.L.C. ("K.W.Management") (herein after collectively "the Waters' Companies"), on the basis that the latest date prescription could have commenced was 6 April 2005, and, thus, the tort claims alleged in Dominion's Petition for Damages filed on 3 August 2006, have prescribed. The trial court dismissed all claims filed by Dominion against the Waters' Companies, as based solely in tort. The trial court likewise dismissed Dominion's tort claims and claims asserted under the Louisiana Unfair Trade Practices Act against FML and Waters.[1] For the following reasons, we affirm the trial court's judgment.

I. Background and Procedural History

The basic facts of this case are largely not in dispute. The plaintiff, Dominion, is engaged in the business of oil and gas exploration and production in Louisiana and other locations. In May 2002, Dominion, through a staffing company, Stokes and Spiehler, Inc., hired Waters as a full-time subcontractor/ consultant mud engineer responsible for overseeing and managing drilling mud programs utilized by Dominion in Louisiana. Waters worked directly with Dominion's mud engineers and was charged with the authority to make purchases of goods and services for Dominion. The defendant, FML, a vendor, is engaged in the sale of drilling fluid additives and other oil field products and services in Louisiana.

This suit, filed on 3 August 2006, arises out of Dominion's attempt to recoup monies associated with an alleged kickback scheme existing between Waters and FML that purportedly took place between September 2002 and December 2003. Specifically, in June 2002, at the direction of Waters, Dominion began using FML as a vendor for its drilling products and engineering *354 services. Six months later, in January 2003, Dominion entered into a Master Service Contract with FML, which set forth the terms governing all work and services performed by FML for Dominion.[2] Between 8 August 2002 and 12 September 2003, Dominion paid $1,744,594.38 to FML for oil field products and engineering services.

In June 2003, concerned about the high costs it was incurring for mud drilling purchases from FML pursuant to the Master Service Contract, Dominion requested a vendor audit of FML for the calendar years 2002 and 2003. The vendor audit took place on 25-26 June 2003 at FML's Houston office. Dominion's Audit Manager, James Rooney, a certified public accountant and certified fraud examiner, was specifically looking for potential conflicts of interests between FML and Dominion employees.[3] In this regard, at the outset of the audit, FML completed a written vendor audit questionnaire, which identified four Dominion employees with whom FML had contact in soliciting business from Dominion. One of the employees named was Defendant, Waters.[4] Dominion has alleged that FML did not allow it to conduct a proper vendor audit because FML only allowed Dominion access to documents Dominion already had in its possession, such as summaries of FML invoices to Dominion and records of payments made by Dominion to FML. According to Dominion, FML refused to allow review of any original entertainment and expense reports or disbursement records in order that Dominion could ascertain the existence of any potential conflicts of interest, failure to disclose, or disloyalty by any Dominion representative on any transaction between Dominion and FML. To the contrary, FML contends that it provided Dominion with access to all of its records pertaining to business FML conducted with, or was related to, Dominion.

Following the audit, on 8 July 2003, Dominion held a meeting with Waters seeking information and clarification regarding his relationship with FML. Dissatisfied with Waters' responses and the alleged development of "trust issues," Dominion terminated Waters' employment during this meeting. On the same day, Dominion terminated its Master Service Agreement with FML. The record reflects that for three years — between 8 July 2003 and 18 July 2006 — except for a single e-mail sent from Waters to his former supervisor at Dominion, James Abercrombie, in September 2003,[5] absolutely no contact *355 whatsoever was had between Dominion and Waters.

In August 2003, still trying to pursue its audit rights against FML, Dominion sought to limit the scope of its FML vendor audit by sending a letter to FML seeking specific information related to the four Dominion employees listed by FML in the vendor audit questionnaire, including information concerning FML's relationship with Waters, and two of the Waters' companies, namely, defendants, Borehole and K.W. Management. According to Dominion, FML again refused to provide all of the information requested. Dissatisfied with the information produced by FML in the audit, coupled with its belief that FML was withholding information regarding potential conflicts of interest, on 17 March 2004, Dominion filed suit against FML in the Twenty-Fourth Judicial District Court for the Parish of Jefferson to enforce its audits rights under the Master Service Contract (hereinafter "Audit Litigation").

On 6 April 2005, in response to written discovery propounded by Dominion to FML in the Audit Litigation, FML produced a set of invoices disclosing that, between 2 September 2002 and 11 December 2003, FML made payments to Waters and the Waters' Companies totaling $210,321.02. FML represented that these invoices related to consulting services, testing, mileage, and commissions on biobase product development conducted by Waters, completely unrelated to work Waters performed for Dominion. During a follow-up meeting held four months later between Dominion and FML, on 22 August 2005, FML informed Dominion that no back-up documents ever existed that would verify the legitimacy of the work performed for it by the Waters' Companies as reflected in the invoices FML had previously produced.

On 18 July 2006 — eleven months after Dominion was told that no verifying documentation for the payments ever existed, and after nearly three years of having no contact with Waters — Dominion confronted Waters with evidence of the $210,321.02 in payments. At that time, Waters admitted ownership of the Waters' Companies and to receipt of the payments from FML.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
972 So. 2d 350, 2007 WL 4225778, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dominion-exploration-production-v-waters-lactapp-2007.