E. & J. Gallo v. Encana Corporation

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 19, 2007
Docket05-17352
StatusPublished

This text of E. & J. Gallo v. Encana Corporation (E. & J. Gallo v. Encana Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
E. & J. Gallo v. Encana Corporation, (9th Cir. 2007).

Opinion

FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT

E. & J. GALLO WINERY,  Plaintiff-Appellee, v. No. 05-17352 ENCANA CORPORATION, formerly known as PANCANADIAN ENERGY  D.C. No. CV-03-05412-AWI CORPORATION; WD ENERGY OPINION SERVICES INC., formerly known as ENCANA ENERGY SERVICES, Defendants-Appellants.  Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of California Anthony W. Ishii, District Judge, Presiding

Argued and Submitted February 13, 2007—San Francisco, California

Filed September 19, 2007

Before: Betty B. Fletcher, Richard R. Clifton, and Sandra S. Ikuta, Circuit Judges.

Opinion by Judge Ikuta

12523 E. & J. GALLO WINERY v. ENCANA CORP. 12527

COUNSEL

Richard P. Levy, David A. Battaglia, James P. Fogelman, Julian W. Poon and J. Christopher Jennings, Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher, LLP, Los Angeles, California, for defendant- appellant EnCana Corporation formerly known as Pan- Canadian Energy Corporation; WD Energy Services, Inc., for- merly known as EnCana Energy Services.

Joseph W. Cotchett, Frank M. Pitre, Steven N. Williams, and Barbara L. Lyons, Cotchett, Pitre, Simon & McCarthy, Bur- lingame, California; D. Greg Durbin and Timothy J. Buchanan, McCormick, Barstow, Sheppard, Wayte & Car- ruth, LLP, Fresno, California; G. Kip Edwards, Kings Beach, California, for plaintiff-appellee E. & J. Gallo Winery.

OPINION

IKUTA, Circuit Judge:

E. & J. Gallo Winery (“Gallo”) alleged that EnCana Corp., a natural gas supplier, and WD Energy Services, Inc., a wholly-owned marketing subsidiary of EnCana Corp. (collec- tively “EnCana”), along with multiple unnamed coconspira- tors, inflated the price Gallo paid for natural gas through their violations of state and federal antitrust laws. EnCana sought summary judgment on the ground that the filed rate doctrine and federal preemption bar Gallo’s claims as a matter of law. The district court denied EnCana’s summary judgment motion. We have jurisdiction over this interlocutory appeal pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b), and we now affirm the dis- trict court. 12528 E. & J. GALLO WINERY v. ENCANA CORP. I

GALLO’S CLAIMS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Gallo is a wine producer and distributor headquartered in California that purchased natural gas for use in its wineries and glass plant. During the period between June 1, 2000, and December 31, 2001, Gallo purchased its gas at the California border market known as PG&E Citygate from EnCana, an energy trader.1 During this period, the purchase and sale con- tract between Gallo and EnCana did not specify how the par- ties would calculate the price of the natural gas. However, both parties concede that, as a matter of practice, the purchase price was pegged to indices published in two trade publica- tions, Natural Gas Intelligence (“NGI”) and Gas Daily.

Beginning in the summer of 2000, both natural gas and electricity prices at the California border markets were subject to widespread manipulation by energy traders that dramati- cally raised the price of natural gas. See FINAL REPORT ON PRICE MANIPULATION IN WESTERN MARKETS (“FINAL REPORT”), FEDERAL ENERGY REGULATORY COMMISSION (2003). One of the key elements of the market misconduct was the manipulation of prices reported to private indices published by natural gas trade publications. These indices, including NGI and Gas Daily, reported the sales price for wholesale transactions at market rates. As explained by the district court:

The indices published in the NGI or the Gas Daily Index are closely linked to rates, but are not rates themselves. The published index represents a compi- lation of submitted and verified information gathered from voluntary submissions of trading activity and is published as a price representing trading activity at each location. 1 Natural gas is transported from producing basins in the Western and Central portion of the United States and Canada into California at four dif- ferent border pipeline points called “Citygates.” E. & J. GALLO WINERY v. ENCANA CORP. 12529 E. & J. Gallo Winery v. EnCana Corp., No. CV-F-03-5412 #AWI-LJO, 2005 WL 2435900 at *19 (E.D. Cal. Sept. 30, 2005) (memorandum order and opinion denying defendant’s motion for summary judgement).

Buyers and sellers relied on these indices to determine the market price for natural gas transactions. See FINAL REPORT, at III-17. However, there was neither a formal process for reporting pricing data to the publishers of the indices, nor any oversight by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (“FERC”), which has jurisdiction over certain natural gas wholesale transactions. See E. & J. Gallo Winery, 2005 WL 2435900, at *19. The process by which the prices in natural gas transactions were reported to the publishers of indices was left largely to the traders themselves. After investigating the operation of the indices, FERC explained that:

[M]ost of the largest natural gas marketing compa- nies in the country had no formal process for report- ing trade data to the publishers of the price indices; the process was left to the trading desks and the trad- ers themselves. Traders from all companies describe a typical trading day as hectic, pressure packed, and frenetic. One of their many tasks was to report trad- ing data to the Trade Press; this was viewed as both- ersome but necessary. Often it was a job given to the newest employee. Many companies report passing around a form or using a spreadsheet on a shared drive. The last person who filled out the form or spreadsheet may have been required to total the numbers and send them to the Trade Press. There was nothing to stop a trader from changing the num- bers someone else had entered. In other cases, trad- ers took an oral “survey” to get a sense of where the market was trading. Sometimes they represented it to the Trade Press as an actual survey, but in other cases they made up trades to average out to a number that was consistent with this “survey.” 12530 E. & J. GALLO WINERY v. ENCANA CORP. FINAL REPORT, at III-29. Thus, despite their wide use as refer- ence points in pricing natural gas sales and derivatives, including most of the transactions subject to FERC’s jurisdic- tional authority, the information used to calculate the indices was reported in a less than meticulous manner. Not only were the indices ripe for manipulation, but also FERC’s investiga- tion confirmed that such abuse actually occurred. Market par- ticipants had provided false reports of natural gas prices and trade volumes, and had engaged in other misconduct. Id. at ES-1-ES-6.

As a purchaser in the wholesale market, Gallo alleges it was affected by the widespread price manipulation identified by FERC in such markets. Specifically, Gallo claims that EnCana and its competitors engaged in a number of illegal practices designed to manipulate the indices, including agree- ing to set the “basis”2 price of natural gas at an inflated rate, misreporting natural gas prices paid to the indices, and engag- ing in “wash trades.”3 Because Gallo paid EnCana for natural gas at rates pegged to the indices, Gallo claims it was injured by the illegal practices that artificially inflated the indices. Gallo seeks to recover as damages the amount it was over- charged due to the allegedly illegal conduct. Gallo states it can establish its damages by determining a hypothetical fair index price and then subtracting that price from the actual price Gallo paid for natural gas.

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E. & J. Gallo v. Encana Corporation, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/e-j-gallo-v-encana-corporation-ca9-2007.