Jpmorgan Chase Bank, N.A. v. Orca Assets G.P., L. L.C.

546 S.W.3d 648
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 23, 2018
DocketNo. 15–0712
StatusPublished
Cited by206 cases

This text of 546 S.W.3d 648 (Jpmorgan Chase Bank, N.A. v. Orca Assets G.P., L. L.C.) 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
Jpmorgan Chase Bank, N.A. v. Orca Assets G.P., L. L.C., 546 S.W.3d 648 (Tex. 2018).

Opinion

Justice Brown delivered the opinion of the Court.

*650In this case, we must determine whether the lessee of certain mineral interests justifiably relied on extra-contractual representations by the lessor's agent despite "red flags" and a negation-of-warranty clause in the sales documents explicitly placing the risk of title failure on the lessee. Because we hold, as a matter of law, that the lessee could not so justifiably rely, we reverse the court of appeals and reinstate the trial court's judgment in favor of the petitioners.

I

The Red Crest Trust owns about 40,000 acres of non-contiguous mineral interests throughout the Eagle Ford Shale. JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A., acts as its trustee. Phillip Mettham, an employee of JPMorgan, was responsible for leasing the trust's Eagle Ford interests.

In 2010, Mettham leased fifteen of the trust's Eagle Ford tracts in DeWitt and Gonzales counties to GeoSouthern Energy Corporation. Comprising more than 1,800 acres, the GeoSouthern deal was one of the largest Mettham negotiated for the trust. Notably, GeoSouthern did not record its leases in the counties' property records until six months after closing the deal.

Also in 2010, Lawrence Berry, an experienced oil-and-gas businessman, formed Orca Assets, G.P., L.L.C. The specific purpose of establishing Orca was to acquire promising unleased acreage in the Eagle Ford Shale. And it quickly set its sights on the trust's holdings in Karnes and DeWitt counties. Orca's team included Berry; its vice president, John Ellis; landmen Tony Villalon and Joan Stewart, and a collection of additional landmen. All were experienced in leasing oil-and-gas properties.

On November 11, 2010, Mettham met with Ellis and Stewart to discuss Orca leasing some of the trust's tracts. Berry also attended part but not all of the meeting. Orca's team brought maps showing the tracts it desired to lease. Ellis asked Mettham whether the indicated acreage "was open and not leased." Each of Orca's representatives at the meeting remembered Mettham's reply somewhat differently. Ellis believes Mettham answered, "[Y]es, but I'll have to-I'll have to check." Stewart remembers him saying, "I'm not sure of that. I'll have to check." Berry recalls Mettham unequivocally representing that the acreage was "open," meaning unleased. However, Berry also concedes that he was in the meeting for only a brief time.

The trust requires that all leases of its tracts contain a clause negating any warranty of title. The standard lease form that JPMorgan usually uses when dealing with the trust's properties includes such a clause: "This Lease is made without warranties of any kind, either express or implied." Orca was familiar with that language as it had twice before leased acreage from the trust using the standard lease form.

But shortly after the parties' initial meeting, Mettham notified Orca that any lease deal it made with the trust would not employ the standard negation-of-warranty provision. Instead, JPMorgan would require new language expressly shifting the risk of title failure to the lessee. Mettham explained that the high volume of leasing activity in the region necessitated the change because lessees were quickly pursuing opportunities without thoroughly examining title. The new clause would read:

*651Negation of Warranty. This lease is made without warranties of any kind, either express or implied, and without recourse against Lessor in the event of a failure of title, not even for the return of the bonus consideration paid for the granting of the lease or for any rental, royalty, shut-in payment, or any other payment now or hereafter made by Lessee to Lessor under the terms of this lease.

Mettham's request to include this new lengthier clause incited concerns among Orca's team. To Ellis, the provision "raised a red flag." It was a "curveball"-something he had never "seen before in any lease." Because the new warranty provision gave the lessee the responsibility "to make absolutely sure that [the t]rust owned the minerals," Ellis believed Orca should obtain "a solid outside legal opinion" as to title. And when asked if Orca would rely on JPMorgan "to confirm whether or not it had title to these mineral interests," Ellis responded: "We would never-that I would never look to JPMorgan to tell me whether or not [the t]rust owned the minerals that were in question."

Similarly, Villalon, Orca's landman and a former practicing attorney, conceded that without a warranty, Orca could purchase only "whatever it was that the Red Crest Trust had to sell," which "might be nothing at all." He also acknowledged that if the trust's properties had already been leased, it could not convey those minerals to Orca. In general, he did not find a disclaimer of warranty out of the ordinary. But he regarded the wording of this particular provision as unusually explicit. So he advised Ellis: "I think we need to accept the language, but we also need to give the title another review before we close."

On December 6, the parties signed a letter of intent acknowledging the trust's agreement to lease the tracts to Orca. In the letter, neither the trust nor JPMorgan made any representation about the trust's title or whether the acreage was available to lease. Instead, the letter provided that Orca had "caused a search to be made of the records of Karnes and DeWitt [c]ounties and has preliminarily determined that Red Crest Trust is the owner and holder of the mineral estate underlying" the tracts at issue.

The letter also quoted the new negation-of-warranty clause on which the parties had agreed. And the letter noted that Orca had requested and received a thirty-day option period in exchange for accepting the new language:

ORCA has accepted the counteroffer of RED CREST TRUST proposing to modify paragraph 18[,] ... but, in light of such requested modification to the lease form[, Orca] has requested, and RED CREST TRUST has agreed to, a delay of up to 30 calendar days in the closing of the proposed transaction to allow ORCA the opportunity to re-examine its title work upon which its determination of ownership is based ....

The letter further provided that the parties could close the transaction "on a piecemeal basis" over the thirty-day option period. As "the title to the individual tracts is examined and approved," the trust would execute a lease to that tract upon Orca tendering consideration of $3,500 per acre. And if Orca's "re-examination of title should reveal [previously unknown] information ... that brings into question the ownership" of one or more of the tracts, then Orca "may, in its sole and absolute discretion, elect to not take a lease on such tract or tracts." Finally, the letter precluded the trust or JPMorgan from leasing the tracts or granting an option to acquire a lease to any third parties.

Before signing the letter of intent, Orca had been checking the property records on an almost daily basis. But it did not continue *652to do so during the thirty-day option period. And it was just three days into the option period, on December 9, that GeoSouthern finally recorded the leases it had obtained from the trust six months earlier. The tracts the letter of intent covered included much of the acreage GeoSouthern had already leased.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
546 S.W.3d 648, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jpmorgan-chase-bank-na-v-orca-assets-gp-l-lc-tex-2018.