In Re Great Western Drilling, Ltd.

211 S.W.3d 828, 170 Oil & Gas Rep. 219, 2006 Tex. App. LEXIS 10353, 2006 WL 3461801
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 30, 2006
Docket11-06-00244-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 211 S.W.3d 828 (In Re Great Western Drilling, Ltd.) 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
In Re Great Western Drilling, Ltd., 211 S.W.3d 828, 170 Oil & Gas Rep. 219, 2006 Tex. App. LEXIS 10353, 2006 WL 3461801 (Tex. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

OPINION

RICK STRANGE, Justice.

This is a mandamus proceeding complaining of the trial court’s order compelling the parties to attend binding arbitration. Great Western Drilling, Ltd. filed a declaratory judgment action against several working interest owners seeking a declaration regarding the parties’ relative rights, duties, and obligations concerning a property described as the NE Linker Prospect. Great Western also sought a declaration that arbitration provisions in two joint operating agreements did not apply to this dispute. Pathfinder Oil & Gas, Inc. intervened in the litigation and sought similar declaratory relief.

The working interest owners asked the trial court to compel arbitration and stay the litigation. Great Western responded with a motion to stay arbitration, conduct an evidentiary hearing, and compel discovery. The trial court granted the working interest owners’ request, ordered the parties to arbitration, and stayed the litigation. Great Western filed a petition for writ of mandamus with this court. The writ is conditionally granted.

I. Background Facts

Great Western, Pathfinder, and the working interest owners entered into a letter agreement to develop a prospect referred to as the “Látigo Project.” The agreement required the drilling and completion of an initial test well in the Strawn formation and the reentry of the Jackson No. 1 well to test the Lower Clearfork formation. Both wells were designated obligatory wells. The agreement contemplated drilling optional wells in areas referred to as the Linerider Prospect and the South Levelland Prospect.

*832 The letter agreement required the parties to execute a 1989 A.A.P.L. model form joint operating agreement (JOA) naming Great Western as the operator for the Strawn and Lower Clearfork reservoirs. Two JOAs were executed. One governed the Látigo Prospect-Strawn Prospects, and the other governed the Látigo Prospect — Jackson Lower Clearfork. Both agreements included the model form’s liability limiting paragraph. 1 The parties added their own area of mutual interest (AMI) provision, arbitration provision, and confidentiality provision. Both JOAs defined the “Contract Area” to “mean all of the lands, Oil and Gas Leases and/or Oil and Gas Interests intended to be developed and operated for Oil and Gas purposes under this agreement,” and both included an exhibit listing the leases.

The Texas Supreme Court defined an AMI as an “agreement [in which] the parties attempt to describe a geographic area within which they agree to share certain additional leases acquired by any of them in the future.” Westland Oil Dev. Corp. v. Gulf Oil Corp., 637 S.W.2d 903, 905 (Tex. 1982). The JOAs defined the AMI contract area as the acreage shown within a bold outline on an attached plat and provided that “the outline on said plat shall be considered a line having no width, running along the nearest boundary line of any separately surveyed section or labor appearing on said plat.” Any party acquiring or proposing to acquire certain interests in the contract area within three years of the date of the letter agreement was required to give notice of the acquisition and its terms to all other parties who then had thirty days to decide if they wished to participate. 2

The JOAs’ arbitration and confidentiality provisions read as follows:

P. Arbitration. Any dispute, controversy or claim arising out of or relating to this Agreement or the breach or validity thereof (“Dispute”) shall be referred to and finally settled by final and binding arbitration in Houston, Harris County, Texas. The term “Agreement” includes the contract itself and all exhibits and attachments .... Upon the request of any party, whether made before or after the institution of any legal proceedings, any Dispute shall be resolved by *833 binding arbitration by three arbitrators. The parties agree to use the Commercial Arbitration Rules of the American Arbitration Association and, to the maximum extent possible, the Federal Arbitration Act (Title 9 of the United States Code).... The transactions contemplated by this Agreement are transactions involving or related to commerce.... The arbitrators shall not have the authority to award, and the tribunal shall not award, any damages or compensation for loss of prospective profits or special, indirect or consequential damages, punitive damages, or exemplary damages in connection with any Dispute, or any attorney’s, expert witness, or other such fees or costs.
Q. Each party hereto agrees that all data and information acquired pursuant to this Agreement shall be confidential and shall not be disclosed by them to any person or corporation who is not a party to this Agreement without the prior written consent of the other parties for a period of three (3) years from the date hereof.

In 2004, Great Western acquired oil and gas leases in Labors 1 and 10 of League 29, Hockley County, Texas, for a project named the NE Linker Prospect. The NE Linker Prospect was not included in either JOA’s contract area or area of mutual interest, but it was adjacent to the Láti-go — Strawn Prospect JOA’s AMI contract area. Great Western did not offer the working interest owners an opportunity to participate in this acquisition. The working interest owners contend that they did not know Great Western was acquiring the offsetting leases and that its acquisition was motivated by geological information which they helped pay to develop.

Also in 2004, Great Western proposed drilling a well known as the Airfield No. 2. This well was in the Latigo-Strawn Prospect JOA’s contract area, near the eastern boundary of the Látigo Project. The Gulf Group and Santa Rosa alleged that they separately contacted Great Western because of their concern about the lack of offset acreage and were both told not to worry because Great Western was acquiring acreage and would handle the land aspects of the matter.

In 2005, Great Western drilled and completed two commercially successful wells in the NE Linker Prospect. The working interest owners describe these as offset wells and contend that they were completed in the Lower Clearfork — which is the same formation from which the Airfield No. 2 is producing — and that the offset wells have reserves worth several million dollars. In 2006, they filed a demand for arbitration and requested the opportunity “to participate in properties developed as a direct result of the investment made by them in the Látigo Project.”

The working interest owners stated in the contentions section of their Arbitration Statement that Great Western and Pathfinder owed fiduciary, contractual, and common law duties to them and that:

Pathfinder and Great Western ignored their duty to keep all information acquired during the parties’ venture confidential. They ignored their duty to use information bought and paid for the (sic) by the venture only in matters that were in the best interests of the venture’s members. They used the information to acquire offsetting acreage solely for their own benefit. These actions amount to breach of contract, breach of fiduciary duty and fraud.

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Bluebook (online)
211 S.W.3d 828, 170 Oil & Gas Rep. 219, 2006 Tex. App. LEXIS 10353, 2006 WL 3461801, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-great-western-drilling-ltd-texapp-2006.