Dynamic Exploration v. Sugar Bowl Gas Corp.

367 So. 2d 18
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 5, 1979
Docket12262
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 367 So. 2d 18 (Dynamic Exploration v. Sugar Bowl Gas Corp.) 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
Dynamic Exploration v. Sugar Bowl Gas Corp., 367 So. 2d 18 (La. Ct. App. 1979).

Opinion

367 So.2d 18 (1978)

DYNAMIC EXPLORATION, INC., et al., Plaintiffs and Appellees,
v.
SUGAR BOWL GAS CORPORATION, Defendant and Appellant.

No. 12262.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.

November 20, 1978.
Rehearings Denied January 16, 1979.
Writ Refused March 5, 1979.

*19 Blake G. Arata, John M. McCollam, New Orleans, for plaintiffs and appellees.

Lis Kow & Lewis, John M. Wilson, Frederick W. Bradley, New Orleans, for defendant and appellant.

Before SARTAIN, CHIASSON and EDWARDS, JJ.

CHIASSON, Judge.

By a written contract dated June 3, 1974, amended on June 16, 1976, Dynamic Exploration, Inc., Comprehensive Resources Corporation, John A. Gordon, Paul LaCoste, Robert W. Polchow, Jack V. Foster and R. L. Roundtree (hereafter collectively known as Dynamic) entered into a gas purchase agreement with Sugar Bowl Gas Corporation (Sugar Bowl) for the sale and purchase of all the natural gas produced from specified mineral leases owned and/or controlled by Dynamic. During July of 1976 Sugar Bowl discovered that through error it had overpaid Dynamic for gas delivered to Sugar Bowl during the period from July, 1974 through May 31, 1976. Sugar Bowl recovered its overpayment by set-off against the amount owed to Dynamic for gas purchased during the months of June, July, August, September and October of 1976. In August, Dynamic brought a mandamus action against Sugar Bowl under the provision of La.R.S. 31:21 but amended its proceedings in October of 1976 to an ordinary proceeding against Sugar Bowl to recover the amount due for the months of June, July, August, September and October of 1976. Sugar Bowl answered the petition asserting the overpayment and pleading set-off as an affirmative defense. Sugar Bowl also filed a reconventional demand based on its claim for overpayment seeking a judgment for the full amount of overpayment should its set-off be denied and any money awarded Dynamic.

There are two time periods involved in this litigation, one is July 1974 through *20 June 1975 and the other is July 1975 through May 1976. These times are important relative to the error made and to the interpretation of a particular clause in the contract. The error that Sugar Bowl discovered in July of 1976 was its use of the wrong orifice coefficient in the formula utilized to compute the quantity of gas purchased. This incorrect orifice coefficient had been used from the time of the first delivery of gas to Sugar Bowl in July of 1974. Thus from July of 1974 until its discovery in July of 1976, the error caused Sugar Bowl to overpay Dynamic the sum of $294,702.65.

Trial was held on January 14, 1977 and the court took the matter under advisement. On March 14, 1978, the trial court rendered judgment and assigned written reasons. Sugar Bowl was required to pay Dynamic $198,005.62 on the following basis:

1. Sugar Bowl could not question the accuracy of its computations for the period of July 1974 through June 1975 because of a contractual provision and because of Sugar Bowl's negligence in causing the error and therefore Dynamic was entitled to $162,480.15.
2. Dynamic was allowed to recover only $26,598.58 paid to royalty owners and $8,926.89 paid in severance taxes to the State for the period of July 1975 through May 1976 since the money Sugar Bowl overpaid in this period occurred during the year preceding Sugar Bowl's discovery of the error.

The trial court also denied Sugar Bowl's reconventional demand. It is from this judgment that Sugar Bowl appeals. Dynamic answered the appeal seeking an increase in the award.

Sugar Bowl specified eight separate errors which we have listed as follows:

1. The district court erred in construing subparagraph (h) of Article B-I of the contract as applying to volume calculations of the nature in which the error at issue in this case was made, and in applying subparagraph (h) against Sugar Bowl so as to deny to it the recoupment of the amount paid by it through error to Dynamic.
2. The district court erred, even under its own construction of subparagraph (h) by allowing Sugar Bowl to recover the erroneous overpayment only for the most recent eleven month period, rather than for a twelve month period.
3. The district court erred in finding that Sugar Bowl failed to pay plaintiffs for natural gas it received from them during the months of June, July, August, September and October, 1976, in that the evidence before the court showed that said natural gas had been paid for in effect in advance by Sugar Bowl.
4. The district court erred in finding, without citing any factual basis, that one of Sugar Bowl's employees was negligent in her computation of the volume of gas delivered, and in finding that her superiors in the company were negligent in not properly supervising her work and checking the accuracy of her calculations.
5. The district court erred in holding that negligence on the part of Sugar Bowl would preclude it from recovering amounts paid to Dynamic through error.
6. The district court erred in considering evidence of a 1975 audit of records regarding Btu content of gas as bearing upon the question of negligence in making or perpetuating the error at issue in this lawsuit, in that such information is irrelevant to the question of negligence regarding the second error, and in that the district court ruled that evidence regarding other errors was irrelevant unless a pattern of negligence could be established.
7. The district court erred in denying to Sugar Bowl its recoupment of those amounts erroneously paid to Dynamic between July, 1975 and May, 1976 which were purportedly paid by Dynamic to third parties (i. e. $26,598.58 to royalty owners and $8,926.89 to the State of Louisiana as severance taxes), in that Dynamic failed to prove with certainty that these amounts were paid to such third parties and were not or could not be recovered from said third parties.
*21 8. The district court erred in failing to hold that Dynamic did not properly mitigate its damages, and in failing to hold that because of the failure to mitigate damages, Dynamic is not entitled to recover the damages sought.

In its answer to Sugar Bowl's appeal, Dynamic contends that Sugar Bowl's negligence in causing the error precludes Sugar Bowl from recovering any portion of the overpayment and prays that its award be increased to the full amount of the overpayment.

Because the error made by Sugar Bowl is so interrelated with the contractual obligations of the parties, some background information is necessary to lay the foundation for the dispute. This litigation revolves around the measurement of natural gas. Individual residences have a positive displacement meter that actually measures the volume of gas flowing into the home for use. However, gas measurement at the well site is a different process. The equipment installed in the field is of a different nature than that in a home. Initially certain basic information must be recorded and gathered to obtain the measurement of gas. This data is obtained by equipment attached at or near the well. The equipment will measure pressure base, pressure, temperature, flow temperature, the range of the static pressure gauge, the range of the differential pressure gauge, the type rotation on the clock, the orifice size and the meter tube. This raw data then has to be adjusted.

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