Henry Seeligson v. Devon Energy Production

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedOctober 16, 2018
Docket17-10320
StatusUnpublished

This text of Henry Seeligson v. Devon Energy Production (Henry Seeligson v. Devon Energy Production) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Henry Seeligson v. Devon Energy Production, (5th Cir. 2018).

Opinion

Case: 17-10320 Document: 00514683594 Page: 1 Date Filed: 10/16/2018

IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT United States Court of Appeals Fifth Circuit

FILED October 16, 2018 No. 17-10320 Lyle W. Cayce Clerk HENRY SEELIGSON; JOHN M. SEELIGSON; SUZANNE SEELIGSON NASH; SHERRI PILCHER,

Plaintiffs - Appellees

v.

DEVON ENERGY PRODUCTION COMPANY, L.P.,

Defendant - Appellant

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Texas USDC No. 3:16-CV-82

Before WIENER, GRAVES, and HO, Circuit Judges. PER CURIAM:* Plaintiffs-Appellees in this class action case (“Plaintiffs”) are royalty owners who allege that Defendant-Appellant, Devon Energy Production Company, L.P. (“DEPCO”), breached its royalty obligations by violating the duty to market implied in the class members’ mineral leases. According to Plaintiffs, DEPCO breached this duty by selling the raw, unprocessed gas to its corporate affiliate at the wellheads at a price artificially reduced by an

* Pursuant to 5TH CIR. R. 47.5, the court has determined that this opinion should not be published and is not precedent except under the limited circumstances set forth in 5TH CIR. R. 47.5.4. Case: 17-10320 Document: 00514683594 Page: 2 Date Filed: 10/16/2018

No. 17-10320 unreasonably high processing fee. Plaintiffs aver that DEPCO then passed this processing fee on to the royalty owners. Plaintiffs sought to certify a class comprising royalty owners who claim that their royalty payments were reduced by DEPCO’s pricing scheme. The district court held an evidentiary hearing, then certified the Class as follows: All person or entities who, between January 1, 2008 and February 28, 2014, (i) are or were royalty owners in Texas wells producing natural gas that was processed through the Bridgeport Gas Processing Plant by Devon Gas Services, LP (“DGS”); (ii) received royalties from Devon Production Company, L.P. (“DEPCO”) on such gas; and (iii) had oil and gas leases that were on one of the [specific forms] . . . (“The Class Lease Forms”). 1 DEPCO now appeals the district court’s certification decision. I. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS Plaintiffs are royalty owners of natural gas wells operated by DEPCO in the Barnett Shale gas field. DEPCO is an oil and gas exploration and production company that is the lessee under numerous natural gas well leases. Several thousand of the wells that DEPCO operates in the Barnett Shale are serviced by the Bridgeport Rich Gathering System (the “Bridgeport System”), a series of horizontal pipelines that gather natural gas from individual wells and transport it to the Bridgeport Gas Processing Plant (the “Bridgeport Plant”). During the period of class claims, the Bridgeport System and Bridgeport Plant were owned and operated by Devon Gas Services (“DGS”). In turn, DEPCO and DGS are both wholly-owned subsidiaries of Devon Energy Corporation. A. DEPCO sells gas to DGS During all relevant times, DEPCO sold all the natural gas that it produced from wells in the Bridgeport System to DGS under a 2005 Gas

1 The court also indicated several persons or entities excluded from the Class. 2 Case: 17-10320 Document: 00514683594 Page: 3 Date Filed: 10/16/2018

No. 17-10320 Purchase and Processing Agreement (the “GPPA”). Under the terms of the GPPA, DEPCO sold “wet” natural gas from the wells to DGS (1) at the wellheads, (2) for a purchase price of “82.5% of the published industry index value of the residue [“dry”] gas and natural gas liquids (“NGLs”).” DGS then transported the wet gas from the individual wells, through the Bridgeport System, to the Bridgeport Plant, where the wet gas was processed into (1) NGLs and (2) dry residue gas. DGS then sold the processed dry residue gas to third parties. The parties characterize this transaction in different ways. DEPCO says that it transferred ownership of the gas to DGS at the moment of sale at the wellhead. DEPCO claims that, because it no longer owned the gas when it was transported through the Bridgeport System and processed at the Bridgeport Plant, it did not charge Plaintiffs a “processing fee”; neither was it the seller of the NGLs or the residue gas. According to Plaintiffs, however, these “sales” were sham transactions, as DEPCO and DGS are closely related subsidiaries of the same corporate parent, and DGS never transferred funds to DEPCO in payment for the gas. Plaintiffs contend that DEPCO did not actually “sell” the gas to DGS at the wellhead, but transported the gas to the Bridgeport Plant, where DGS “charged” DEPCO a 17.5% processing fee—a percentage far greater than the market rate for processing. Plaintiffs further contend that this processing fee was passed on to the royalty owners by DEPCO’s artificial lowering of the purchase price at the wellhead by 17.5%, uniformly using this methodology for every well within the Bridgeport System. Plaintiffs insist that all royalty owners thus received lower payments as a result of DEPCO’s purely internal pricing scheme.

3 Case: 17-10320 Document: 00514683594 Page: 4 Date Filed: 10/16/2018

B. Implied Duty to Market in Class Leases Each Plaintiff’s royalty interest was memorialized on one of nine standard oil and gas lease forms (the “Class Lease Forms”). Plaintiffs claim that all Class Lease Forms are “proceeds” leases, in which royalty payments are based on the net proceeds, viz., the amount realized by the lessee—here, DEPCO—when the gas is sold at the well. 2 According to Plaintiffs, when a mineral lease does not contain any provision regarding a duty to market, Texas law implies a duty to market. This duty requires producers like DEPCO to act in good faith to obtain “the best price reasonably attainable.” Plaintiffs argue that DEPCO breached the implied duty to market when it artificially lowered the price of the natural gas that it sold to DGS at the wellhead. Plaintiffs contend that because (1) all of the Class Lease Forms are deemed to include such an implied duty to market, and (2) DEPCO used a uniform pricing methodology to artificially lower the wellhead price and the resulting royalty payments, all class members have “identical duty-to-market claims.” DEPCO maintains, however, that some of the Class Leases are not subject to an implied duty to market. It claims that the district court did not examine the Class Leases and only assumed that each of them was subject to an implied duty to market. According to DEPCO, three of the named Plaintiffs’ nine leases were modified to change the lessee’s marketing duty, so that the implied duty to market does not apply to each of the named Plaintiff’s leases, much less to each of the 4,143 Class Leases.

2 As discussed more fully below, Plaintiffs submitted expert testimony from an “industry veteran” who reviewed more than 10,000 DEPCO leases. He identified 4,143 Leases on the nine Class Lease Forms which did not include any modifications or addenda that would modify the duty to market. Based on this evidence, the district court limited the Class Leases to these 4,143 documents. Case: 17-10320 Document: 00514683594 Page: 5 Date Filed: 10/16/2018

C. District Court Decision Plaintiffs originally filed this suit in the Eastern District of Texas, alleging that DEPCO improperly calculated and intentionally underpaid royalties to Plaintiffs for gas that was processed through the Bridgeport Plant. 3 That court scheduled a day-long class certification hearing to receive evidence on the certification issue. Shortly before the date scheduled for that hearing, however, DEPCO filed an emergency motion to stay the proceedings pending resolution of its motion to transfer venue. 4 The hearing was stayed and the case was eventually transferred to the Northern District of Texas, where Plaintiffs’ motion for class certification was eventually denied. 5 Plaintiffs then filed a motion for reconsideration.

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Henry Seeligson v. Devon Energy Production, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/henry-seeligson-v-devon-energy-production-ca5-2018.