Forest Oil Corp. v. McAllen

268 S.W.3d 51, 51 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 1309, 168 Oil & Gas Rep. 450, 2008 Tex. LEXIS 768, 2008 WL 3991058
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 29, 2008
Docket06-0178
StatusPublished
Cited by243 cases

This text of 268 S.W.3d 51 (Forest Oil Corp. v. McAllen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Forest Oil Corp. v. McAllen, 268 S.W.3d 51, 51 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 1309, 168 Oil & Gas Rep. 450, 2008 Tex. LEXIS 768, 2008 WL 3991058 (Tex. 2008).

Opinions

Justice WILLETT

delivered the opinion of the Court,

in which Justice HECHT, Justice O’NEILL, Justice WAINWRIGHT, Justice BRISTER, Justice GREEN, and Justice JOHNSON joined.

This commercial contract case asks whether an unambiguous waiver-of-reliance provision precludes a fraudulent-inducement claim as a matter of law. Here, sophisticated parties represented by counsel in an arm’s-length transaction negotiated a settlement agreement that included clear and broad waiver-of-reliance and release-of-claims language. Because that agreement conclusively negates reliance on representations made by either side, any [53]*53fraudulent-inducement claim, lodged here to avoid an arbitration provision, is contractually barred. We enforce the parties’ contract as written. Thus, we reverse the court of appeals’ judgment and remand to the trial court to compel arbitration in accordance with our opinion.

1. Factual and Procedural Background

In 1999, Forest Oil Corporation settled a long-running lawsuit over oil and gas royalties and leasehold development with James McAllen and others with interests in the McAllen Ranch.1 The settlement agreement resulted from a week-long mediation and released Forest Oil from “any and all” claims “of any type or character known or unknown” that are “in any manner relating to” the McAllen Ranch Leases and the covered lands, whether the claims sound in contract, tort, trespass or any other theory.2 While this sweeping release resolved the royalty and nondevelopment disputes, the parties reserved the right to arbitrate under the Texas General Arbitration Act (TAA) claims “for environmental liability, surface damages, personal [54]*54injury, or wrongful death occurring at any time and relating to the McAllen Ranch Leases.” The parties also incorporated into the settlement agreement a separate surface agreement that detailed ongoing care and remediation of the surface estate.3

Importantly, the settlement agreement specifically disclaimed reliance “upon any statement or any representation of any agent of the parties” in executing the releases contained in the agreement.4 The parties also acknowledged they were “fully advised” by legal counsel as to both the contents and consequences of the release.

In 2004, McAllen sued Forest Oil to recover for environmental damage caused when Forest Oil allegedly “used its access under the leases to the surface estate to bury highly toxic mercury-contaminated” material on the McAllen Ranch. McAllen also alleged environmental and personal injuries caused when Forest Oil moved oilfield drilling pipe contaminated with radioactive material from the McAllen Ranch to a nearby property, the Santillana Ranch, which housed a sanctuary for endangered rhinoceroses.5

Forest Oil sought to compel arbitration under the settlement agreement, but [55]*55McAllen argued the arbitration provision was induced by fraud and thus unenforceable. McAllen recounts assurances during the 1999 settlement negotiations that no environmental pollutants or contaminants existed on the property. McAllen claims an unidentified lawyer for one of the four defendants “assured [McAllen] that there was no problem, no issue at all that [he] would be concerned about,” and McAllen says he signed the agreement based on that specific representation. McAllen claims that when this assurance of “no environmental issues” was given, Forest Oil knew all about the radioactive-contaminated pipe and the mercury-contaminated material.

After an evidentiary hearing on Forest Oil’s motion to compel arbitration, the trial court denied the motion, and the court of appeals affirmed, applying a no-evidence standard of review because the case was “an interlocutory appeal from an order denying a motion to compel arbitration that involves the defense of fraudulent inducement.” 6 After examining the testimony of McAllen and a former Forest Oil employee, the court of appeals concluded there was some evidence to support the trial court’s determination that the arbitration provision was induced by fraud.7

This interlocutory appeal followed.8 Although the court of appeals treated Forest Oil’s argument as an evidentiary challenge, this case fundamentally poses a legal question, not a factual one: does McAllen’s disclaimer of rebanee on Forest Ob’s representations negate the fraudulent-inducement claim as a matter of law? We review this legal question de novo.9

2. Enforcement of the Parties’ Arbitration Agreement Under the Texas General Arbitration Act

We first address appbeation of the TAA, which the parties’ settlement [56]*56agreement specifically invoked. Federal and Texas law strongly favor arbitration,10 and we uphold arbitration agreements that comport with traditional principles of contract law.11 While an arbitration agreement procured by fraud is unenforceable,12 the party opposing arbitration must show that the fraud relates to the arbitration provision specifically, not to the broader contract in which it appears.13 If a trial court finds that the claim falls within the scope of a valid arbitration agreement, the “court has no discretion but to compel arbitration and stay its own proceedings.” 14

Forest Oil challenges the trial court’s refusal to compel arbitration on three grounds: (1) the waiver-of-reliance provision in the contract precludes as a matter of law McAllen’s ability to show the reliance element of fraudulent inducement; (2) McAllen cannot establish justifiable reliance on oral representations that directly contradict the terms of a signed contract; and (3) McAllen cannot establish justifiable reliance on statements made by an adversary. Because Forest Oil’s first argument defeats McAllen’s claim, we do not reach the other two.

3. Schlumberger Controls this Relevantly Similar Case: The Parties’ Broad Disclaimer of Reliance is Dispositive

Forest Oil contends the waiver-of-reliance provision in the settlement agreement conclusively defeats McAllen’s fraudulent inducement claim. We agree.

We considered today’s question in Schlumberger Technology Corp. v. Swanson, holding that a disclaimer of reliance on representations, “where the parties’ intent is clear and specific, should be effective to negate a fraudulent inducement claim.”15 In that case — decided eighteen months before the settlement in the instant case and construing virtually identical disclaimer language — Schlumberger and the Swansons agreed to a complete release of claims to settle a dispute involving an underwater diamond-mining project off the South African coast.16 The Swan-sons sold their interests in the venture to Schlumberger for roughly $1 million,17 and [57]*57the parties signed a settlement agreement, which included this waiver-of-reliance provision:

[E]ach of us [the Swansons] expressly warrants and represents and does hereby state ... and represent ... that no promise or agreement which is not herein expressed has been made to him or her in executing this release, and that

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
268 S.W.3d 51, 51 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 1309, 168 Oil & Gas Rep. 450, 2008 Tex. LEXIS 768, 2008 WL 3991058, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/forest-oil-corp-v-mcallen-tex-2008.