Fairfield Industries, Inc. v. EP Energy E&P Co.

531 S.W.3d 234
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 6, 2017
DocketNO. 14-15-00586-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 531 S.W.3d 234 (Fairfield Industries, Inc. v. EP Energy E&P 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
Fairfield Industries, Inc. v. EP Energy E&P Co., 531 S.W.3d 234 (Tex. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

OPINION

Kem Thompson Frost, Chief Justice

A licensor of seismic data brought suit against the licensee alleging that the licensee breached the license agreement by (1) failing to pay a fee the agreement required the licensee to pay after a change' of control of an entity that controls the licensee, (2) disclosing data in violation of the license agreement, and (3) failing to affix warning labels to the data as required by the license agreement. The trial • court granted the licensee’s, summary-judgment motion and dismissed the licensor’s claims. Concluding that the trial court erred in granting summary judgment as to the first claim, we reverse and remand as to that cláim and affirm the remainder of the judgment,

I. Factual and Procedural Background

Appellant/plaintiff Fairfield Industries, Inc. d/b/a FairfieldNodal collects and processes seismic data and then licenses that data to oil and gas companies. In contracting with a customer-licensee, Fairfield generally enters into a Master License Agreement, which provides the terms and conditions under which Fairfield licenses data to the customer-licensee. The Master License Agreement itself does not obligate customers to purchase data, nor does it obligate Fairfield to provide data. Rather, customers sign “Supplement Agreements” to the Master License Agreement under which the parties specify the data licensed and the license fee to be paid to license the data under the terms of the Master License Agreement. From 1990 through 2010, Fairfield entered into a number of Master License Agreements with appel-lee/defendant EP Energy E&P Company, L.P. fiW El Paso E&P Company, L.P. and its predecessors in interest. During this period Fairfield licensed to EP Energy and its predecessors a substantial amount of seismic data through Supplement Agreements to these Master License Agreements.

The Agreement

Fairfield and EP Energy executed a Master License Agreement as of May 22, 2007 (the “Agreement”). In this contract, the parties agreed that all prior Master License Agreements between Fairfield and [239]*239EP Energy’s predecessors in interest as of May 22, 2007, were cancelled without prejudice to the rights and obligations accrued thereunder. The parties also agreed that all Supplement Agreements to these prior Master License Agreements became Supplement Agreements to the Agreement and were subject to all of the Agreement’s terms as of the date of the Agreement. As of this date, all data Fairfield licensed under the Supplement Agreements was licensed to EP Energy under and subject to the Agreement’s terms. After signing the Agreement, Fairfield and EP Energy entered into five additional Supplement Agreements to the Agreement. Fairfield granted EP Energy a non-exclusive right to use the data identified in each Supplement Agreement for a period of twenty-five years from the date of the Supplement Agreement.

Fee Provision

Under section 5 of the Agreement, Fair-field and EP Energy provided that, in the event of a change in control as to EP Energy or any entity that controls EP Energy, EP Energy “will pay [Fairfield], within thirty (30) days after the effective date of the change in control, for the Data licensed under this Agreement to which the party acquiring control does not already have a license from [Fairfield] for the same type of Data, a fee” determined by a formula in the Agreement (the “Fee”).

Third-Party Disclosure Provision

Under section 3(c) of the Agreement, EP Energy may disclose the geophysical seismic data owned by Fairfield (the “Data”) or Data Products1 to certain third parties for certain purposes only if before viewing any Data or Data product and commencing any work, the third party executes and delivers to EP Energy a written confidentiality agreement under which the third party agrees 'to certain matters specified in section 3(c) of the Agreement. Under section 3(b) of the Agreement, the parties provided that EP Energy would affix a specified label to certain copies of a Data Prodüct and that each Data Product must contain a specified notice. In section 4 of the Agreement, the parties agreed to a liquidated-damages provision for any breach of section 2 or section 3 of the Agreement.

Chrnge in-Control of EP Energy

A limited liability company affiliated with certain investors purchased EP Energy’s parent company on May 24, 2012 (the “Change-in-Control Date”) and this purchase constituted a change in control of an entity that directly or indirectly (through one or more other entitles) controlled EP Energy.

EP Energy’s Purported Termination of the Agreement

Nine days before the Change-in-Control' Date, EP Energy sent a notice to Fairfield purporting to terminate the Agreement immediately. EP Energy stated that it was in the process of preparing to return all physical copies or embodiments of the Data in its possession as well as Data in the possession of any affiliate, consultant, partner, officer, or employee. According to the notice, EP Energy was permanently deleting and causing to be permanently deleted any copies or embodiments from the computers and other systems of EP Energy and all other entities. EP Energy stated that it was not using the Data and [240]*240was not using embodiments of the Data. According to a summary-judgment affidavit, on the Change-in-Control Date, EP Energy returned 4,496 data tapes and stored an additional 418 data tapes and Data Products in secure storage inaccessible to EP Energy. The affiant testified that after the Change-in-Control Date, EP Energy found some Fairfield Data and that, in July. 2014, EP Energy returned this Data to Fairfield’s counsel. According to the affiant, none of Fairfield’s Data or Data Products had been used since the Change-in-Control Date.

Fairfield responded that no provision of the Agreement allowed EP Energy to terminate the Agreement unilaterally. Fair-field took the position that the Agreement did not permit EP Energy to relieve itself from its obligations under the Agreement by returning Data and Data Products, ceasing the use of Data and Data Products, or deleting all copies or embodiments of Data and Data Products from EP Energy’s computers and other systems. Fair-field later demanded that EP Energy pay the Fee under section 5. EP Energy declined to pay, and Fairfield filed this suit seeking to recover the Fee.

The Parties’ Claims

Fairfield eventually asserted claims for (1) breach of contract based on EP Energy’s refusal to pay the Fee, which Fairfield alleges to be in excess of $21 million; (2) breach of the Agreement by disclosing Data in violation of the Agreement; (3) breach of the Agreement by failing to affix warning labels and notices on Data Products to protect their confidentiality; and (4) misappropriating trade secrets. EP Energy asserted various defenses and several counterclaims.

The Summary-Judgment Motions

EP Energy filed a summary-judgment motion in which it sought dismissal of all Fairfield’s claims and judgment as a matter of law on one of EP Energy’s counterclaims. Fairfield filed two motions, one seeking dismissal of EP Energy’s counterclaims, and the other asserting that EP Energy was liable as a matter of law for the Fee and that EP Energy’s defenses failed as a matter of law, without seeking summary judgment as to damages on the Fee claim and without seeking summary judgment as to its other claims.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
531 S.W.3d 234, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fairfield-industries-inc-v-ep-energy-ep-co-texapp-2017.