Louisiana Pigment Company, Lp v. Air Liquide America Corp., Lp

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 15, 2014
DocketCA-0013-0698
StatusUnknown

This text of Louisiana Pigment Company, Lp v. Air Liquide America Corp., Lp (Louisiana Pigment Company, Lp v. Air Liquide America Corp., Lp) 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.

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Louisiana Pigment Company, Lp v. Air Liquide America Corp., Lp, (La. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT

13-698

LOUISIANA PIGMENT COMPANY, L.P.

VERSUS

AIR LIQUIDE AMERICA, L.P. AND AIR LIQUIDE LARGE INDUSTRIES, US L.P.

**********

APPEAL FROM THE FOURTEENTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT PARISH OF CALCASIEU, NO. 2012-2617 HONORABLE RONALD F. WARE, DISTRICT JUDGE

JIMMIE C. PETERS JUDGE

Court composed of Sylvia R. Cooks, Jimmie C. Peters, J. David Painter, James T. Genovese, and John E. Conery, Judges.

REVERSED AND RENDERED.

James M. Garner Debra J. Fischman Jennifer H. Mabry Sher Garner Cahill Richter Klein & Hilbert, L.L.C. 909 Poydras Street Twenty-Eighth Floor New Orleans, LA 70112 (504) 299-2100 COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANTS/APPELLANTS: Air Liquide America, L.P. Air Liquide Large Industries, US L.P. Rudie R. Soileau, Jr. Hunter W. Lundy Daniel A. Kramer Lundy, Lundy, Soileau & South LLP 501 Broad Street Lake Charles, LA 70601 (337) 439-0707 COUNSEL FOR PLAINTIFF/APPELLEE: Louisiana Pigment Company, L.P. PETERS, J.

This litigation involves a contract dispute over the sale and delivery of

oxygen and nitrogen to a Louisiana facility currently operated by the plaintiff,

Louisiana Pigment Company, L.P. The defendants in this litigation, Air Liquide

America, L.P. and Air Liquide Large Industries, US L.P., appeal the trial court‟s

denial of their declinatory exception of improper venue. For the following reasons,

we reverse the trial court judgment and render judgment granting the exception of

improper venue and dismissing the lawsuit of Louisiana Pigment Company, L.P.

against Air Liquide America, L.P. and Air Liquide Large Industries, US L.P., but

without prejudice.

DISCUSSION OF THE RECORD

The litigation has as its origin a September 1, 1990 contract between Big

Three Industrial Gas, Inc. (Big Three) and Kronos Louisiana, Inc. (Kronos), both

Delaware corporations. In the contract, Big Three agreed to deliver oxygen and

nitrogen to a Kronos‟ Calcasieu Parish chemical manufacturing facility for use in

its manufacturing process. The contract identified the point of delivery and

ownership transfer of the oxygen and nitrogen as Big Three‟s meters, located

inside Kronos‟ Calcasieu Parish facility, and provided that the oxygen and nitrogen

originating from various plants owned by Big Three would to be transported to

Kronos‟ facility through a pipeline system running along the Texas and Louisiana

Gulf Coast.

On September 23, 1993, Louisiana Pigment Company, L.P. (Louisiana

Pigment) came into being as a limited partnership, with Kronos and Toxide

America, L.L.C. (Toxide) as partners in the endeavor. On the same day Louisiana

Pigment was created, Kronos assigned the September 1, 1990 contract to it with

the acceptance and concurrence of Big Three. By January of 1994, Big Three Industrial Gas, Inc. came to be identified as Big Three Industries, Inc., an Air

Liquide Group Company. Immediately thereafter, Air Liquide America, L.P. (Air

Liquide America) became the party at interest in the contract.

On November 25, 2002, Air Liquide America submitted a price schedule to

Louisiana Pigment, to take effect on January 1, 2003, for prices affecting “the use

of supplemental, excess, liquid, or peaking product per the provisions of your

agreement with Air Liquide.” It informed Louisiana Pigment that this

supplemental rate would not apply to normal deliveries of its product. On

September 23, 2004, Air Liquide America assigned the contract to Air Liquide

Large Industries, US L.P. (Air Liquide US), effective January 1, 2005. Louisiana

Pigment recognized the existence of this assignment on September 30, 2004.

The original term of the contract ran through January 1, 2007. However, a

May 1, 1998 amendment extended the term through January 1, 2010, with one-year

increments to be effective thereafter until either party provided written notice of

termination. Upon written notice of termination, the contract would extend

through the remainder of that year and the next complete year. On December 13,

2010, Air Liquide US provided Louisiana Pigment with written notice that it was

terminating the contract, effective January 1, 2012.

On June 15, 2012, Louisiana Pigment filed suit against Air Liquide America

and Air Liquide US, asserting that since delivery of the January 1, 2003 price

schedule by Air Liquide America, the two entities had manipulated the delivery

meters so that the higher supplemental rate applied for what was actually normal

deliveries of oxygen and nitrogen. Louisiana Pigment further asserted that

between January 1, 2003 and January 1, 2012, Air Liquide America and Air

2 Liquide US had assessed it with excessive electrical power charges based on the

categorization of the deliveries at issue in the litigation.

Air Liquide America and Air Liquide US responded to the original petition

by filing a declinatory exception of improper venue based on Section 20.1 of the

September 1, 1990 contract, which reads as follows:

This Agreement shall be governed by and construed in accordance with the laws of Texas and shall be performed in Harris County, Texas. It is expressly stipulated and agreed that the District Courts of Harris County, Texas, and the Federal District Court for the Southern District of Texas shall have exclusive jurisdiction and venue of all proceedings based on or arising out of this Agreement.

Following a March 6, 2013 hearing, the trial court denied the exception and

certified the ruling as a final and immediately appealable judgment. On March 22,

2013, the trial court executed a judgment conforming to its ruling. Thereafter, Air

Liquide America and Air Liquide US perfected this appeal, asserting the following

assignments of error:

1. The district court erred in denying [the defendants‟] declinatory exception of improper venue, as the parties here executed a valid contract with an unambiguous forum-selection clause designating Texas courts as the exclusive and mandatory venue for actions such as this one.

2. The district court erred to the extent that it applied Louisiana law to determine the enforceability of the contract‟s forum- selection clause, as the contract‟s choice-of-law clause provides that it shall be governed by and construed in accordance with Texas law.

3. The district court erred to the extent it engaged in a conflict-of- laws analysis under Louisiana Civil Code article 3537 to determine what state‟s law applies to the contract at issue, because article 3537 “applies in the absence of an effective choice of law by the parties,” and the parties‟ effective choice of Texas law here, as memorialized in their contract, makes article 3537 inapplicable.

4. The district court erred to the extent it found that article 3537‟s relative impairment test weighed in favor of application of Louisiana law, as opposed to Texas law. 3 5. The district court erred to the extent it found that Louisiana has a strong public policy against enforcing forum-selection agreements, despite the fact that four out of five Louisiana Circuits have held, and the Louisiana Supreme Court has recognized, that forum-selection agreements are prima facie valid and enforceable in Louisiana.

(Footnotes to assignments omitted.)

OPINION

The declinatory exception of improper venue is provided for by La.Code

Civ.P. art. 925(A)(4). An appeal from a judgment denying an exception of

improper venue presents a question of law, and we review the record de novo in

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