Exxon Corporation v. Laurie T. Miesch

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 29, 2005
Docket13-00-00104-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Exxon Corporation v. Laurie T. Miesch (Exxon Corporation v. Laurie T. Miesch) 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
Exxon Corporation v. Laurie T. Miesch, (Tex. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

                                    NUMBER 13-00-104-CV

                                 COURT OF APPEALS

                     THIRTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

                         CORPUS CHRISTI B EDINBURG

EXXON CORPORATION, ET AL.,                                                  Appellants,

                                                             v.

LAURIE T. MIESCH, ET AL.,                                                           Appellees.

                    On appeal from the 135th District Court

                                        of Refugio County, Texas.

                                                O P I N I O N

     Before Chief Justice Valdez and Justices Hinojosa and Castillo

      Opinion by Chief Justice Valdez


This appeal follows a jury trial in an oil and gas case.  Emerald Oil & Gas, L.C. (AEmerald@), a subsequent lessee, and intervening royalty interest owners[1] brought suit against Exxon Corp. and Exxon Texas, Inc., as successor in interest to Humble Oil & Refining Co. (AExxon@), for wrongful conduct in the development and abandonment of oil and gas wells in the Mary Ellen O=Connor Field, near Refugio, Texas.  The trial court granted Exxon=s motion for directed verdict and entered a take-nothing judgment against Emerald.[2]  The jury found in favor of the royalty interest owners on their causes of action against Exxon for waste and breach of contract and awarded the intervenors both actual and punitive damages.  The trial court entered judgment in accordance with the verdict.  All parties have appealed.  The judgment is affirmed in part and reversed in part.    

                                                                  I.  Background

Exxon leased the mineral interests on several thousand acres, the Mary Ellen O'Connor Field, near Refugio, Texas.  Exxon's interest in the property spanned four decades beginning in the 1950's and was derived from four separate leases.[3]  The leases are atypical of many oil and gas leases in some respects.  They include, for instance, an unusually high fifty percent royalty obligation and stringent surrender clauses.


Beginning in the early 1970s, Exxon attempted to negotiate a reduction in its fifty percent royalty obligation on the field.  Exxon owned an interest in a contiguous tract operated by Quintana, and its royalty obligation on that tract was substantially lower and thus more favorable for Exxon.  Exxon told the royalty interest owners that the Mary Ellen O=Connor Field was no longer economical to operate, although Exxon continued production on the adjacent tract operated by Quintana.   

In considering Exxon=s request for a reduction in royalty interest, the royalty owners requested that Exxon provide them information and documentation regarding the productivity of the field.  Under the terms of the leases, the lessors were entitled to Afull information@ covering all operations, including logs, reports, analyses, data, and information concerning oil and gas potentialities for the field. 

Exxon initially refused to provide the royalty interest owners information on  grounds that it was proprietary, then that the information would be too difficult to locate and retrieve, and finally, that the information would be made available only if a confidentiality agreement were signed.  Nevertheless, Exxon ultimately provided the royalty interest owners a Areading room@ containing documentation on the field.  The reading room, however, did not contain all information on the field:  Exxon did not include any interpretive data and did not include all of the well logs for the field.  Some data on the field was not produced until discovery in the instant lawsuit, and some data, including calculations made by Exxon employee Joel Wylie regarding the productivity of the field and some of the well logs, was missing even at the time of trial.


The royalty interest owners suggested several options in renegotiating the terms of the lease.  One of the options was a lower royalty obligation that would increase if productivity on the field increased.  Exxon refused.  After the failure of additional negotiations, the royalty interest owners began looking for a new lessee for the field.  Exxon initially refused to allow another operator to take over the lease without a release.  All negotiations ultimately proved unsuccessful.  Accordingly, Exxon plugged and abandoned the wells. 

Emerald became interested in leasing a portion of the tract originally leased by Exxon. 

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Exxon Corporation v. Laurie T. Miesch, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/exxon-corporation-v-laurie-t-miesch-texapp-2005.