Laird Hill Salt Water Disposal, Ltd. v. East Texas Salt Water Disposal, Inc.

351 S.W.3d 81, 179 Oil & Gas Rep. 120, 2011 Tex. App. LEXIS 4965, 2011 WL 2638152
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 30, 2011
Docket12-10-00122-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 351 S.W.3d 81 (Laird Hill Salt Water Disposal, Ltd. v. East Texas Salt Water Disposal, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Laird Hill Salt Water Disposal, Ltd. v. East Texas Salt Water Disposal, Inc., 351 S.W.3d 81, 179 Oil & Gas Rep. 120, 2011 Tex. App. LEXIS 4965, 2011 WL 2638152 (Tex. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

OPINION

JAMES T. WORTHEN, Chief Justice.

This is an appeal in a condemnation case. The trial court granted a partial summary judgment determining that East Texas Salt Water Disposal, Inc. (ETSWD), had the authority to condemn the two acres on which the Bass # 5 salt water disposal well (Bass # 5) owned by Laird Hill Salt Water Disposal, Ltd. and Bolt-serv, Inc. (Laird Hill) 1 was located. The issues of compensation and trespass were then tried to a jury, who determined that there had been no trespass by ETSWD and awarded Laird Hill $24,700.00 for the Bass # 5. In its first issue, Laird Hill appeals the trial court’s partial summary judgment. In its second issue, which we need not address if we sustain the first, Laird Hill attacks the admission of evidence and the charge in the jury trial. We affirm.

BACKGROUND

East Texas Oil Field

The Woodbine Formation, also known as the East Texas Oil Field (Field), is the largest and most prolific oil reserve produced in the contiguous United States. The Field is approximately forty miles long and between five to seven miles wide. Since its discovery in 1930, the Field’s primary oil recovery source consists of a strong “water drive,” whereby salt water in the formation creates pressure to move oil from the reservoir to the wellbore and ultimately to the surface. To produce a barrel of oil from the Field, ninety-two barrels of salt water must be extracted.

By the late 1930s, a crisis had developed in the Field because there was nowhere to store the large amount of salt water being brought to the surface, and it had begun to seep into the area’s fresh water supply. In 1942, ETSWD was established to dispose of the salt water in disposal wells specifically drilled and constructed to safely store this water and keep it from polluting the area’s fresh water supply. Since its founding, ETSWD has provided this service to the producers in the Field on a cost basis. It has constructed over 700 miles of pipeline throughout the Field to transport salt water to its disposal wells in an efficient and environmentally sound manner for disposal. Dozens of disposal wells have been drilled over the decades to dispose of the millions of gallons of salt water produced daily in the Field.

Bass # 5

In 1985, ETSWD leased the approximately two acre tract that is the subject of this suit from Jimmy Mankins and his wife, Virginia, for ten years for the purpose of operating a salt water disposal well. ETSWD exercised an option to extend the lease for an additional five year term in 1995, and the parties thereafter amended the lease to provide for an addi *85 tional five year term to expire on June 4, 2005. Near the expiration of the lease in 2005, Glenn Phillips, the attorney for the Mankinses, informed ETSWD through its land manager, Hollis Wood, that they had an offer of $70,000.00 for the two acres. When ETSWD balked at paying this amount for the two acres, Phillips sent the following letter, which in pertinent part read as follows:

This letter will confirm that Mr. and Mrs. Mankins have agreed to extend the termination date of the above-described lease until June 30, 2005, conditioned upon East Texas Salt Water Disposal Company paying rental for that period in the amount of $100.00. During this time we are going to have Mr. Lawler give us some idea of the value of that property and I will contact you after I hear from Mr. Lawler.

There was a dispute between the testimonies of Phillips and Wood over whether any negotiations continued between the parties following this communication. Wood testified that he never heard from Phillips again about a purchase price for the two acres. Phillips testified that he and Wood negotiated during July and August 2005 and that ETSWD’s top offer was $10,000.00, which the Mankinses considered inadequate. ETSWD continued to operate the Bass # 5 from July through November and paid $100.00 each month to the Mankinses.

On November 23, 2005, the Mankinses sold the two acres to Laird Hill for $48,000.00. Laird Hill is an ETSWD competitor in the salt water disposal industry. The two companies’ competitive positions in disposing of salt water were as follows:

ETSWD Laird Hill
$1.30-1.70 Charged price per barrel of salt water disposed 4.6$
3,700-5,500 Barrels of salt water disposed of daily 980,000-1,000,000
1 Number of salt water disposal wells operated 88
Trucks (130 barrels per truckload) Method of transporting salt water to disposal well Pipeline (700 miles)
Cotton Valley, Travis Peak, Haynesville Shale (primarily) Formations served Woodbine (solely)

On December 6, 2005, Kevin Key, general manager for Laird Hill, along with Phillips, met with Jim Schneider, field superintendent for ETSWD, regarding the operation of the Bass # 5 under Laird Hill’s ownership. The testimony of Schneider, Key, and Phillips conflicted as to what happened at this meeting, but on December 14, 2005, Key sent a letter to Schneider, which in pertinent part stated the following:

As we indicated in the meeting, we would like to work an arrangement that is mutually beneficial for Laird Hill and East Texas Salt Water, but if that is not possible we intend to proceed with our plans to expand the facility early next year. Laird Hill understands that your firm will need some time to disconnect this well from your operations, but we need to know your target date for the disconnect. We will work with you on this issue to the greatest extent possible.

No communication occurred between Key and Schneider for three weeks following the December 14, 2005 correspondence. Then, on January 4, 2006, Key sent a letter to Schneider, which included the following:

*86 We are in the process of placing a fence around our two acre tract upon which the Bass well bore is located.
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Please consider this letter as formal notice that Laird Hill Salt Water is erecting a gate at the entry to the two acre tract. No one, including East Texas Salt Water, has authority to enter upon the two acre tract without contacting me in advance.

Condemnation Proceedings

One week after Key’s letter, ETSWD filed its petition to condemn the two acres. Special commissioners, in the standard administrative proceeding for condemnation proceedings, entered an award of $22,000.00 to Laird Hill for the two acres. Laird Hill immediately filed a written objection stating that the award was inadequate. This objection converted the administrative proceeding into a cause before the trial court. 2 Nearly four years later, in February 2010, both parties filed motions for partial summary judgment. The trial court signed an order on these two motions. The following portions of the order are pertinent to this appeal.

(1) ETSWD’s condemnation is proper;

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351 S.W.3d 81, 179 Oil & Gas Rep. 120, 2011 Tex. App. LEXIS 4965, 2011 WL 2638152, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/laird-hill-salt-water-disposal-ltd-v-east-texas-salt-water-disposal-texapp-2011.