In Re Petroleum Production Management, Inc.

240 B.R. 407, 1999 Bankr. LEXIS 1355, 1999 WL 983476
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Kansas
DecidedJune 24, 1999
Docket19-40160
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 240 B.R. 407 (In Re Petroleum Production Management, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Petroleum Production Management, Inc., 240 B.R. 407, 1999 Bankr. LEXIS 1355, 1999 WL 983476 (Kan. 1999).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION 1

JOHN T. FLANNAGAN, Bankruptcy Judge.

Petroleum Production Management, Inc. (“PPMI”) received checks from Northern Natural Gas Company under a gas supply contract. When PPMI entered Chapter 11, it mailed a notice of claims bar date to the Texas address on Northern’s checks. Although the mail handling room at the Texas address routinely forwarded Northern’s mail to its Nebraska office, where proofs of claim were handled, the notice never arrived there. Was the notice sufficient? Yes, the notice was sufficient to bar Northern’s claim. The court therefore denies Northern’s motion to file its claim out of time. 2

*409 The Maurice L. Brown Company

The Maurice L. Brown Company operated oil and gas properties in several mid-western states before its employees bought the company. The employee buyout agreement gave the buyers the right to use The Maurice L. Brown Company name for five years. At some point, the company changed its name to Petroleum Production Management, Inc. On January 23, 1997, it filed for Chapter 11 relief and the United States Trustee subsequently appointed an Unsecured Creditors’ Committee.

Endowment Energy Partners, L.P.

Endowment Energy Partners, L.P. (“EEP”), an investment group, held a security interest in virtually all of PPMI’s assets. EEP opposed PPMI’s reorganization effort and pressed for sale of its collateral to Global Millennium Energy. EEP eventually convinced PPMI and the Unsecured Creditors’ Committee to sell the company. EEP accomplished this by agreeing to place $550,000 of its cash collateral into escrow for unsecured creditors. Thus, under the sale agreement, unsecured claim holders were to recover approximately 55 cents on the dollar.

Even before the sale agreement, however, Northern Natural Gas Company moved to file a proof of claim out of time, alleging it had failed to file on time because of excusable neglect. The Unsecured Creditors’ Committee, aware of Northern’s motion at the time of the sale and escrow agreement, now predictably opposes it because, if successful, Northern’s motion would dilute unsecured claim holders’ recovery. 3

The Record

The Committee and PPMI stipulated to certain facts in the pretrial order. 4 On April 22, 1999, they presented evidence. The court directed the Committee to proceed first because the validity of the mailed notice was at issue and if the Committee could prove that PPMI properly mailed the notice, a presumption of receipt would arise for Northern to rebut. In its case in chief, the Committee called four witnesses: Paul Hoffman, PPMI’s counsel; Larry W. Miller, PPMI’s vice president/comptroller who helped with the schedules; Mark Benedict, EEP’s counsel; and Glenn R. Hass, an employee of Northern’s gas supply division in Omaha, Nebraska. In its case in chief, Northern called Jane Green Alseth, an attorney in Northern’s gas supply division in Omaha, and Larry W. Miller, PPMI’s vice president/comptroller. In rebuttal, the Committee called Christopher J. Ryan, the chairman of the Unsecured Creditors’ Committee. The following narrative weaves together the stipulations with the testimony and exhibits received in evidence.

Enron Corp

Enron Corp, the corporate parent of Northern Natural Gas Company and a major force in the energy business, operated in all 50 states and internationally. It had as many as 11,000 employees and numerous affiliates, at least five of which Glenn Hass named in his testimony. Enron owned a 70-story building in Houston, Texas, which served as its corporate headquarters. Its mailing address there was P.O. Box 1188, Houston, Texas 77251-1188.

Glenn Hass, an employee of Northern’s gas supply division in Omaha, testified that *410 the central mail room at Enron Corp’s Houston headquarters received mail for the various Enron Corp entities, including Northern. An independent third-party-contractor operated the mail room. Mail room personnel knew that Northern was an affiliate of Enron Corp and routinely routed Northern’s mail to Northern’s Omaha offices. Glenn Hass himself regularly received mail that was forwarded from the Houston mail room.

The headquarters also housed both the Enron Litigation Unit and Northern’s marketing division lawyer. The Enron Litigation Unit attorneys performed legal services for Northern from time to time.

Northern Natural Gas Company

Northern Natural Gas Company, Enron Corp’s subsidiary, was a petroleum products transportation company with over 1,000 employees in six divisions operating pipelines throughout the country. Its home office address was 1111 South 103rd Street, Omaha, Nebraska.

Jane Green Alseth, an attorney with Northern’s gas supply division in Omaha, testified that at the time in question, she was responsible for filing proofs of claim. She testified about the company’s organization and its relationship with PPMI. She stated that Northern maintained an office in the Enron Corp headquarters building in Houston, and both its accounting and finance division and its marketing division attorney had offices there. Although the Enron Litigation Unit was also in the Houston office, the legal department for Northern’s gas supply division was located in Omaha.

Northern allegedly held a claim against PPMI for reimbursement of Kansas ad valorem tax overpayments. Northern’s gas supply division made the overpay-ments when it purchased gas from PPMI’s predecessor, The Maurice L. Brown Company, under contracts that were eventually canceled. Northern and The Maurice L. Brown Company (succeeded by PPMI) have been litigating Northern’s claim before regulatory boards and courts since 1983.

The contracts between Northern’s gas supply division and PPMI’s predecessor required notice to Northern Natural Gas Company, 2223 Dodge Street, Omaha, Nebraska 68102. The contracts were canceled when, effective in 1993, Northern decided to end its gas purchasing business and become exclusively a pipeline company. Thereafter, the address of Northern’s gas supply division became Northern Natural Gas Company, P.O. Box 3330, Omaha, Nebraska 68124.

The Notice

On May 16, 1997, PPMI obtained an order fixing June 13, 1997, as a bar date for filing claims. 5 On May 23, 1997, PPMI mailed the notice of bar date 6 to “Northern Natural Gas (Enron Gas Processing), P.O. Box 1188, Houston, TX 77251-1188.” 7 The notice explained that Northern’s claim was "disputed, contingent, or unliquidated and advised Northern that it must file a proof of claim by the June 13 deadline. Northern, however, failed to file a proof of claim by the June 13,1997, bar date.

Although PPMI’s notice advised Northern that a proof of claim must be filed, PPMI had failed to list Northern’s claim on its schedules as disputed, contingent, or unliquidated by the time it mailed the notice of bar date on May 23, 1997.

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Bluebook (online)
240 B.R. 407, 1999 Bankr. LEXIS 1355, 1999 WL 983476, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-petroleum-production-management-inc-ksb-1999.