Energy Transfer v. Culberson Midstream

2024 Tex. Bus. 1
CourtTexas Business Court
DecidedOctober 30, 2024
Docket24-BC01B-0005
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 2024 Tex. Bus. 1 (Energy Transfer v. Culberson Midstream) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Business Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Energy Transfer v. Culberson Midstream, 2024 Tex. Bus. 1 (Tex. Super. Ct. 2024).

Opinion

E-filed in the Office of the Clerk for the Business Court of Texas

10/30/2024 10:46 AM

Accepted by: Beverly Crumley Case Number: 24-BC01B-0005

The Business Court of Texas, 1st Division

ENERGY TRANSFER LP (formerly known as ENERGY TRANSFER OPERATING, L.P.) and ETC TEXAS PIPELINE LTD., Plaintiffs,

V.

CULBERSON MIDSTREAM LLC, CULBERSON MIDSTREAM EQUITY, LLC, MOONTOWER RESOURCES GATHERINGS, LLC, MOONTOWER RESOURCES OPERATING, LLC, and MOONTOWER RESOURCES WI, LLC, Defendants

Cause No. 24-BC01B-0005

PM (Or OM GM MD GG ) GH GH WP

OPINION AND ORDER

Before the court is defendants’ motion to remand this case.! The court

grants that motion because plaintiffs filed this suit on April 8, 2022, but this

1 Although defendants’ October 10, 2024, filings is captioned, “Defendants’ Brief in Support of Remand,” their conclusion and prayer objects to this court’s authority to hear this case and asked this court to remand the case to the district court. Because the defendants’ brief in support of remand is in substance a motion to remand, the court treats court does not have authority over cases filed before September 1, 2024. Act of May 25, 2023, 88th Leg., R.S., ch. 380, §§ 8, 2023 Tex. Sess. Law Serv. 919, 929 (H.B. 19).

I. Background On April 8, 2022, Energy Transfer LP; Energy Transfer Operating, L.P.;

and ETC Texas Pipeline, Ltd. sued Culberson Midstream LLC; Culberson Midstream Equity, LLC; and Moontower Resources Gathering, LLC in the 193rd_ District Court of Dallas, Texas. Plaintiffs asserted declaratory judgment and contract breach claims regarding a gas gathering and processing agreement. Thereafter, the defendants appeared. The district court’s docket sheet shows fifty-seven pages of district and appellate court activity from April 8, 2022, until August 31, 2024.

Plaintiffs removed the case to this court on September 30, 2024. Their removal appendix filed the next day contains eighteen volumes spread over six .pdf files. They later filed supplemental appendices.

On October 1st, this court requested briefs regarding what effect H.B.

19, § 8 has on this court’s authority to hear this case. H.B. 19, § 1’s operative

it as such. Verburgt v. Dorner, 959 S.W.2d 615, 617 (Tex. 1997) (treat a pleading’s substance over form).

Opinion and Order, Page 2 sections are codified as Government Code §§ 25A.001-25A.020. Gov’T CODE §§ 25A.001-25A.020.

Nine days later, defendants moved for remand asserting two arguments: (i) this case is not removable under § 25A.006 because H.B. 19, § 8’s plain text means that chapter 25A is restricted to actions commenced on or after September 1, 2024, thus precluding application to this 2022 case; and (ii) applying H.B. 19 retroactively would be unconstitutional.

Plaintiffs responded with these arguments:

First, the plain text of H.B. 19, § 8 shows no prohibition to the

removal of cases, only an affirmation of this Court’s ability to start accepting cases on September 1, 2024.

Second, H.B. 19 (including § 8) is a procedural, as opposed to substantive, statute; accordingly, its removal process should apply to ongoing, pre-September 1, 2024 [sic] cases.

And third, when the Legislature has excluded cases of a certain age from a new statutory scheme, it used specific language that is not in H.B. 19, § 8.

Defendants replied with statutory text, a public policy, legislative history, and other arguments. Neither side contends that there are disputed fact issues, and the court

does not find any. Nor do the parties contend that H.B. 19 is ambiguous on

Opinion and Order, Page 3 this issue, and the court does not discern any such ambiguity. Finally, no party requested oral argument.

II. Analysis

A. Overview The issue is whether H.B. 19, § 8 restricts the court’s authority to act to cases commenced on or after September 1, 2024, as defendants contend, or whether § 8 marks the date when the court can begin accepting cases, as plaintiffs contend. For the following reasons, the court concludes that § 8 serves both purposes. Thus, the court lacks authority to hear this 2022 case. B. Applicable Law This is a statutory construction issue, which is a legal question. In re Panchakarla, 602 S.W.3d 536, 540 (Tex. 2020) (orig. proceeding). The applicable principles are: When a statute’s language is unambiguous, “we adopt the interpretation supported by its plain language unless such an interpretation would lead to absurd results.” “We presume the Legislature included each word in the statute for a purpose and that words not included were purposefully omitted.” We construe statutes and related provisions as a whole, not in isolation, .. ., and as a general proposition, we are hesitant to

conclude that a trial court’s jurisdiction is curtailed absent manifestation of legislative intent to that effect, .. ..

Id. (citations omitted).

Opinion and Order, Page 4 On June 9, 2023, Governor Abbott signed H.B. 19. H.B. 19, § 1 states:

SECTION 1. Subtitle A, Title 2, Government Code, is amended by adding Chapter 25A to read as follows: ....

H.B. 19, § 1. Thereafter, H.B. 19, § 1 adds twenty sections regarding the business court’s operation, including §§ 25A.004 and 25A.006 concerning the court’s jurisdiction, removal, and remand rules.

Under § 25A.006(f)(1), a party may file an unagreed removal notice within thirty days after it discovered, or reasonably should have discovered, facts establishing the business court’s jurisdiction over the case. GOV’T CoDE, § 25A.006(f)(1). Based on this section, plaintiffs contend that their removal is timely because they filed their notice within thirty days after September 1, 2024, when the court’s jurisdiction became effective.

But H.B. 19 has seven other enabling provisions, including §§ 8 and 9:

SECTION 8. The changes in the law made by this Act Apply to civil actions commenced on or after September 1, 2024.

SECTION 9. This Act takes effect September 1, 2023.

Because plaintiffs first and third arguments are related, the court

addresses them together.

Opinion and Order, Page 5 C. H.B.19’s plain text is dispositive.

1. The Statute’s Plain Text

Section 25A.006 permits removal of cases to the business court if the case meets business court jurisdictional requirements. Id. § 25A.006((d)-(h). But § 25A.006 does not address whether cases, like this one, filed before September 1, 2024, are removable. Nor does any other part of chapter 25A. Rather, one must consider H.B. 19 as a whole to resolve that issue. Sections 8 and 9 provide that resolution.

Section 9 establishes that the statute became effective on September 1, 2023. That is, § 9 was the start date for ramping up this brand-new court to begin hearing cases. Based on § 9 alone, Government Code § 25A.006 would appear to allow parties to remove pending cases to this court beginning on September 1, 2023. But removals were not practical then because on that date this court had no court space, judges, staff, equipment, supplies, systems, rules, and other things needed to function. So, the legislature provided one- year for the court to become ready to begin accepting cases. H.B. 19, § 8 is

that authorizing statute.

Opinion and Order, Page 6 Section 8 does more than set the court’s first operational date. If that were all that § 8 does, it would read, “The court may begin accepting cases beginning on September 1, 2024.” But that is not what § 8 says.

Rather, § 8 also limits H.B. 19’s changes to the law to cases commenced on or after September 1, 2024—a full year after the statute’s effective date.

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Bluebook (online)
2024 Tex. Bus. 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/energy-transfer-v-culberson-midstream-texbizct-2024.