Energy Development Corp. v. St. Martin

112 F. App'x 952
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedOctober 11, 2004
Docket04-30098
StatusUnpublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 112 F. App'x 952 (Energy Development Corp. v. St. Martin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Energy Development Corp. v. St. Martin, 112 F. App'x 952 (5th Cir. 2004).

Opinion

JERRY E. SMITH, Circuit Judge: *

The parties are engaged in a dizzying web of interrelated lawsuits. It is therefore unfortunate, yet understandable, that in denying plaintiff’s request for an injunction that would have yielded finality, the district court relied on clearly erroneous factual assumptions. Lacking guidance from this court’s jurisprudence, the district court further misapplied applicable Supreme Court precedent in exercising its discretion. Regrettably, therefore, we reverse and remand, thereby allowing the wheels of justice to continue spinning a bit longer.

I.

The facts and proceedings are aptly described in our prior opinion, 1 so we only briefly summarize the relevant history here. Plaintiff Energy Development Corporation (“EDO”) and defendants Michael St. Martin, Virginia Rayne St. Martin, and *954 Quality Environmental Processes, Inc. (collectively, “the St. Martin Group” or “SMG”) have been engaged in a longstanding dispute over the mineral rights to a particular oilfield (the Sunrise Field) in Terrebonne Parish, Louisiana.

We greatly oversimplify by stating that SMG is the surface owner of the disputed tracts, and EDC claims mineral rights to much of the disputed land under a purported mineral servitude granted to its predecessors in 1971. SMG, for its part, also claims ownership of the minerals underlying the land. The crux of the dispute goes to whether the 1971 conveyance resulted in a valid servitude that extends to the present or whether, instead, SMG’s claim is superior.

A.

In 1998, EDC sued for a declaratory judgment establishing its mineral rights with respect to a portion of the disputed property (“the federal case”). The suit was later consolidated with an action brought when a mineral lessee of EDC and SMG deposited with the district court payments due under the leases and inter-pleaded EDC and SMG. A bench trial was held in May 2000 before Judge Schwartz, 2 who, in December 2000, granted EDC a declaratory judgment that we affirmed in the aforementioned opinion.

B.

In 1997, EDC sued in state court (Jefferson Parish), seeking a declaratory judgment that it had a valid mineral servitude on a tract of land neighboring the one at issue in the federal case, a tract of land also owned by SMG. Although that case involved a separate tract of land, it hinged on the same factual and legal issues relating to the validity of EDC’s mineral servitude.

The state court entered summary judgment for SMG in 1998, but that judgment was reversed and remanded for trial. Energy Dev. Corp. v. Quality Envtl. Processes, Inc., 734 So.2d 965 (La.App. 5th Cir.1999). On remand, the trial court found that EDC did not have a valid mineral servitude and in 1999 entered judgment in favor of SMG in December 1999. The Court of Appeal affirmed on December 12, 2000 — just eight days before the federal district court issued its opinion and just over a month before it entered judgment. The Louisiana Supreme Court denied EDC’s application for writs on March 9, 2001. 3

After judgment was entered in state court — an act with preclusive effect under Louisiana law 4 — SMG did not raise the *955 issue of res judicata with the district court, but rather waited until its appeal to this court to raise the defense, arguing that the state ruling was not binding for res judicata purposes until after all appeals had been exhausted. Energy Dev. Corp., 296 F.3d at 361. This court rejected that argument and held that SMG’s res judicata argument was not properly before the court, because it had been waived by SMG’s not raising it in the federal district court. Id. We further opined, in dictum, that the state case would not be issue-preclusive of the federal case, because its ruling on the validity of the purported mineral servitude conveyance was not essential to its decision. Id. at 362. We therefore affirmed.

C.

While all this was transpiring, three related suits sprang up in the Louisiana courts. In September 1998, the lessees of EDC and SMG brought a concursus proceeding (the Louisiana equivalent to a federal interpleader action) (“the first concursus”) in state court (Terrebonne Parish), involving yet another tract of land in dispute between the parties — not the same portion of land at issue in the Jefferson Parish case or the tracts adjudicated in the federal case. Although the trial court initially found in favor of EDC, the Louisiana Court of Appeal remanded for consideration of SMG’s res judicata claim based on the Jefferson Parish judgment. Mandalay Oil & Gas, LLC v. Energy Dev. Corp., 867 So.2d 709, 2002 WL 1434422 (La.App. 1st Cir. July 3, 2002). 5

On remand, the trial court reversed course, finding that the Jefferson Parish judgment was preclusive of the first concursus in that, despite involving different areas of land, the Jefferson Parish decision was based on the same factual and legal disputes as that at issue in the first concursus. EDC appealed, and recently, after briefing in the instant appeal was complete, the Louisiana Court of Appeal affirmed the trial court’s decision granting judgment to SMG on grounds of res judicata. Mandalay Oil & Gas, LLC v. Energy Dev. Corp., 880 So.2d 129, 2004 WL 1737466 (La.App. 1st Cir. Aug.4, 2004).

To recap, at this point, with the parties having conclusively litigated their rights to three separate neighboring tracts of land in three different courts (two state and one federal) that had considered nearly identical legal and factual disputes, one court (the federal court) had found in favor of EDC, and the two state courts had ruled for SMG. Thus, although there are inconsistencies between the factual and legal conclusions of the federal court and those of the two state courts, the cases involved different tracts of land, and thus the judgments were not incapable of being honored simultaneously. 6 The matter becomes, however, more confusing.

D.

Regarding the so-called “collateral attacks,” 7 the lessees of EDC and SMG, on *956 May 23, 2000 — four days after the trial in the federal case came to a close but before the district court’s opinion was released or judgment entered — filed another concursus proceeding in Terrebonne Parish (the “first collateral attack”). This suit pitted EDC and SMG against each other as claimants to a disputed sum. The only difference in parties between that suit (as well as the second collateral attack, discussed infra) and the federal case is that the stakeholders who initiated the concursus and interpleader actions were different.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Breen v. Knapp
E.D. Louisiana, 2022
BRENNAN'S, INC. v. Brennan
629 F. Supp. 2d 634 (S.D. Mississippi, 2009)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
112 F. App'x 952, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/energy-development-corp-v-st-martin-ca5-2004.