Gotham Insurance Company v. Warren E&P, Inc. F/K/A Petroleum Development Corporation D/B/A Pedeco, Inc., Warren Resources, Inc., and Oil Technology Fund 1996 - Series D, L.P.

CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 21, 2014
Docket12-0452
StatusPublished

This text of Gotham Insurance Company v. Warren E&P, Inc. F/K/A Petroleum Development Corporation D/B/A Pedeco, Inc., Warren Resources, Inc., and Oil Technology Fund 1996 - Series D, L.P. (Gotham Insurance Company v. Warren E&P, Inc. F/K/A Petroleum Development Corporation D/B/A Pedeco, Inc., Warren Resources, Inc., and Oil Technology Fund 1996 - Series D, L.P.) 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
Gotham Insurance Company v. Warren E&P, Inc. F/K/A Petroleum Development Corporation D/B/A Pedeco, Inc., Warren Resources, Inc., and Oil Technology Fund 1996 - Series D, L.P., (Tex. 2014).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF TEXAS 444444444444 NO. 12-0452 444444444444

GOTHAM INSURANCE COMPANY, PETITIONER, v.

WARREN E&P, INC. F/K/A PETROLEUM DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION D/B/A PEDECO, INC., WARREN RESOURCES, INC., AND OIL TECHNOLOGY FUND 1996 - SERIES D, L.P., RESPONDENTS 4444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444 ON PETITION FOR REVIEW FROM THE COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE EIGHTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS 4444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444

Argued November 8, 2013

JUSTICE GUZMAN delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an insurance coverage dispute concerning an oil well that blew out and caught fire.

The parties have previously appealed on three separate occasions to the court of appeals, and this

is the first time we have granted review. Though the parties raise a number of issues related to

equity and contract claims, the crux of our analysis is determining the proper role of equity claims

when a contractual provision addresses the matter in dispute. Here, the insured obtained an

insurance policy to reimburse its expenses in regaining control of an oil well in the event of a

blowout. When the well blew out, the insured represented to the insurer that it owned a 100%

working interest in the well and the insurer paid claims accordingly. But a later-discovered joint

operating agreement reflected that the insured might have possessed less than a 100% working interest in the well. The insurer sued for a return of its payments under breach of contract and equity

theories.

In the first two appeals, the court of appeals held that summary judgment in favor of the

insurer was proper on its equity claims. The third appeal was transferred to a different court of

appeals under docket equalization procedures. That court of appeals overturned the prior rulings,

concluding that under Excess Underwriters at Lloyd’s, London v. Frank’s Casing Crew & Rental

Tools, Inc.,1 the insurer had no equitable right to reimbursement. We agree with the court of appeals

that the insurer may not proceed on its equity claims but for different reasons. We held in Fortis

Benefits v. Cantu that an insurer is limited to contractual claims when the policy addresses the matter

at issue.2 There, we held that an insurer is limited to contractual claims when the policy addresses

the matter at issue. Here, this policy contains several clauses addressing misrepresentations,

reporting, salvage and recoveries, subrogation, and due diligence. Thus, because the insurance

contract addresses the insured’s conduct, we hold that the insurer cannot rely on its equity claims.

We therefore reverse the judgment of the court of appeals and remand to that court to address the

contract claims.

I. Background

The factual and procedural background surrounding this appeal is complex. The underlying

suit involves the Halff-Oppenheimer No. 1 oil well (the H&O Well) in Frio County, which blew out

and caught fire in 1997. Pedeco, Inc., now known as Warren E&P, Inc. (Pedeco), entered into a

1 246 S.W.3d 42 (Tex. 2008). 2 234 S.W.3d 642 (Tex. 2007).

2 joint venture with Warren Resources, Inc. (WRI) and Oil Technology Fund 1996—Series D, L.P.

(the Fund) in 1992 to drill a series of wells that included the H&O Well. In 1996, Pedeco, WRI, and

the Fund entered into a joint operating agreement that covered a number of wells, including the

H&O Well, once the wells went into production. The operating agreement designated Pedeco as the

operator and indicated Pedeco and WRI would each possess 12.5% cost-bearing working interests

while the Fund would possess the remaining 75% interest.3 After receiving a drilling permit, Pedeco

began drilling the H&O Well in July 1997. During the drilling process, the rig lost circulation

pressure, formation gas rose to the surface, the blowout preventer failed, and the gas ignited.

Pedeco was insured under a policy by Gotham Insurance Company (Gotham) to reimburse

Pedeco for actual expenses in regaining or attempting to regain control of the well. The policy

covered Pedeco to the extent of its working interest in the well.4 Pedeco notified Gotham of the loss

and represented it was the sole operator and held a 100% working interest in the well. Gotham

requested all turnkey contracts,5 joint operating agreements, and other documents regarding the

claim. Pedeco sent a handwritten response from its insuring agent that Pedeco was the operator for

the well and subsequently sent sworn proofs of loss to Gotham that it held a 100% working interest.

3 These allocations are for revenues received before payout. After the well reached payout, revenue was to be distributed 20% each to Pedeco and WRI and 60% to the Fund under the operating agreement. Notwithstanding these revenue allocations, Pedeco and WRI remained obligated for drilling expenses. 4 The primary insured on the policy was R.W. Dirks Petroleum Engineers, Inc., whom Pedeco contracted with to perform its duties before Pedeco became fully licensed in Texas. Pedeco was named an additional insured for no additional premium on the representation that Pedeco was a non-operator. The parties initially disputed the effect of that representation, which is not at issue in our disposition of this appeal. 5 In this context, a turnkey contract is a contract by which an entity agrees to drill a well for a fixed price. The record indicates WRI agreed to a turnkey contract with the Fund, and Pedeco agreed to a turnkey contract with WRI for a lower price.

3 WRI reimbursed Pedeco for its expenses in controlling the well, but WRI’s CEO testified that under

the arrangement between WRI and Pedeco, the two companies would share evenly in drilling profits

and drilling losses in the aggregate at the end of each year. Gotham subsequently paid claims

totaling over $1.8 million.

After issuing payment on the claim, in May 1998, Gotham discovered that several

subcontractors providing services to Pedeco for the H&O Well had sued Pedeco for allegedly failing

to use proper blowout prevention equipment. Gotham also obtained a copy of Pedeco’s joint

operating agreement from another source indicating Pedeco’s interest was 12.5%. Gotham then

inquired of Pedeco whether it had a 100% working interest in the well, as it previously reported, in

light of the agreement. Pedeco responded that it held 100% of the equitable title to the well under

a farmout agreement, was the sole performing party under the turnkey drilling agreements, would

have full liability in the event of a blowout, and paid full premiums to Gotham for its full interest

in the well.

Gotham ceased further payments under the claim and intervened in the existing lawsuit

involving Pedeco and its subcontractors. Gotham alleged Pedeco breached the insurance policy by

using improper blowout prevention equipment and making misrepresentations regarding its interest

in the well. Gotham also added a claim for restitution and unjust enrichment against Pedeco for a

return of its payments, and sued WRI and the Fund to recoup the portion of its payments that

benefitted them under theories of restitution, unjust enrichment, and subrogation. Pedeco

counterclaimed for breach, alleging that Gotham failed to pay sums due under the policy.

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Gotham Insurance Company v. Warren E&P, Inc. F/K/A Petroleum Development Corporation D/B/A Pedeco, Inc., Warren Resources, Inc., and Oil Technology Fund 1996 - Series D, L.P., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gotham-insurance-company-v-warren-ep-inc-fka-petroleum-development-tex-2014.