Marathon Oil v. Mercuria Energy America

2025 Tex. Bus. 36
CourtTexas Business Court
DecidedSeptember 18, 2025
Docket25-BC11A-0013
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2025 Tex. Bus. 36 (Marathon Oil v. Mercuria Energy America) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Business Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marathon Oil v. Mercuria Energy America, 2025 Tex. Bus. 36 (Tex. Super. Ct. 2025).

Opinion

2025 Tex. Bus. 36

The Business Court of Texas, 11th Division MARATHON OIL CO., § Plaintiff, § § v. § Cause No. 25-BC11A-0013 MERCURIA ENERGY AMERICA, § LLC, § § Defendant. § ════════════════════════════════════════════ Syllabus* ════════════════════════════════════════════

In this force-majeure dispute arising out of a contract for the purchase and sale of natural gas based on the North American Energy Standards Board base- contract form, the parties dispute (a) whether the transaction confirmations are part of their contract and (b) which one controls over the other. The Court holds that, although the seller’s transaction confirmation identifies a delivery term on which the buyer’s confirmation is silent, the two confirmations do not materially conflict. Thus, both transaction confirmations combine with the base contract to form a single, integrated agreement, and neither confirmation trumps the other.

* The syllabus was created by court staff and is provided for the convenience of the reader. It is not part of the Court’s opinion, does not constitute the Court’s official description or statement, and should not be relied upon as legal authority. FILED IN BUSINESS COURT OF TEXAS 2025 Tex. Bus. 36 BEVERLY CRUMLEY, CLERK ENTERED 9/18/2025

The Business Court of Texas, 11th Division

MARATHON OIL CO., § Plaintiff, § § v. § Cause No. 25-BC11A-0013 MERCURIA ENERGY AMERICA, § LLC, § § Defendant. § ═══════════════════════════════════════ OPINION AND ORDER ═══════════════════════════════════════

¶1 Pursuant to the Scheduling Order, the parties filed a Joint Advisory on

Early Legal Issues identifying legal issues that one or both parties contend can be

resolved early in the case to facilitate efficiency or resolution. The Court requested

briefing on two such issues (#3 and #12) and now rules on the first such issue (#3)

pursuant to Texas Rule of Civil Procedure 166(g).1

1 TEX. R. CIV. P. 166(g); see also Skeels v. Suder, 671 S.W.3d 664, 670 (Tex. 2023); JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A. v. Orca Assets G.P., 546 S.W.3d 648, 653 (Tex. 2018).

1 Summary

¶2 This dispute arises out of Marathon’s force-majeure declaration under

its natural-gas purchase and sale agreement with Mercuria, in the wake of Winter

Storm Uri. The question before the Court is whether the transaction confirmations

exchanged by the parties are part of their “Contract,” as defined in their agreement,

and whether either party’s confirmation controls over the other’s. The Court holds

that whether the parties’ transaction confirmations are part of the Contract depends

on whether they are “binding” under their agreement, which in turn depends on

whether the recipient timely (a) notified the sender that the confirmation materially

differed from its understanding of the agreement or (b) sent its own confirmation

containing materially different terms. The Court holds that there is no material dif-

ference between the parties’ confirmations, such that both are “binding” and form

part of the parties’ integrated agreement and neither trumps the other.2

Background

¶3 Marathon Oil Co. and Mercuria Energy America are parties to a Base

Contract for Sale and Purchase of Natural Gas (the Base Contract), a master contract

that sets out overarching terms and conditions governing their individual

2 The issue of how the pipeline term affects Marathon’s obligations under the Contract is not before the Court, and the Court does not reach any conclusion in that regard.

2 transactions.3 The parties first agreed to the transaction at issue in January 2021

via ICE Chat, an instant messaging platform used by natural gas traders.4 The chat

specified the transaction’s quantity (“20k”), duration (February), price (“IF PEPL

plus $.035”), and delivery location (“EOIT West Pool”).5 The following morning,

Mercuria sent Marathon a transaction confirmation stating the same terms with

some additional terms (such as that it was a “firm” transaction) and details.6 The

morning after that, Marathon sent Mercuria its own transaction confirmation with

the same terms7 plus a “pipeline” term: “Enable Gathering and Processing.”8 On

January 25, Mercuria signed and returned Marathon’s confirmation

with checkmarks added near some of the terms but not next to the “Enable

Gathering and Processing” term.9

3 The Base Contract is attached to Marathon’s Trial Brief on Dueling Transaction Confirmations (Marathon’s TC Br.) as Exhibit 1 and to Mercuria’s Brief Regarding the Controlling Terms of Its Agreement with Marathon (Mercuria’s TC Br.) as Exhibit A. The Base Contract includes General Terms and Conditions and, when so elected by the parties, as is the case here, Special Provisions that modify and supplement the General Terms and Conditions. 4 Mercuria TC Br., Exh. D; see also Mercuria Mot. Summ. J. at 3 n.2. 5 Mercuria TC Br., Exh. D. 6 Marathon TC Br., Exh. 3; Mercuria TC Br., Exh. B. 7 Although the confirmations use different terminology for the delivery point, Mercuria says they refer to the same place, and Marathon does not dispute that here. See Marathon TC Br. at 13; Mer- curia TC Br. at 5–6. 8 The parties appear to agree that “Enable Gathering and Processing” is a gathering system rather than a pipeline. This opinion refers to the “Enable Gathering and Processing” term as the “pipe- line” term only for simplicity and consistency with the parties’ arguments. 9 Marathon TC Br., Exh. 2; Mercuria TC Br., Exh. H at 72.

3 ¶4 In the wake of Winter Storm Uri, Marathon declared force majeure in

mid-February and delivered only 424,000 of the 560,000 MMBtu for the month.10

Mercuria disputed Marathon’s force-majeure declaration and brought this suit (and

its predecessor in district court).

¶5 Because the putative pipeline term is potentially relevant to the force-

majeure dispute in this case, the parties have briefed their disagreement over what

constitutes the terms of their Contract. Marathon argues that the pipeline term is

part of their Contract because Marathon’s confirmation (1) is binding, (2) became

part of the parties’ Contract, and (3) either controls over Mercuria’s confirmation

or, alternatively, can be read together with Mercuria’s confirmation. Mercuria ar-

gues that the pipeline term is not part of the parties’ agreement because (1) the ICE

Chat terms control; (2) Marathon’s confirmation cannot vary or supplement the ICE

Chat terms or the Base Contract’s general terms; and (3) it rejected the pipeline term

either by signing and returning Marathon’s confirmation without a checkmark next

to that term or by sending its own confirmation that included no pipeline term.

10 See Mercuria’s Orig. Answer & Countercl. at ¶ 12; Marathon Mot. Summ. J., Exh. 11.

4 Analysis

A. The Court must apply the parties’ contract as written, cognizant of the need for consistency in interpreting frequently used industry contract forms.

¶6 The issue before the Court requires it to construe the parties’ contract.

The meaning of an unambiguous contract is a question of law for the courts.11 When

interpreting a contract, Texas courts begin with the text and “seek to ascertain the

parties’ intent as expressed in the plain language of the written agreement that won

their mutual assent.”12 In short, we presume that the parties meant what they said

in the contract,13 and we construe what they said to mean “what an ordinary person

using those words under the circumstances in which they are used would understand

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Related

Marathon Oil v. Mercuria Energy America
2025 Tex. Bus. 39 (Texas Business Court, 2025)

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2025 Tex. Bus. 36, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marathon-oil-v-mercuria-energy-america-texbizct-2025.