Kerr-Mcgee Corporation v. Jimmy Helton

CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 30, 2004
Docket02-0356
StatusPublished

This text of Kerr-Mcgee Corporation v. Jimmy Helton (Kerr-Mcgee Corporation v. Jimmy Helton) 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
Kerr-Mcgee Corporation v. Jimmy Helton, (Tex. 2004).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF TEXAS

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF TEXAS

No. 02-0356

Kerr-Mcgee Corporation, Et Al.

v.

Jimmy Helton, Et Al.

On Petition for Review from the

Court of Appeals for the Seventh District of Texas

Argued on January 22, 2003

Justice Smith delivered the opinion of the Court, in which Chief Justice Phillips,

Justice Hecht, Justice Owen, Justice Jefferson, Justice Schneider, Justice Wainwright, and Justice Brister joined.

Justice Hecht filed a concurring opinion, in which Justice Wainwright joined.

Justice O=Neill did not participate in the decision.

Oil and gas lessors brought suit against lessee for breach of the implied covenant to protect the leasehold against drainage.  The case was tried to the bench.  At trial, lessors= sole evidence of the amount of damages was the expert testimony of Michael Riley.  After cross-examining Riley, lessee objected and moved to strike Riley=s testimony as unreliable.  The trial court denied the motion and, at the close of trial, rendered judgment for lessors.  Concluding, among other things, that the evidence was legally sufficient to support the damages award, the court of appeals affirmed.  ___ S.W.3d ___.  We conclude that Riley=s testimony regarding the amount of damages is unreliable and is therefore no evidence.  Accordingly, because lessors failed to present any competent evidence on an essential element of their cause of action, we reverse the court of appeals= judgment and render judgment that lessors take nothing.

I

Kerr-McGee Corporation acquired sixty-one oil and gas leases from the respondents, who consist of sixty-nine  individuals, estates, and trusts (collectively referred to as AHelton@).  The leases cover all of Section 10, Block R.E., Roberts and Eddleman Survey, in Wheeler County.[1]  Kerr-McGee pooled the leases effective March 28, 1994.  Kerr-McGee also owned leases in several sections of the West Park Field surrounding section 10.[2]

In September 1993, Kerr-McGee began drilling a wildcat well in section 17, which is directly south of section 10.  This well, Holmes 17-1, was a deep gas well in the West Park Field, Upper Morrow formation of the Anadarko Basin.  It was completed on December 4, 1993.  Holmes 17-1 was located 660 feet from the northern and western boundary lines of section 17.  It encountered approximately 73 feet of the previously unknown Lower Puryear zone in the Upper Morrow formation and was a very profitable well, producing approximately 8.7 Bcf (billion cubic feet) of gas over its lifetime.

After Holmes 17-1 was drilled, Kerr-McGee drilled several additional wells in the West Park Field, including two wells in section 10 (Mitchell 10-1 and Mitchell 10-2).  Mitchell 10-1, which was located 1600 feet from the southern boundary line of section 10, was completed in August 1994, and encountered no Lower Puryear.  Kerr-McGee next drilled the Eden 11-1 well in section 11, which is directly west of section 10.  Kerr-McGee placed this well 467 feet from the eastern and southern boundary lines of section 11, as close as spacing rules[3] would allow to the boundary lines, thereby placing the Eden 11-1 as close as possible to Holmes 17-1.  Eden 11-1 encountered 7 feet of Lower Puryear.  It was completed in January 1995 in another zone, the Puryear, and will make a reasonable profit. 

After completing a seismic survey, Kerr-McGee drilled the Zybach 16-1 well in section 16, the section southwest of section 10.  Zybach 16-1 was spudded in February 1996 near the southern boundary line of section 16.  It encountered no Lower Puryear.  KerrBMcGee then returned to section 10 to drill an additional well, Mitchell 10-2, in June 1996.  Although Mitchell 10-2 was 467 feet from the southern boundary line of section 10, it was 2300 feet from the western boundary line, and thus was not very close to Holmes 17-1.  Mitchell 10-2 encountered approximately 7 feet of Lower Puryear, was completed in the Lower Puryear and two other zones, and was a marginal producer.  It will not make a profit. 

In December 1996, Kerr-McGee completed a second well in section 16.  This well, Fleetwood Trust 16-1, was located west of Holmes 17-1, 467 feet from the eastern boundary line of section 16.  Fleetwood Trust 16-1, which was placed as close as possible to Holmes 17-1, encountered approximately 79 feet of Lower Puryear, produced approximately 7.0 Bcf of gas, and was also a very profitable well.  Kerr-McGee drilled three additional wells in the West Park Field, for a total of nine wells.[4]

The parties agree that, in the Upper Morrow formation in the Anadarko Basin, hydrocarbon-bearing rock and sands were deposited by streams and rivers and are therefore difficult to find.  The area is extremely difficult to map, and deposits are easily missed.  Of the nine wells Kerr-McGee drilled in the West Park Field, four wells C

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