Intratex Gas Co. v. Beeson

22 S.W.3d 398, 146 Oil & Gas Rep. 363, 43 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 489, 2000 Tex. LEXIS 23, 2000 WL 266700
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 9, 2000
Docket98-0132
StatusPublished
Cited by118 cases

This text of 22 S.W.3d 398 (Intratex Gas Co. v. Beeson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Intratex Gas Co. v. Beeson, 22 S.W.3d 398, 146 Oil & Gas Rep. 363, 43 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 489, 2000 Tex. LEXIS 23, 2000 WL 266700 (Tex. 2000).

Opinion

Justice HANKINSON

delivered the opinion of the Court,

in which Chief Justice PHILLIPS, Justice HECHT, Justice ENOCH, Justice OWEN, Justice BAKER, Justice ABBOTT, and Justice GONZALES joined.

This appeal from a trial court’s decision to certify a class presents two issues: first, whether the class in a class-action lawsuit may be defined by the ultimate liability issue; and second, whether an appellate court may redefine an erroneously defined class. Plaintiffs allege that Intratex Gas Company did not take natural gas in ratable proportions from the wells of more than 900 producers. The trial court defined the plaintiff class as consisting of producers of natural gas whose gas was taken by Intratex between 1978 and 1988 in less than ratable proportions, and certified it under rule 42 of the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure. The court of appeals held that the trial court properly certified the class. 960 S.W.2d 389. We conclude that because the class definition is improperly based on the ultimate issue of alleged liability in the case, the trial court abused its discretion when it certified the class. Because we cannot modify the class definition in this case without interfering with the trial court’s discretion and oversight of the class action, we decline to redefine the class on appeal. Accordingly, we reverse the judgment of the court of appeals and remand the case to the trial court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

Intratex is an intrastate pipeline company that purchases gas as the first purchaser from several thousand wells in west Texas along its Oasis pipeline. Plaintiffs, who are producers of natural gas, sued on behalf of a “class of persons who, at any given time from 1978 to the present, have held overriding royalty interests or working interests in natural gas producing properties on which the production was dedicated to or purchased by” Intratex. They allege that from 1978 to 1988, Intra-tex did not take gas ratably from them.

Plaintiffs’ ratable-take claim is a discrimination claim. Texas law requires an intrastate pipeline like Intratex to buy gas without discrimination (i.e., “ratably”) from the producers selling to it at the wellhead; the law also requires the producers to produce ratably. The source of the ratability doctrine is the Texas Common Purchasers Act. See Tex. Nat. Res. Code §§ 111.081-.097; see also 16 Tex. Admin. Code § 3.34. Plaintiffs predicate their claim on section 111.086 of the Act, which provides that a purchaser cannot discriminate in favor of one producer against another producer in the same field, and cannot discriminate “unjustly” *401 or “unreasonably” between fields. 1 Tex. Nat. Res.Code § 111.086.

The Texas Railroad Commission has adopted ratable-take rules to implement section 111.086. See Tex. Admin. Code § 3.34. The rules impose ratability obligations on producers and purchasers to prevent waste, protect correlative rights, prevent discrimination, and conserve the state’s natural resources. See id. § 3.34(b). The Commission’s regulations require that a first purchaser nominate gas ratably, and in accordance with the purchaser’s market demand. See id. To guard against discrimination, the regulations prohibit a purchaser from considering the contractual price, agreed upon by the purchaser and the producer, in nominating or taking natural gas. See id. § 3.34(f)(1), (g)(1). A purchaser’s nominations are one of the factors the Commission considers when setting a gas well’s allowables, which are used in determining the maximum amount a well is permitted to produce.

Intratex purchased gas along the Oasis pipeline pursuant to contracts with the Plaintiffs; under these gas contracts, prices paid for production from some wells were lower than those paid for production from other wells. In 1978 and 1984, Intra-tex executed contracts with Dow Chemical Company that allowed Intratex, as the contractual first purchaser, to opt not to take delivery of gas at certain wells in certain production fields. Plaintiffs contend that Intratex selected wells to be part of the Dow-waiver “program” based on those wells’ ability to produce gas in large quantities, and because the contractual prices were far below the spot-market price and system-wide weighted average cost of gas. Under these “Dow-waiver agreements,” Intratex waived to Dow its proportion of gas under specific gas-purchase contracts so that Dow received the gas and made payments to Intratex at a price calculated according to an agreed-upon formula. The Dow-waiver agreements allegedly enabled Intratex to nominate waiver fields with certain low-cost waiver wells higher than nonwaiver fields, which in turn allowed Intratex to take high volumes of gas from the waiver fields below the market price or system-wide price. Plaintiffs further contend that, rather than spreading the gas takes ratably system-wide, the waiver wells were produced in high, nonratable quantities under the Dow-waiver agreements. 2

During the three-day certification hearing, Plaintiffs’ expert, Don Rhodes, testified that Intratex had taken disproportionate shares of natural gas from approximately 970 wells between 1978 and 1988. Rhodes conducted a study of In-tratex’s takes over the relevant period. He claimed to have identified, based on separate gas takings, those wells that were overtaken and those that were undertaken. According to Rhodes, between 1978 and 1988, Intratex took large quantities of low-priced gas while taking less high-priced gas. In response, Intratex presented its own expert, Don George, who challenged Rhodes’s methodology. Based on George’s testimony, Intratex argued that a class definition derived from a suspect study could not meet the rule 42 requirements.

After hearing the certification evidence, the trial court granted Plaintiffs’ motion to certify the class, but only on the issue of whether Intratex took ratably from the class members. And, instead of certifying the class originally requested by Plaintiffs, the trial court defined the class as:

*402 All persons who were producers of natural gas sold to the defendant between January 1, 1978 and December 31, 1988 whose natural gas was taken by the defendant in quantities less than their ratable proportions.

The record suggests that the court based its class definition and its certification decision on the Rhodes study. The trial court denied certification of all other issues and claims, including allegations of statutory and regulatory violations, breach of contract, intentional or negligent misrepresentation, and fraud.

Affirming the trial court’s certification order, the court of appeals concluded that the class was properly defined, and the rule 42(a) and (b)(4) requirements of nu-merosity, commonality, typicality, adequacy of representation, and predominance were satisfied. 960 S.W.2d at 395-99. The court of appeals held that Intratex’s criticisms of the trial court’s class definition were merits based and thus needed to be decided at trial. Id. at 394-95.

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Bluebook (online)
22 S.W.3d 398, 146 Oil & Gas Rep. 363, 43 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 489, 2000 Tex. LEXIS 23, 2000 WL 266700, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/intratex-gas-co-v-beeson-tex-2000.