Henry J.N. Taub, H. Ben Taub, Henry J.N. Taub, II, Kitchco Realty, Ltd., Marcy Taub and Metco Petro, Ltd. v. Houston Pipeline Company and HPL Resources Company

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 10, 2002
Docket06-01-00073-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Henry J.N. Taub, H. Ben Taub, Henry J.N. Taub, II, Kitchco Realty, Ltd., Marcy Taub and Metco Petro, Ltd. v. Houston Pipeline Company and HPL Resources Company (Henry J.N. Taub, H. Ben Taub, Henry J.N. Taub, II, Kitchco Realty, Ltd., Marcy Taub and Metco Petro, Ltd. v. Houston Pipeline Company and HPL Resources Company) 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
Henry J.N. Taub, H. Ben Taub, Henry J.N. Taub, II, Kitchco Realty, Ltd., Marcy Taub and Metco Petro, Ltd. v. Houston Pipeline Company and HPL Resources Company, (Tex. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion



In The

Court of Appeals

Sixth Appellate District of Texas at Texarkana



______________________________


No. 06-01-00073-CV
______________________________


HENRY J. N. TAUB, H. BEN TAUB,
HENRY J. N. TAUB, II, KITCHCO REALTY, LTD.,
MARCY TAUB, AND METCO PETRO, LTD., Appellants


V.


HOUSTON PIPELINE COMPANY AND
HPL RESOURCES COMPANY, Appellees





On Appeal from the 80th Judicial District Court
Harris County, Texas
Trial Court No. 98-58066A





Before Cornelius, C.J., Grant and Ross, JJ.
Opinion by Justice Ross


O P I N I O N


Henry J. N. Taub, H. Ben Taub, Henry J. N. Taub, II, Kitchco Realty, Ltd., Marcy Taub, and Metco Petro, Ltd. (collectively, the Taubs) appeal from a summary judgment granted in favor of Houston Pipeline Company and HPL Resources Company (collectively, HPL). Enron Oil & Gas Company was an additional defendant, but the Taubs settled with Enron before this appeal.

Background

This case concerns a 254-acre tract of land in northern Harris County overlaying the Bammel Field, a natural gas field discovered in the 1930s. The Taubs owned the surface rights. By the 1960s, Houston Natural Gas Production Company owned the Bammel Field. The Bammel-Cockfield sand, an oil and gas reservoir approximately 6,200 feet below the surface, had been substantially depleted. Houston Natural Gas desired to turn this depleted reservoir into a natural gas storage facility, and to accomplish this, needed to unitize the oil and gas leases, and required additional rights to use the surface in ways that exceeded its rights under the oil and gas leases.

Houston Natural Gas, along with the lessors of oil and gas leases, and the Taubs entered into two agreements. The first was the Unit Agreement, which unitized the oil and gas leases, permitting Houston Natural Gas to utilize the Bammel-Cockfield sand for gas storage. The second was the Collateral Agreement, out of which this dispute arose.

Under the Collateral Agreement, finalized September 15, 1966, Houston Natural Gas relinquished all surface rights under the oil and gas leases, except the right to use designated two-acre well sites located immediately around the actual drilling locations and related surface easements, so long as these sites were used for certain specified operations.

The Taubs contend that, as a result of the Collateral Agreement, the operators had:

determinable fee estates permitting use of the 2-acre wellsites and related easements, and each estate automatically terminated when a site was no longer used for storage or other operations. By entering into the Collateral Agreement, and in exchange for agreeing to the Unit Agreement and creation of a gas storage facility beneath their surface, the surface owners [Taubs] immediately recovered most of their surface rights and limited the Operator's remaining interest to determinable fee estates in specific 2-acre wellsites and related easements.



The Collateral Agreement provided that, after September 1, 1972, any well site on the property not used by the operator for "drilling, reworking, storage, injection, repressuring, or production, during any period of 365 consecutive calendar days with respect to a Unit Well used for Unit Operations . . . Operator's right to use said Wellsite shall automatically terminate . . . ." The Collateral Agreement further provided that, if there was not an oil, gas, disposal, or injection well on one or more well sites on September 1, 1973, the operator's right to use such well sites "shall automatically terminate." Further, within ninety days after termination, the operator was to plug and cement any well, remove all equipment and facilities, level and clean the surface, and file an instrument acknowledging termination. Henry Taub, designated in the agreement as the "Landowners' representative," was to be sent a copy of each such filed instrument within fifteen days after the document was returned to the operator by the county clerk.

In 1971, Houston Natural Gas filed a "Partial Release of Surface Under Oil, Gas and Mineral Leases," as provided in the Collateral Agreement. This released all of Houston Natural Gas' interests in the surface except for the following: well sites, designated as 3M, 5M, and 6M; a heater site, designated as 4M; pipeline easements, designated as 7M, 8M, and 9M; and a roadway easement, designated as 1M (see Appendix A).

HPL acquired the interests of Houston Natural Gas around 1988 and continued its operations in the area. As reflected in responses to requests for admissions, sometime before February 1, 1990, the 4M and 5M sites were not used for "drilling, reworking, storage, injection, repressuring, or production" for 365 consecutive calendar days during the period between February 1, 1988 and January 31, 1990. HPL did not plug the well, remove all equipment, clean the surface, or file the documentation required by the Collateral Agreement. The 5M well was not plugged until April 8, 1994.

In 1993, HPL assigned its nonstorage rights in the Bammel Field to Enron, which wanted to drill a new well at a new site near the 5M site. Because of the Collateral Agreement and a partial release signed in 1971, Enron was required to obtain from the Taubs a new surface site for its well. In November 1993, Enron's employee, Warren Davis, approached Henry Taub about obtaining a new site. Henry Taub asserts in his deposition that, even though the rights to use 4M and 5M had actually terminated, he was personally unaware of the termination because the well had not been plugged and he had not received the notice required under the Collateral Agreement. He further testified he entered into negotiations with Enron, believing HPL and Enron still had rights regarding the 4M and 5M sites. In these negotiations, Davis proposed to Henry Taub that Enron enter into a new surface agreement with the Taubs for a two-acre well site, in exchange for Enron arranging for the release of the 5M site back to the Taubs.

At the Taubs' request, Enron had two surveys made of the 4M and 5M sites, one in January 1994 and one in April 1994. The Taubs suggest the sites are falsely labeled on the surveys as "existing" sites.

On the "release" of the 5M well site, the Taubs entered into a new Surface Use Agreement with Enron on June 22, 1994. Enron drilled two new deep wells at this location. Henry Taub testified that, had he known the 4M and 5M sites had already been abandoned, he would not have entered into the surface agreement with Enron. Further, in July 1998, HPL removed a twelve-inch pipeline from the 7M and 8M rights-of-way and installed a twenty-inch pipeline.

An agreement and several supplements to that agreement, entered into between the Taubs, Enron, and HPL in May 1996 tolled the statute of limitations until December 4, 1998, for any litigation by the Taubs.

On December 4, 1998, the Taubs sued HPL and Enron, asserting claims arising from the Collateral Agreement.

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

Related

In Re the Marriage of Ham
59 S.W.3d 326 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 2001)
Walston v. Lockhart
62 S.W.3d 257 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 2002)
Abraxas Petroleum Corp. v. Hornburg
20 S.W.3d 741 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 2000)
Young v. Amoco Production Co.
610 F. Supp. 1479 (E.D. Texas, 1985)
Copenhaver v. Berryman
602 S.W.2d 540 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1980)
Haby v. Howard
757 S.W.2d 34 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1988)
At & T CORP. v. Rylander
2 S.W.3d 546 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1999)
Fina Supply, Inc. v. Abilene National Bank
726 S.W.2d 537 (Texas Supreme Court, 1987)
Gold Kist, Inc. v. Carr
886 S.W.2d 425 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1994)
City of Houston v. Clear Creek Basin Authority
589 S.W.2d 671 (Texas Supreme Court, 1979)
Ernst & Young, L.L.P. v. Pacific Mutual Life Insurance Co.
51 S.W.3d 573 (Texas Supreme Court, 2001)
Lang v. City of Nacogdoches
942 S.W.2d 752 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1997)
Wright v. Christian & Smith
950 S.W.2d 411 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1997)
Lesikar v. Rappeport
33 S.W.3d 282 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 2000)
Carlson v. Carlson
983 S.W.2d 304 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1998)
Wade v. Southwestern Bell Telephone Company
352 S.W.2d 460 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1961)
Morriss v. Enron Oil & Gas Co.
948 S.W.2d 858 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1997)
Shivers v. Texaco Exploration & Production, Inc.
965 S.W.2d 727 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1998)
A. H. Belo Corp. v. Sanders
632 S.W.2d 145 (Texas Supreme Court, 1982)
Malooly Brothers, Inc. v. Napier
461 S.W.2d 119 (Texas Supreme Court, 1970)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Henry J.N. Taub, H. Ben Taub, Henry J.N. Taub, II, Kitchco Realty, Ltd., Marcy Taub and Metco Petro, Ltd. v. Houston Pipeline Company and HPL Resources Company, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/henry-jn-taub-h-ben-taub-henry-jn-taub-ii-kitchco-realty-ltd-texapp-2002.