Louisiana Intrastate Gas Co. v. Martin Intrastate Gas Co.

623 So. 2d 664, 1993 La. App. LEXIS 2595, 1993 WL 254393
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 2, 1993
DocketNo. 92 CA 0840
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 623 So. 2d 664 (Louisiana Intrastate Gas Co. v. Martin Intrastate Gas Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Louisiana Intrastate Gas Co. v. Martin Intrastate Gas Co., 623 So. 2d 664, 1993 La. App. LEXIS 2595, 1993 WL 254393 (La. Ct. App. 1993).

Opinion

LOTTINGER, Chief Judge.

This appeal concerns a declaratory judgment action in which plaintiff, Louisiana Intrastate Gas Corporation (LIG), seeks a determination of its rights and obligations, under a statewide gas purchase contract, vis-a-vis an assignee of the original party to the contract, defendant and plaintiff-in-reconvention, Martin Intrastate Gas Company (MIG), and intervenor, Martin Exploration Company (MECO), respectively. The trial court found in favor of MIG, declaring that the contract was validly assigned to it and determining MiG’s various rights as seller under the contract, as well as the pricing for gas tendered under the contract. The trial court also dismissed MECO’s intervention in which it sought to be declared the owner of rights MIG claimed, in its reconventional demand against LIG. LIG and MECO appeal this judgment.

PACTS

The pertinent facts, laid out in a voluminous record, are these.

In 1978, LIG and MECO began negotiations toward completion of gas purchase contracts that would cover gas production from specific, developed properties (lands and leases) in Louisiana owned by MECO. Roy Johnson, LIG’s representative, planned to meet with Ken Martin, MECO’s president, to sign the already-prepared contracts he brought with him from Alexandria.

Once at MECO’s offices, Johnson encountered a number of other men representing other parties, or MECO, in various capacities. Johnson learned that Martin wanted to negotiate a statewide gas purchase contract in which MECO could commit to LIG’s pipeline not only the gas from its developed properties, but all gas production from its present and future-acquired properties within Louisiana. The men then began an all-night negotiation session during which the specifies of the contract at issue were settled upon.

Once signed by LIG and MECO, the parties continued their businesses, separately and together, until MECO entered bankruptcy in 1982, after the collapse of gas prices in 1981. In 1986, while still in bankruptcy, all of MECO’s assets, including the statewide contract, were transferred to Wells Fargo Bank, MECO’s main creditor, via Wells-Fargo’s nominee, ATC Realty Eight, Inc. Then, in 1988, ATC and Wells Fargo assigned the contract to MIG, a company formed by Ken Martin to exploit the dormant statewide contract.

Paragraph 11.3, the only provision concerning assignment, of the contract’s general terms and conditions allowed for assignment of the contract as follows:

This contract shall be binding upon and inure to the benefit of the heirs, legal representatives, successors and assigns of the respective parties hereto, but only to the extent of the interest in the property assigned, and shall be binding upon any purchaser of Buyer’s [LIG] transmission system and upon any purchaser of the properties of Seller [MECO] which are subject to this Contract.

However, the assignment specifically reserved to Wells Fargo the properties previ[666]*666ously owned by MECO, which was still in bankruptcy. MIG received only those rights, if any, that Wells Fargo possessed in the contract as MECO’s assignee, independent of the properties committed to the contract.

Ken Martin did not view this as a problem, believing that he could solicit other producers to sell their gas to LIG, at pre-crash prices, under the broad language of the contract describing the available commitment of gas to LIG. Martin wrote to LIG, and its then owner Tenneco, expressing his intent to exploit the contract by acquiring the right, from third party producers, to broker then-gas for sale to LIG.

LIG and Tenneco immediately took the position that Wells Fargo’s assignment of the MECO contract to MIG was invalid, or at least did not convey any enforceable rights to MIG, because MIG did not receive any of MECO’s properties in the assignment. LIG and Tenneco based their interpretation of the parties’ rights on the clause, in paragraph 11.3, “but only to the extent of the interest in the property assigned” which, LIG contends, restricts enforcement of contractual rights to an assignment of MECO properties.

As the parties’ positions became solidly divergent, LIG decided to file suit against MIG to have the latter’s rights declared unenforceable. Tenneco, in an effort to protect itself as the contractual indemnitor of LIG under the statewide contract, purchased MECO out of bankruptcy, in 1991, and MECO then intervened in the suit to have the assignment declared invalid as a breach of the fiduciary duties Ken Martin owed to it, as a corporate officer, while it was in bankruptcy. Tenneco took these extraordinary measures because the value of the gas MIG wanted to tender to LIG was, allegedly, “about $5 billion.”

The trial court found that the “but only” clause of the contract was ambiguous and then relied upon extensive parol evidence to find that the clause did not restrict enforcement of the contract’s rights to an assignment of MECO’s properties. The court found that the phrase meant only that an assignee took no more than he was intended to receive in the assignment.

The court then determined MiG’s other rights under the contract, restricting the available commitment of gas to that in which MIG owned an interest, rather than allowing it to simply broker gas as Ken Martin wanted to do. The practical difference, however, between the two means of tendering gas to LIG is negligible given that MIG need only acquire a minute ownership interest, along with the right to sell for the third party producer, in order to commit the producer’s gas to the contract.

Further, the trial court determined the pricing structure for the sale of gas under the contract, and dismissed MECO’s intervention by which it sought to have the contract adjudicated to it.

ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR

For its part, LIG assigns as error the following:

1. The trial court erred when it concluded that the Contract between LIG and MECO was freely assignable, and that rights under that Contract had in fact been assigned to MIG. Specifically, the trial court erred:
a. In failing to hold that the very nature of the Contract precluded the assignment of MECO’s open-ended contractual rights;
b. In refusing to hold, based on the unambiguous terms of the Contract, that an assignee’s rights will extend only to those properties in which MECO had owned an interest; and
c. In concluding that the parol testimony at trial establishes the absence of any limitation on the assignability of the Contract.
2. The trial court erred when it concluded that the “Seller” need only possess a nominal financial, contractual, or other interest in gas properties in order to sell gas from those properties under the Contract. Instead, the terms of the Contract, the parties’ contract negotiations, and settled legal principles all establish that the Seller was authorized to sell gas only from those properties which it had actively acquired, explored, and developed.
[667]*6673. The trial court erred when it concluded that the definition of “Tuscaloosa Trend” in the 1980 Sohio Release was intended to convey a geological meaning, where the express definition of that term in the release itself and the trial evidence establish that the term was intended to convey a geographical meaning.
4.

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Bluebook (online)
623 So. 2d 664, 1993 La. App. LEXIS 2595, 1993 WL 254393, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louisiana-intrastate-gas-co-v-martin-intrastate-gas-co-lactapp-1993.