In Re Monroe Well Service, Inc.

67 B.R. 746
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 3, 1986
Docket19-11788
StatusPublished
Cited by79 cases

This text of 67 B.R. 746 (In Re Monroe Well Service, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Monroe Well Service, Inc., 67 B.R. 746 (Pa. 1986).

Opinion

OPINION

BRUCE FOX, Bankruptcy Judge:

Before me is the debtors’ motion to “Compel Further Continuation of Payments.” This motion seeks to enjoin creditors from exercising their state created rights against non-debtors and raises issues involving the scope of the bankruptcy court’s powers under 11 U.S.C. § 105 to stay the actions of entities who are not subject to 11 U.S.C. § 362. In order to understand the reasons why the debtors have sought to invoke the court’s section 105 powers, and why, in my discretion, I am very reluctantly exercising those powers, it is first necessary to set out the *748 factual and procedural underpinnings of the motion.

I.

The facts in this matter are in large measure uncontested by the parties. The following summary is derived from testimony and documents provided at hearings held on May 14, 1986, May 22, 1986 and November 18, 1986.

This bankruptcy case began on April 23, 1986, when five related debtors filed voluntary bankruptcy petitions under chapter 11. This court consolidated these five cases for joint administration. All of the debtors are controlled by one individual — Sheldon Som-erman; he is the chief executive officer and sole shareholder of the four corporate debtors and he holds .the majority interest in the one limited partnership debtor. Somer-man’s various entities were involved in the oil business in four states — Louisiana, Arkansas, Texas, and Indiana.

For purposes of this motion, the principal debtor is Monroe Well Service, Inc. (“Monroe”). Monroe drills, operates, maintains and services approximately 3,400 oil wells under contract with 101 affiliated limited partnerships which own 1 the vast majority of the wells. Monroe organized investors into limited partnerships which then contracted with Monroe to drill “stripper wells” — wells which produce under 10 barrels of oil per day. 2

Debtor Metro Pipe and Supply Company, Inc. (“Metro”), is a corporation that provides tools, equipment and supplies to Monroe. The three remaining debtors, Evergreen Oil & Gas (“Evergreen”), Tullos Group, Inc. (“Tullos"), and SSM own approximately 400 “stripper” oil wells between them, the proceeds of which have been assigned to various lending institutions. These last three debtors also have an interest in some of the non-debtor limited partnerships that together own approximately 3,000 such wells; specifically, the three remaining debtors are the general partners in 45 of the limited partnerships which own approximately 60% of the 3,000 wells.

When oil prices declined recently, Monroe was unable to locate investors to form new limited partnerships and was forced to cease its drilling operations. As it was the drilling component of its business which generated 90% of its income, Monroe and its relations were compelled to file for bankruptcy. At the time that the petitions were filed, the debtors were subsisting upon income generated solely from servicing the oil wells for the limited partnerships and lending institutions. During the course of the bankruptcy proceedings, this servicing income was fixed at $450.00 per month per well, yielding income to the debtors of approximately $1.1 million per month which enables them to cover expenses. 3

Two customary occurrences in the oil business play key roles in evaluating this motion. First, although Monroe was hired to drill oil wells, it contracted and subcontracted different functions to third parties. Various entities or individuals performed surveying tasks, did the actual drilling on some wells, built roads and storage tanks at the well sites, and brought in equipment and machinery. These contractors and ma-terialmen not only became creditors of the various debtors, they also possessed the right under relevant state law to obtain liens upon both the oil and the proceeds of the sale of such oil. Many such liens were filed against some of the .3,400 wells ser *749 viced by Monroe and these liens total more than $10 million. 4

Second, the oil produced is initially sold to an entity denoted the “First Purchaser.” This purchaser pays for its oil in accordance with a “division order.” The division order directs payment for the oil in part to the owner of the mineral rights (“royalty owner”) and the balance to the owner of the working interest or leasehold interest. Here, that latter interest in large measure would be held by the limited partnerships or lending institutions. However, the parties agree that creditors with statutory liens against the oil and its proceeds can compel First Purchasers to pay their lien claims ahead of the payments directed by the division orders. See also Babcock & Thomas, Some Common Issues In Oil and Gas Bankruptcies: A Primer for the Non-Bankruptcy Practitioner, 46 La.L.Rev. 763, 779-80 & nn. 122, 125 (1986).

Failure of First Purchasers to make payments to in accordance with the division orders would likely cause the following to occur: the working interests in the wells would cease making monthly service payments to Monroe; Monroe would then stop servicing the stripper wells; due to the high saltwater content of these wells, the wells would cease being operational within 30 to 90 days and there would be a substantial cost involved in either reopening the wells or drilling adjacent wells. Testimony was also offered that it would be difficult to obtain a replacement servicer for these wells before the wells suffered significant damage.

II.

Prior to the debtors’ bankruptcy filing, various creditors of the debtors who had provided labor, services or materials in connection with debtors’ oil drilling and service operations filed notice of their statutory liens or “privileges.” See La.Rev.Stat. § 9:4861. See also In re Energy Contractors, Inc., 49 B.R. 139 (Bankr.M.D.La.1985). Notice of these liens was provided to First Purchasers of oil from the various Monroe oil wells which prevented these purchasers from complying with the division orders. 5 Since the proceeds from the sale of oil would ordinarily go to the working interest holders (i.e. the banks and limited partnerships), who, in turn, would use those funds to pay Monroe their contractual monthly service charges, these lien creditors were threatening to terminate the last source of income to the debtors.

In May 1986, shortly after they filed bankruptcy, the debtors sought a court order to compel, initially the largest First Purchaser and then, all First Purchasers to comply with the relevant division orders and not to pay any sum to the lien creditors. By orders dated May 14, 1986, May 22, 1986, August 20, 1986, and September 18, 1986, Chief Judge Emil F. Goldhaber granted debtors’ request.

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