Dyco Petroleum Corp. v. Mesa Operating Co.

3 F. App'x 951
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 26, 2001
Docket98-6328, 98-6400, 98-6329, 98-6399
StatusUnpublished

This text of 3 F. App'x 951 (Dyco Petroleum Corp. v. Mesa Operating Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dyco Petroleum Corp. v. Mesa Operating Co., 3 F. App'x 951 (10th Cir. 2001).

Opinion

ORDER AND JUDGMENT *

HOLLOWAY, Circuit Judge.

I

Plaintiff/appellant Dyco Petroleum Corporation (Dyco) brought the original action against defendant/appellee Mesa Operating Company (Mesa) and defendant/appellee Hillin-Simon Oil Company (HSOC). Jurisdiction in the district court was based on diversity of citizenship and the requisite amount in controversy under 28 U.S.C. § 1332. In that action, Dyco sought declaratory relief, alleging that one (or both) of the defendants was liable for gas balancing obligations arising from Mesa’s overproduction from the Jarvis No. 1-10 Well (the Jarvis well) located in Beckham County, Oklahoma. Mesa filed a third-party claim for indemnity against appellant Samson Resources Company (Samson). Mesa and HSOC filed cross-claims against each other.

On motions for summary judgment, the district court held in favor of Mesa on Dyco’s claim and on HSOC’s cross-claim. HSOC filed a motion to reconsider or amend the first decision. In that motion, HSOC contended that it should have judgment in its favor on Dyco’s claim based on the rationale underlying the decision in favor of Mesa, which was that Dyco had been paid for the gas imbalance out of which its claim arose. The district court granted that motion of HSOC.

These decisions disposed of almost all of the issues in the case; there remained only a claim by Dyco against HSOC for unpaid billings in an amount of approximately $10,000, which Dyco dismissed without prejudice. Dyco and Samson then appealed from the district court’s order in favor of Mesa on the primary gas imbalance claims of Dyco in the case (No. 98-6328), and HSOC also appealed (No. 98-6329). We determined that Dyco’s dismissal without prejudice of the final, unadjudicated claim was probably insufficient to achieve a final, appealable order, see Heimann v. Snead, 133 F.3d 767 (10th Cir.1998), and tolled briefing in the case while allowing the parties thirty days in which to obtain either entry of judgment in the district court under Fed.R.Civ.P. 54(b) or a final, dispositive adjudication. The district court then entered judgment pursuant to Rule 54(b), thereby rendering the prematurely filed notices of appeal effective. See Lewis v. B.F. Goodrich Co., 850 F.2d 641 (10th Cir.1988) (en banc). Nevertheless, out of an apparent abundance of caution, new notices of appeal were filed following the district court’s entry of judgment (Nos. 98-6399 & 98-6400). We consolidated all four appeals and exercising jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291 now dispose of them all in this order and judgment.

II

Most of the relevant facts are undisputed. Dyco was the operator of the Jarvis well, which began producing in 1984. *954 Dyco and the other parties having interests in the Jarvis well had entered into a joint operating agreement (JOA) of a type which is common in the industry. (Indeed, the JOA for the Jarvis well is based on a standardized form.) The instant lawsuit arises from provisions for gas balancing and cash balancing which are often included in such agreements. It is undisputed that Mesa had “overproduced” its working interest in the Jarvis well, ia, that it had sold more than its proportionate share of gas produced from the well. 1 Accordingly, Dyco (and any other “underproduced” working interest owner) had a right under the JOA to gas balancing from Mesa’s share of future production, and in the event that production proved insufficient to make Dyco whole through gas balancing before depletion of the well, to “cash balancing” to recover the amount by which Dyco’s receipts fell short of its proportionate share. Cash balancing in this context means a payment of cash sufficient to increase Dyco’s receipts and correspondingly decrease Mesa’s receipts to the point that the receipts of each from the total produced and sold were proportionate to the interest each owned in the well.

The relationships among the parties in the instant case became more complicated, however, as a result of subsequent transactions. The first such event was Mesa’s sale of its interest in the Jarvis well to HSOC in February 1988 (the HSOC assignment). It is alleged that Mesa did not inform HSOC of Mesa’s liability for overproduction from the Jarvis well at that time. In 1991, Mesa sold its interests in a number of producing wells to Samson; that transaction was effected by a contract titled Purchase and Sale Agreement (PSA). Apparently because the sheer number of interests being transferred under the PSA made the transaction quite complex, the PSA included a provision for a “post-closing period,” during which adjustments would be made to the purchase price as the parties determined the volume and value of the overproduction from the wells included in the transaction. Order On Pending Motions at 6, K10, IV Aplt. App. 953, 958. It appears that at the time it entered into the PSA, Mesa failed to realize that it had previously sold its Jarvis well interest to HSOC, and Dyco was unaware of the HSOC assignment. In any event, in the PSA the parties assigned a value of minus $170,002 to Mesa’s interest in the Jarvis well, reflecting Mesa’s liability for balancing to compensate for its overproduction. Ill Aplt. App. 584.

In June 1991, after an affiliate of Samson had acquired the stock of Dyco, Samson became the operator of the Jarvis well. In July 1991, HSOC notified Samson of its 1988 acquisition of Mesa’s interest in the Jarvis well. Both of these events occurred during the post-closing period for the PSA. On September 30, 1991, during the post-closing period, and in accordance with a term of the PSA, Samson prepared and signed a document certifying the accuracy of an amended schedule of assets covered by the PSA and any associated gas balancing claims or liabilities. That schedule also listed the Jarvis well, with its net imbalance. Ill Aplt. App. 644, 651; IV Aplt. App. 959. This certificate was given by Samson after it had knowledge of the HSOC assignment.

In February 1993, Mesa entered into a settlement agreement (the Settlement Agreement) with Samson, Dyco, and another Samson affiliate, to resolve a number of disputes, including disputes over gas *955 balancing adjustments to the purchase price under the PSA. The Settlement Agreement included the following specific provision as to gas balancing obligations: “Any and all payments relating to gas imbalances as between [Mesa] and Samson as required by the terms of the [PSA] are hereby deemed to be fully paid and completely satisfied and settled.Ill Aplt. App. 660. The Settlement Agreement also provided that the written document represents the whole understanding of Sellers (Mesa et al.) and Samson as to only matters recited therein and that the Agreement shall not affect any obligation of Sellers and Samson except as set forth in the Agreement.

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Bluebook (online)
3 F. App'x 951, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dyco-petroleum-corp-v-mesa-operating-co-ca10-2001.