Florida Gas Transmission Company, LLC v. Texas Brine Company, LLC

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 3, 2022
Docket2022CA0004
StatusUnknown

This text of Florida Gas Transmission Company, LLC v. Texas Brine Company, LLC (Florida Gas Transmission Company, LLC v. Texas Brine Company, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Florida Gas Transmission Company, LLC v. Texas Brine Company, LLC, (La. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA

COURT OF APPEAL

FIRST CIRCUIT

2022 CA 0004

and 2021 CW 1267

FLORIDA GAS TRANSMISSION COMPANY, LLC

VERSUS

TEXAS BRINE COMPANY, LLC, ET AL.

Judgment Rendered: AUG 0 3 2022

Appealed from the 23` d Judicial District Court In and for the Parish of Assumption A/, i' f State of Louisiana Docket Number 34, 316

Honorable Thomas J. Kliebert, Jr., Judge Presiding

Names M. earner Attorneys for " Appellant/Defendant Leopold Z. Sher Texas Brine Company, LLC Peter L. Hilbert, Jr. l:) arnell Bludworth

Jeffrey D. Kessler Stuart D. Kottle New Orleans, Louisiana

Robert Ryland Percy, III Gonzales, Louisiana

Royce I. Duplessis New Orleans, Louisiana

Travis J. Turner Gonzt3les, Louisiana

Martin A. Stern Attorneys for 2''`i Appellants/ Defendants Leigh Ann. Schell Occidental Chemical Corporation, Raymond P. Ward Occidental Petroleum Corporation, and New Orleans, Louisiana OXY USA, Inc. Kathy Patrick Laura Kissel Cassidy Caitlin Halpern Samuel W. Cruse, III Houston, Texas

Richard Hymel Lafayette, Louisiana

Brad Brian Bethany Kristovich Daniel Levin Los Angeles, California

Roy C. Cheatwood Attorneys for Appellee/ Defendant Kent A. Lambert Legacy Vulcan, LLC Adam B. Zuckerman Colleen C. Jarrott Matthew C. Juneau Leopoldo J. Yanez Lauren Brink Adams New Orleans, Louisiana

BEFORE: THERIOT, WOLFE, AND HESTER, JJ.

2 THERIOT, J.

Texas Brine Company, LLC appeals a summary judgment declaring a lease,

and other interdependent contracts, extinguished by confusion. In its answer to

this appeal and related request for supervisory review, Legacy Vulcan, LLC

challenges the trial court' s findings as to the effects of those extinguished

contracts. Occidental Chemical Corporation, Occidental Petroleum Corporation,

and Oxy USA, Inc., challenge the summary judgment' s lack of a reservation of

their right to arbitrate their contractual disputes with Texas Brine Company, LLC

including confusion of the lease at issue.' For the following reasons, we affirm the

trial court' s December 9, 2020 judgment finding that four certain contracts were

extinguished due to confusion or by operation of law and dismissing all causes of

action based on claims arising from those contracts, after the date of confusion;

and we affirm the trial court' s August 13, 2021 judgment finding that causes of

action based on claims arising from the four aforementioned extinguished contracts

are still viable for litigation.

This court has previously considered and decided the arbitration issues Occidental Chemical Corporation, Occidental Petroleum Corporation, and Oxy USA, Inc. ( collectively the Oxy Parties) raise in their appeal. See Florida Gas Transmission Company, LLC v. Texas Brine Company, LLC, 2018- 1391 ( La. App. 1st Cir. 5/ 3/ 21), 324 So. 3d 1090, 1094, writs denied, 2021- 00770, 2021- 00773 ( La. 10/ 19/ 21), 326 So. 3d 255 & 260, citing to Pontchartrain Natural Gas System v. Texas Brine Company, LLC, 2018- 1249 ( La. App. 1st Cir. 12/ 30/ 20), 317 So. 3d 715, 745, writs denied, 2021- 00382, 2021- 00386 ( La. 6/ 8/ 21), 317 So. 3d 323 ( wherein this court held that all claims between the Oxy Parties and Texas Brine be submitted for determination by the arbitration panel); and Florida Gas Transmission Company, LLC v. Texas Brine Company, LLC, 2018- 0075 ( La. App. 1st Cir. 7/ 1/ 19), 285 So. 3d 1093, 1101, writs denied, 2019- 01124 ( La. 7/ 17/ 19), 227 So. 3d 1180, 2019- 01405 ( La. 11/ 12/ 19), 282 So. 3d 225 ( wherein this court held that the determination of the issue of confusion of contracts as

between the Oxy Parties and Texas Brine was appropriate for the arbitration panel rather than the trial court). Both of these rulings are final and definitive judgments, as the Louisiana Supreme Court has denied writs of certiorari; therefore, this is the law of the case and there is no need to reexamine these arbitration issues. See Slaughter v. Louisiana State Employees' Retirement System, 2020- 0881 ( La. App. 1st Cir. 3/ 25/ 21), 322 So. 3d 839, 845, writ denied, 2021- 00567 La. 6/ 22/ 21), 318 So. 3d 706, cert. denied, 142 S. Ct. 775 ( 2022) ( the law of the case doctrine embodies the principle that an appellate court generally does not revisit its own ruling of law on a subsequent appeal in the same case). For these same reasons, Texas Brine' s motion to dismiss

the Oxy Parties' appeal is denied as moot. 3 FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

This litigation arises out of a sinkhole that developed from the collapse of a

salt mine cavern in Assumption Parish on or about August 3, 2012. The present

matter involves contractual claims between Texas Brine Company, LLC, ( Texas

Brine) which operated the brine production well, and Legacy Vulcan, LLC,

Legacy Vulcan) the previous owner of the Geismar Plant which utilized the

brine.2

The contracts involved in this matter date back to 1975 when Hooker

Chemicals & Plastics Corp., predecessor in interest to Occidental Chemical

Corporation ( Occidental), was the owner of the 40 -acre tract of land located over

the Napoleonville Salt Dome, and entered into a Salt Lease with Texas Brine for

the mining of salt. In 1976, Texas Brine and Legacy Vulcan executed a contract

entitled, " Assignment of Salt Lease," wherein Legacy Vulcan took on the role as

lessee of the original Salt Lease. Texas Brine and Legacy Vulcan also entered into

two additional contracts, the Construction Contract and Facilities Lease ( Facilities

Lease), calling for Texas Brine, as lessor, to construct improvements and a pipeline

on the salt lease premises in order to produce and transport brine from the salt lease

property to the Geismar Plant; and the Operating and Supply Agreement

Operating Agreement) stating that Texas Brine was to operate the facilities leased

to Legacy Vulcan pursuant to the Facilities Lease. The parties amended and

restated both the Operating Agreement and the Facilities Lease in their entirety in

2000. Important to this appeal, both the Amended Facilities Lease and Amended

2 Legacy Vulcan was previously known as Vulcan Materials Company, but will be referred to as Legacy Vulcan throughout this opinion. 9 Operating Agreement contained clauses tying the term of each of these contracts to

the term of the Salt Lease.'

Through a series of transactions, culminating in 2008, Occidental acquired

Legacy Vulcan' s interest in the Salt Lease and all of the ancillary contracts reliant

thereon. As a result of those transactions, Occidental was both lessor and lessee of

the Salt Lease when the sinkhole emerged in 2012.

The sinkhole spawned numerous Iawsuits, including this one, instituted by a

company owning and operating a pipeline damaged by the sinkhole. The claims

asserted in this suit include damages, indemnification, and attorney' s fees by Texas

Brine against Legacy Vulcan based in contract.

In June 2017, Texas Brine filed motions for partial summary judgment in

this and related lawsuits, asserting the Salt Lease terminated by confusion.

Occidental opposed the summary judgment motions, arguing the parties submitted

the confusion claim to the arbitration panel and were awaiting a decision. See

Florida Gas Transmission Company, LLC, 285 So.3d at 1096. The trial court

granted the motions, and signed judgments in favor of Texas Brine and against

Occidental, decreeing the Salt .Lease " terminated as a matter of law as of March

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

Related

Millennium Petrochem v. Brown & Root Holding, et a
390 F.3d 336 (Fifth Circuit, 2004)
Southern St. Masonry v. JA Jones Const.
507 So. 2d 198 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1987)
Dumas v. United States Fidelity & Guaranty Company
134 So. 2d 45 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1961)
Addison v. Employers Mut. Liability Ins. Co. of Wis.
64 So. 2d 484 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1953)
Sewerage & Water Board v. Bertucci
65 So. 2d 377 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1953)
Capital Loans, Inc. v. Stassi
195 So. 2d 670 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1967)
Boon v. Boon
593 So. 2d 1289 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1991)
Black River Crawfish Farms, LLC v. King
246 So. 3d 1 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2018)
Danos Tree Serv., LLC v. Proride Trailers, LLC
255 So. 3d 1078 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2018)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Florida Gas Transmission Company, LLC v. Texas Brine Company, LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/florida-gas-transmission-company-llc-v-texas-brine-company-llc-lactapp-2022.