HECI Exploration Company v. Clajon Gas Company, Clajon Gas Company, L.P. and Clajon Management, Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 7, 1992
Docket03-91-00268-CV
StatusPublished

This text of HECI Exploration Company v. Clajon Gas Company, Clajon Gas Company, L.P. and Clajon Management, Inc. (HECI Exploration Company v. Clajon Gas Company, Clajon Gas Company, L.P. and Clajon Management, Inc.) 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
HECI Exploration Company v. Clajon Gas Company, Clajon Gas Company, L.P. and Clajon Management, Inc., (Tex. Ct. App. 1992).

Opinion

clajon
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT OF TEXAS,


AT AUSTIN




NO. 3-91-268-CV


HECI EXPLORATION COMPANY,


APPELLANT



vs.


CLAJON GAS COMPANY, CLAJON GAS COMPANY, L.P.,
AND CLAJON MANAGEMENT COMPANY, INC.


APPELLEES





FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF FAYETTE COUNTY, 155TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT


NO. 87-519, HONORABLE DAN R. BECK, JUDGE PRESIDING




Appellant HECI Exploration Company sued appellees Clajon Gas Company, Clajon Gas Company, L.P., and Clajon Gas Management, Inc. (1) for breach of a take-or-pay contract. Clajon counterclaimed for a declaration of its rights and obligations under the contract. After a series of summary judgment hearings and orders, the trial court rendered final summary judgment for Clajon. HECI appeals. We will reverse the judgment and remand the cause to the trial court.



THE CONTROVERSY

On May 31, 1982, Clajon Gas Company entered into a Gas Purchase Contract (the "Contract") (2) with Humble Exploration Company, HECI's predecessor in interest. The Contract set forth the rights and duties of the parties as follows:

1.  Clajon agreed to take a specified minimum amount of gas produced during each accounting period from certain HECI leases in Fayette County, Texas.

2.  Clajon agreed that if it failed to take the specified minimum amount of gas, it nevertheless would pay HECI for the deficiency, provided HECI made a request for payment and supplied supporting data for the request.

3.  If Clajon was obliged to make such a payment for gas it did not actually receive during an accounting period, it could withhold payment for quantities it received in a subsequent accounting period, as long as those quantities were in excess of a daily minimum amount specified in the Contract.

4.  If Clajon had paid for gas it had not received when the Contract expired December 31, 1984, during the next year Clajon could under certain conditions take an amount of gas equal to the unrecovered balance of the prepayments. If a designated well was incapable of producing an amount of gas sufficient to make Clajon whole, or if Clajon had not recovered enough gas within the following year to satisfy the prepayment, HECI was obliged to refund the balance of the prepayment.

5.  Clajon agreed to design and operate a low-pressure pipeline system that would permit HECI to deliver gas at a specified maximum wellhead pressure.

On November 26, 1984, Clajon notified HECI that it intended to terminate the Contract on December 31, 1984, as Clajon was entitled to do. On December 14, 1984, HECI sent Clajon an invoice requesting payment for alleged "deficient takes" under the Contract. HECI also requested payment for loss of gas it allegedly suffered because of Clajon's failure to construct the low-pressure pipeline. Clajon did not pay such sums.

In late 1984 or early 1985, the parties began negotiating for a second contract. After a series of offers and counteroffers, HECI accepted Clajon's offer, subject to approval by the bankruptcy court overseeing HECI's affairs. Although the record is not clear in this regard, the bankruptcy court apparently never approved the second contract (the "1985 Contract").

In March 1987, HECI sued Clajon Gas Company. A year later HECI amended its petition to add Clajon Gas Company, L.P., and Clajon Management, Inc. as defendants, alleging each was an alter ego of Clajon Gas Company used to defraud HECI. HECI also alleged in its petition that Clajon breached the Contract by "failing to honor the take-or-pay obligations of the contract" and by failing to design and operate the low-pressure pipeline.

Clajon responded with a general denial of HECI's claims and a counterclaim for declaratory judgment setting forth the parties' respective rights and obligations under the Contract. Clajon also asserted seven affirmative defenses and failure of a condition precedent.

In September 1988, Clajon filed its first motion for summary judgment, asking the trial court to construe the Contract. While the summary-judgment motion was pending, HECI filed a motion to disqualify Clajon's counsel, the law firm Godwin, Carlton & Maxwell ("G, C & M"). HECI alleged that Dennis Olson, an attorney for G, C & M, had represented HECI in the same litigation before joining G, C & M. The trial court overruled HECI's motion, and both this Court and the supreme court overruled HECI's motions for leave to file petition for writ of mandamus.

On May 25, 1990, the trial court considered summary judgment motions by both parties. The court denied in its entirety HECI's motion for summary judgment. The court granted Clajon's motion as to the issue of "deficient takes" of gas; the court did not rule on the issue of Clajon's failure to construct the low-pressure pipeline. On October 5, 1990, the trial court granted Clajon's second amended motion for summary judgment, ordering that HECI take nothing by its breach-of-contract claim concerning the low-pressure pipeline. The court therefore ordered that HECI take nothing by its suit. (3)

Both parties moved for summary judgment on Clajon's claim for attorney's fees. In December 1990, the trial court granted Clajon's motion for summary judgment concerning attorney's fees and denied HECI's motion, thereby awarding Clajon nearly $175,000 in attorney's fees as well as additional amounts if HECI appealed from the judgment.

In March 1991, the trial court purportedly granted Clajon's "Notice of Nonsuit of Counterclaims Related to Second Contract and Request for Entry of Final Judgment," whereupon the court dismissed without prejudice the remainder of Clajon's claims relating to the counterclaim and rendered final judgment. HECI appeals from this judgment, complaining of the trial court's failure to disqualify Clajon's counsel and the court's rulings granting the three partial summary judgments.



DISQUALIFICATION OF COUNSEL

In its first two points of error, HECI contends the trial court abused its discretion in failing to grant HECI's motion to disqualify Clajon's attorneys. HECI argues that the court's ruling denied HECI due process of law under the federal and state constitutions because the attorneys were disqualified as a matter of law.

Clajon offers two responses to HECI's argument: (1) Olson did not have a "substantial relationship" with HECI; and (2) HECI waived its right to disqualify G, C & M by waiting eleven months after learning of Olson's association with G, C & M before moving for their disqualification. We will address each argument after setting forth the circumstances necessary to analyze the arguments.

Olson did not begin representing HECI until 1985; before that, however, he represented the Brownings, a group who later succeeded to ownership of HECI. In his capacity as counsel for the Brownings, Olson attended at least one meeting in which a HECI attorney and a Brownings attorney discussed the merits of the 1985 Contract with Clajon.

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HECI Exploration Company v. Clajon Gas Company, Clajon Gas Company, L.P. and Clajon Management, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heci-exploration-company-v-clajon-gas-company-claj-texapp-1992.