Fasken Land & Minerals, Ltd. v. Occidental Permian Ltd.

225 S.W.3d 577, 169 Oil & Gas Rep. 395, 2005 Tex. App. LEXIS 5066, 2005 WL 1539260
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 30, 2005
Docket08-03-00407-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 225 S.W.3d 577 (Fasken Land & Minerals, Ltd. v. Occidental Permian Ltd.) 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
Fasken Land & Minerals, Ltd. v. Occidental Permian Ltd., 225 S.W.3d 577, 169 Oil & Gas Rep. 395, 2005 Tex. App. LEXIS 5066, 2005 WL 1539260 (Tex. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

OPINION

DAVID WELLINGTON CHEW, Justice.

This is yet another oil and gas case originating from the attempted removal of an operator under an operating agreement. But it is of historic note as it may be the last oil and gas case from the Permian Basin that will reach this Court — certainly, the last one from Midland County 1 . The Appellants Fasken Land and Minerals, Ltd., Crane Avenue, Inc., and D.H. Acquisition, Ltd. (collectively “Fasken entities”) appeal from a take-nothing judgment rendered in favor of Appellees Occidental Permian Ltd. (“OPL”), OXY USA, Inc., and Occidental Petroleum Corporation (“OPC”). 2 Appellants sued Appellees for inter alia alleged *581 breaches of an oil and gas unit operating agreement, concerning the provisions related to operator removal and election of a successor, and Fasken entities’ preferential purchase right. 3 Fasken entities also sought a declaratory judgment on their preferential purchase right and OPL’s removal as Unit Operator and its successor’s election under the Unit Operating Agreement. 4 On appeal, Fasken entities bring four issues, in which they assert the trial court erred: (1) by refusing to award them administrative overhead charges paid to OPL; (2) by failing to render judgment that D.H. Acquisition, Ltd. is the successor Unit Operator; (3) by failing to declare the preferential purchase right notice invalid or alternatively erred by improperly instructing the jury; and (4) by impermissibly taxing certain items as costs. We affirm.

Fasken entities and OPL are working interest owners of the Midland Farms Unit (“MFU”), an oil and gas unit located on C Ranch in Andrews County, Texas. In 1913, David Fasken bought the C Ranch, which then consisted of 250,000 acres northwest of Midland. In the 1940s, Fasken family members leased out a portion of the property to Stanolind Oil Company. The Faskens retained a royalty interest in three-quarters of the property under the lease and held a working interest in one-quarter of the property. In the early 1960s, the property was unitized and divided into tracts for purposes of initiating secondary recovery operations. As a result, Pan American Oil Company (“Pan American”), formerly Stanolind, held approximately 75 percent of the working interest over the entire acreage covered by the unit. In 1961, the working interest owners and royalty owners executed a Unit Agreement and a Unit Operating Agreement. The Unit Agreement was incorporated into the Unit Operating Agreement by reference and Pan American was designated as the initial Unit Operator. Pan American, which later became American Oil Company (“AMOCO”) operated the Unit for several decades.

In 1995, Fasken entities initiated an audit of the MFU, and thereafter claimed a number of exceptions to its joint interest billing charges as a working interest owner of the Unit. Fasken entities later filed suit against AMOCO over the accounting issues and its operational practices and also attempted to remove it as operator. As part of the settlement of that lawsuit, the Unit Operating Agreement was amended to include a preferential right to purchase provision, contained in Article 24. In settlement negotiations, Fasken entities also agreed to the transfer of AMOCO’s 75 percent working interest in the MFU to Altura Energy Ltd. (“Altura”), a limited partnership formed between AMOCO and Shell Oil Company in 1997 to operate their Permian basin assets as a single entity.

The present lawsuit arises from the purchase of Altura’s working interest in the MFU by OPC through one of its subsidiaries in April 2000. In 1999, OPC, a Los Angeles-based oil and gas company, learned that AMOCO and Shell were considering selling the Altura properties. OPC expressed its interest in the assets *582 and later received a formal letter inviting it to be part of the bidding process for the Altura acquisition. According to the letter, Altura was focusing its effort on companies that had expressed an interest in acquiring Altura in its entirety. 5 As a result of a multi-step bidding process, OPC was selected as the potential purchaser and if offered to purchase 100 percent of the Altura assets for approximately $3,550,000,000. The total purchase price included a small amount of assumed liabilities which added another $50 million to the transaction. AMOCO and Shell accepted the offer and the parties began negotiating the terms of the purchase and sale agreement.

During the due diligence process, OPC personnel and AMOCO representatives discussed whether the transaction triggered the provision for preferential right to purchase the MFU asset. OPC did not believe that the provision would be triggered by the transaction, but AMOCO felt strongly that it should offer the MFU as a preferential right. The MFU was the only Altura partnership interest that was subject to a preferential right.

Jim Lyerly, Senior Vice President in Financial Planning Analysis for Occidental Oil and Gas Company, an OPC subsidiary was part of the acquisitions team. Mr. Lyerly volunteered to work on the allocation of the purchase price for the MFU. In his testimony, Mr. Lyerly explained how he arrived at the later disputed $63 million figure as the allocation of the purchase price for the MFU. Since OPC was the buyer, they were asked to determine the allocated price of MFU, rather than have the seller make the determination outright, because they would know what they were paying for it. Mr. Lyerly knew the purchase price for the Altura properties was $3.8 billion in terms of total asset value and $3.6 billion in terms of the dollar amount. In undertaking to determine the allocated price for the MFU component, Mr. Lyerly first asked Terry Lindquist and Ed Behm, engineers experienced at building development and exploitation programs, to build a technical case for the value of the property, that is, an analysis of the projects based on technical matters in engineering and geology. Mr. Lyerly explained that the value of the property is centered on future capital, including the capability of reserves projects beyond the proved developed resources.

Before receiving the engineers’ independent opinion, Mr. Lyerly conducted his own analysis, relying primarily on the Netherland Sewell reserve report, which evaluated all the Altura properties in the acquisition. 6 The Netherland Sewell report provided data on the properties in *583 aggregate form — on more than 8,000 wells, of which the MFU interest was just a component. Mr. Lyerly knew the general background assumptions underlying all the evaluations in the report. In his evaluation, he adjusted for differences in their global assumptions and their discount rate for instance. Mr. Lyerly cut the MFU’s probable reserves numbers in half in his assessment, but made no adjustment to the proved developed reserve numbers or the proved developed nonproducing reserve numbers. In Mr. Lyerly’s opinion, the MFU had significantly more potential on average than all the other properties.

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Bluebook (online)
225 S.W.3d 577, 169 Oil & Gas Rep. 395, 2005 Tex. App. LEXIS 5066, 2005 WL 1539260, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fasken-land-minerals-ltd-v-occidental-permian-ltd-texapp-2005.