Emmer v. Phillips Petroleum Co.

668 S.W.2d 487, 1984 Tex. App. LEXIS 5287
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 28, 1984
Docket07-82-0047-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by46 cases

This text of 668 S.W.2d 487 (Emmer v. Phillips Petroleum Co.) 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.

Bluebook
Emmer v. Phillips Petroleum Co., 668 S.W.2d 487, 1984 Tex. App. LEXIS 5287 (Tex. Ct. App. 1984).

Opinion

COUNTISS, Justice.

This is a contract dispute. Miriam Em-mer, as trustee, and her brother, M.J. Rubin, appellants and hereafter collectively “the Rubins,” sued Phillips Petroleum Company, hereafter “Phillips," to recover damages resulting from Phillips’ use of gas compressors jointly owned by the parties. The trial court granted a summary judgment to Phillips. In this Court, the Rubins attack that judgment by six points of error. We reverse and remand.

We construct the following factual background from the summary judgment evidence. The Rubins’ father, Dave Rubin, conveyed an interest to Phillips in two gas compressors, and he and Phillips entered into a series of agreements governing the joint ownership and use of the compressors. As pertinent here, they agreed in a written contract dated May 6, 1960, on the use of the compressors to compress gas from a leasehold characterized as the Burnett lease. In the May 6 contract the parties recognized that the need for the compression facilities would lessen as the volume of gas available from the Burnett lease declined. Thus, the contract stated:

When any equipment is no longer needed or becomes unprofitable in the judgment of Phillips, such equipment shall be salvaged and the proceeds thereof divided equally between the parties hereto; provided, however, that at any time such equipment is proposed to be salvaged Phillips shall have the option, to be exercised within thirty days following notice of intent to salvage such equipment, to purchase Second Party’s interest in such equipment for a price equal to the fair market value of such equipment.

Additionally, the parties agreed to jointly share maintenance and repair expenses on the compressors.

Rubin and Phillips also agreed on the period for which the contract was to be in force, as follows:

This Agreement shall be effective from and after the date hereof and shall continue in force and effect so long as Phillips purchases gas from the above described lands and leases pursuant to said Assignment and Agreement, as amended.

Pursuant to a letter dated June 8, 1962, Rubin and Phillips amended the May 6, 1960 contract. Under the June 8 amendment, Phillips was permitted to use the compressors to compress gas from sources other than the Burnett lease, “during the term of the Amended Agreement,” i. e., the *489 May 6 contract. Phillips agreed to pay Rubin $.05 per MCF “for all gas compressed and delivered to Phillips in such compression facilities. 1

In February of 1976, after the Rubins had acquired their father’s interest in the contract, Phillips advised them it was planning to plug and abandon the active wells on the Burnett lease. Subsequently, in July of 1976, Phillips advised the Rubins that all wells on the lease had been plugged, that the compressors had lost money in May, 1976, because of maintenance costs, and that additional maintenance would be required because of the age of the compressors. Phillips also offered to buy the Rubins’ interest in the compressors. The Rubins did not respond to the offer, but, in September of 1976, requested an accounting of the earnings from the compressors for April through September of 1976.

Phillips continued to operate the compressors until mid-1978, compressing gas from other leases and crediting the Rubins at the rate of $.05 per MCF. Because maintenance costs and expenses exceeded the credit, the compressors lost money virtually every month during that time and the Rubins paid their proportionate share of the loss each month. In mid-1978, the Rubins requested termination of the operation. Phillips complied, and subsequently purchased the Rubins’ interest in the compressors.

The Rubins then filed this suit, alleging various acts of misconduct by, and reasons to recover money from, Phillips. For purposes of this appeal, however, we are concerned only with the Rubins’ quantum me-ruit allegations. The Rubins’ alleged that the May 6 contract expired by its own terms in late 1975, when Phillips stopped purchasing gas from the Burnett lease. From this premise the Rubins argue that compensation for all subsequent use of the compressors was not governed by the $.05 per MCF price specified in the May 6 contract; rather, they were entitled to be compensated in quantum meruit for the reasonable market value of the compression services, alleged to be $.25 per MCF. Thus, say the Rubins, the compressors operated at a substantial profit, not a loss, during the 1976-78 time frame in question and they are entitled to recover their share of that profit from Phillips.

Phillips responded with defensive pleadings and, after the parties participated in various discovery proceedings, moved for summary judgment. Phillips advanced various grounds in support of the motion, but predicated the entire motion on the contention that all operations during the period of time in question were conducted under or governed by the 1960 agreement and that it had fully complied with that agreement.

The Rubins responded, as pertinent here, by contending that the 1960 agreement expired when Phillips stopped compressing gas from the Burnett lease and that they were thereafter entitled to be compensated at a compression rate based on reasonable fair market conditions. M.J. Rubin swore that the “fair market value of the compression services rendered would have been at $.25/mcf, yielding a profit to Plaintiff Em-mer of $58,362.92 and to Plaintiff Rubin of $29,681.46.”

In this Court, the Rubins contend by their third and fourth points of error, that Phillips failed to establish the absence of, and that there was, a fact issue on their right to be compensated at the rate of $.25 per MCF, rather than $.05 per MCF for compression services rendered after expiration of the contract. Because we have concluded that those points are determinative of this appeal, we will resolve them first.

The issues before us must be resolved within the framework of settled principles of summary judgment law. 2 A movant earns a summary judgment by es *490 tablishing (1) the absence of genuine issues of material fact and (2) the right to judgment under those undisputed material facts, as a matter of law, on grounds expressly stated in the motion. Tex.R.Civ. Pro. 166-A(c); Delgado v. Burns, 656 S.W.2d 428, 429 (Tex.1983); Whiddon v. Metni, 650 S.W.2d 904, 905 (Tex.App.—Dallas 1983, writ ref’d n.r.e.). The movant, against whom all doubts are resolved, has the burden of establishing both elements, City of Houston v. Clear Creek Basin Authority, 589 S.W.2d 671, 678 (Tex.1979), and, when the defendant is the movant, summary judgment is proper only if the plaintiff cannot, as a matter of law, succeed upon any theory plead. Peirce v. Sheldon Petroleum Co., 589 S.W.2d 849, 852 (Tex.Civ.App.—Amarillo 1979, no writ).

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Bluebook (online)
668 S.W.2d 487, 1984 Tex. App. LEXIS 5287, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/emmer-v-phillips-petroleum-co-texapp-1984.