Mark Carpenter and Carpco Efficient Energy, L.L.C. v. Chris Phelps and Steve Helms

391 S.W.3d 143, 179 Oil & Gas Rep. 972, 2011 WL 1233312, 2011 Tex. App. LEXIS 2414
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 31, 2011
Docket01-09-00203-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 391 S.W.3d 143 (Mark Carpenter and Carpco Efficient Energy, L.L.C. v. Chris Phelps and Steve Helms) 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
Mark Carpenter and Carpco Efficient Energy, L.L.C. v. Chris Phelps and Steve Helms, 391 S.W.3d 143, 179 Oil & Gas Rep. 972, 2011 WL 1233312, 2011 Tex. App. LEXIS 2414 (Tex. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

OPINION

JIM SHARP, Justice.

The issue posed here is whether documents that recite a description of real property as Texas Railroad Commission “Oil Lse/Gas ID no. 08294” and “the M.T. Cole ‘A’ Lease in Gregg County, Texas” are sufficient to satisfy the statute of *146 frauds. 1 We hold that because the pertinent documents do not furnish within themselves, or by reference to other existing writings, the means or data by which the land may be identified with reasonable certainty, the statute of frauds is not satisfied, and we reverse. 2

Background

This dispute arises out of a business transaction between appellant Mark Carpenter and investors that included appel-lees Chris Phelps and Steve Helms. Carpenter is the sole member of appellant Carpco Efficient Energy, L.L.C., which, in 2004, acquired an oil lease in Gregg County encompassing as many as 48 wells (the M.T. Cole “A” lease). Carpenter and Carpco sought $80,000 in capital to develop the lease. It is undisputed that Helms and Phelps originally invested $30,000.00 and $10,000.00, respectively.

No formal joint venture agreement or joint operating agreement was executed by the parties before the lease was put into production and began to generate income. Rather, the parties exchanged numerous e-mails, which Phelps and Helms argue form an enforceable contract. Helms and Phelps sued Carpenter and Carpco in 2007, alleging in part a breach of contract and breach of fiduciary duty.

The fundamental disagreement between the parties is whether Carpenter and Carpco were merely seeking to raise an initial capital amount for the first of three planned phases of development of the M.T. Cole “A” lease (“Phase 1”), thus limiting Phelps’s and Helms’s investments to only a portion of the lease, or whether there was an enforceable contract for Phelps’s and Helms’s investment in the entire lease. Carpenter’s testimony was that he only raised $72,000.00 for Phase 1 of the planned development.

After a bench trial, the court determined there was an enforceable contract and found that the material terms were as follows:

• Plaintiffs would invest, with other investors, in a working interest in the M.T. Cole “A” Lease and associated oil wells;
• Plaintiffs would share, with other investors, in a pro rata ownership of one hundred percent ((100%)) of the M.T. Cole “A” Lease until net revenues from the wells equaled the principal and interest due to the investors (“payout”);
• Defendants would pay Plaintiffs eight percent (8%) interest on their investment until payout occurred;
• Plaintiffs’ would share a diluted pro rata ownership of fifty percent (50%) of the M.T. Cole “A” Lease after payout; and
• Defendants would deliver a joint operating agreement (JOA) to Plaintiffs showing their and other investors ownership interest in the M.T. Cole “A” Lease as well as containing the other terms of operating the M.T. Cole “A” Lease.

Based on these findings, the trial court rendered judgment against Carpenter and Carpco: (1) that Phelps recover actual damages of $80,493.74, along with pre- and *147 postjudgment interest and $100,276.94 in attorney’s fees; (2) that Phelps receive an 11.25% working interest in the M.T. Cole “A” lease; (3) that Helms recover actual damages of $182,378.44 (plus pre- and postjudgment interest) and $167,128.07 in attorney’s fees; (4) that Phelps receive an 18.75% working interest in the M.T. Cole “A” lease; and (5) that the parties enter into a “AAPL Form 610-1989 Joint Operating Agreement.”

On appeal, Phelps and Helms cite to the following statements in a letter and other e-mails to support the trial court’s findings regarding the material terms of the alleged contract:

Carpenter to Phelps, January 13, 2005: Carpco Efficient Energy, Co., LLC is looking for investors to invest in the M.T. Cole “A” lease in Gregg County, Texas. The field consists of 48 wells drilled to approximately 3,000 feet into the Woodbine formation.
[[Image here]]
... Ideally, I would like to sell a 1/3 interest for $80,000 "with interest payable @ 8% on the principal until the original investment is returned plus interest at which time the investors stake is converted into a 1/6 carried interest. Carpenter to Phelps, January 18, 2005: Ross asked me the same question about royalty or working interest. Royalty interest is usually associated with existing production. My deal will require a workover program before a level of production can be established and defined. Therefore the interest would be a working interest.
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... This is why I am confident that all investors will get their original investment back in less than two years and I will end up with my share of the production. The way the deal is structured I don’t get my carried interest until APO (after payout).
Carpenter to Phelps, January 18, 2005: Have you received any feedback from Steve in Chicago? I need to get the Joint Operating Agreement finalized before the other investors make their capital contributions. The JOA spells out the percentages of all involved and cannot be completed until everyone and their interest is listed.
Carpenter to Phelps, January 29, 2005: I got an e-mail this morning from one of the investors in the East Texas oil deal wanting to know what the hold up was with the JOA. I told him to complete the JOA and begin producing the field I need to know who was in and their percentages.

Analysis

A. Statute of frauds

In its second issue, Carpenter and Carpco contend the trial court erred in concluding that the alleged contract satisfies the statute of frauds because it “furnished within itself the means or data by which property, the M.T. Cole A’ Lease, in Gregg County, Texas, may be identified with reasonable certainty” and “describes the property and contains sufficient data such that a party familiar with the locality can identify the property with reasonable certainty.” See Tex. Bus & Com. Ann. § 26.01 (West 2009) (statute of frauds). Carpenter and Carpco further contend the trial court erred in concluding that the contract was partially performed and that promissory estoppel bars the application of the statute of frauds.

The trial court found that the alleged contract provided that Phelps and Helms would initially share in a pro rata ownership of 100% of the M.T. Cole “A” lease until net revenues from the wells *148 equaled the principal and interest due the investors, after which Phelps and Helms would share in a pro rata ownership of 50%. On appeal, the parties do not dispute that an agreement assigning such real property interests must contain a description of the property in order to satisfy the statute of frauds. See Westland Oil Dev. Corp. v. Gulf Oil Corp., 637

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Bluebook (online)
391 S.W.3d 143, 179 Oil & Gas Rep. 972, 2011 WL 1233312, 2011 Tex. App. LEXIS 2414, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mark-carpenter-and-carpco-efficient-energy-llc-v-chris-phelps-and-texapp-2011.