McKinnon v. Alpetco Co.

633 P.2d 281, 1981 Alas. LEXIS 539
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 18, 1981
Docket5546
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 633 P.2d 281 (McKinnon v. Alpetco Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McKinnon v. Alpetco Co., 633 P.2d 281, 1981 Alas. LEXIS 539 (Ala. 1981).

Opinion

OPINION

COMPTON, Justice.

This controversy revolves around an amendment to a contract between the State of Alaska and the Alaska Petrochemical Company (“Alpetco”), 1 by which the state is selling 75,000 barrels a day of its royalty oil to Alpetco. McKinnon and Parker, who were legislators at the time the contract was amended, and the Alaska Public Interest Research Group (hereafter collectively referred to as McKinnon) brought an action in the superior court against Alpetco and the state. McKinnon alleged that various procedural errors occurred during the negotiation and approval of the amendment. He contended that these errors invalidated the amendment and that the original contract is no longer of any force or effect. The relief he sought was a declaratory judgment that the state has no obligation or authority to deliver royalty oil to Alpetco and an injunction restraining the Commissioner of Natural Resources from permitting the delivery of this oil to Alpetco. Both sides moved for summary judgment. The motion of the state and Alpetco was granted on the dual bases that McKinnon’s action was without merit and that McKin-non did not have standing to maintain the action. McKinnon has appealed. For the reasons discussed below, we affirm the superior court’s judgment.

I.

FACTS

The state receives a one-eighth royalty share of all gas and oil produced from state leases executed prior to December, 1979. See AS 38.05.180. In accordance with the statutory scheme set forth in AS 38.06.-010-.080, the Alaska Royalty Oil and Gas Development Advisory Board (“Royalty Board”) studies matters relating to the state’s royalty oil and gas. It directs the Commissioner of Natural Resources (“Commissioner”) to solicit bids and proposals for the royalty oil and gas. The sale of royalty oil is to occur through competitive bidding unless the Commissioner, with the approval of the Royalty Board, waives competitive bidding on the ground that to do so is in the best interest of the state or that no competition exists. At the time this action was brought, the Royalty Board was required to approve or disapprove any dispositions of royalty oil and gas. 2 Any “sale, exchange or other disposition” of royalty oil must be approved by the legislature under most circumstances. 3

In 1977, considerable interest and disagreement arose about how the state could make maximum use of the royalty oil that would be obtained from the Prudhoe Bay leases. Many people wanted the state’s royalty share to be used to encourage the development of oil and gas industries in the state by subsidizing these developments through the sale of royalty oil at prices *284 below market value. Some people wanted many small industries, while others wanted large projects. Yet others did not want oil and gas industries at all, preferring that the royalty oil be used to encourage different types of industries or that the oil be sold for the maximum price possible and the profits be distributed directly to the people of the state.

The Commissioner decided to solicit proposals from private companies to enter into a contract whereby the state would sell its royalty oil to a company at reduced prices in exchange for which the company would build an oil processing facility in the state. Competitive bidding was formally waived. Eleven proposals were received, four of which were given serious consideration. Ultimately, the state selected Alpetco’s proposal. Alpetco had suggested that it would build a $2.5 billion petrochemical facility in Alaska if the state would sell it 150,000 barrels of oil per day at the “in value” price that the state would have received for the oil from the producers. 4 A contract to this effect was entered into with the state and it was approved by the Commissioner and the Royalty Board. After a few changes were made, the legislature approved the contract on June 18, 1978.

McKinnon asserts that everyone involved with the contract at this stage realized that Alpetco’s proposal was extremely speculative, particularly as to the matter of whether Alpetco could obtain financing for the facility. McKinnon asserts that for this reason “benchmark” requirements were included in the contract to make it a “no risk” venture for the state. In accordance with these requirements, Alpetco was not to receive any oil from the state until and unless the following occurred:

(1)Alpetco contained written commitments from others to “lend or invest” $1.5 billion in the project within eighteen months of the effective date of the contract, /. e., by December 18, •1979);
(2) Alpetco obtained interim financing by that date;
(3) Alpetco expended $10 million on the project by that date;
(4) Alpetco completed a substantial amount of the preliminary work on the project by that date;
(5) Alpetco obtained sales contracts for 70% of the facility’s output by that date;
(6) Alpetco expended or committed $100 million within 24 months of the effective date of the contract, i. e., by June 18, 1980; and
(7) Alpetco actually expended $100 million on the project before receiving any royalty oil.

As the eighteen-month benchmark deadline drew near, it became apparent that not all was going smoothly. The most troubling point concerned the first requirement, that Alpetco obtain written commitments from others to lend or invest $1.5 billion in the project. The plaintiffs contend that Alpetco did not meet this requirement because the commitments it had obtained were not “binding obligations.” Alpetco submitted evidence to the state of what it considered to be compliance with the benchmark requirements.

The contract gave the Commissioner authority to extend the eighteen-month benchmark period six months. He chose to do so, over the objection of Alpetco, in order to evaluate whether the benchmark requirements had been met and to give Alpetco more time to comply with the requirements in the event Alpetco had not already done so. In February, 1980, the Commissioner determined that Alpetco had met the requirements within the eighteen-month period. He decided that the commitments for financing obtained by Alpetco *285 were sufficient because the contract did not require legally binding commitments, but only “business” commitments.

Sometime around this period, Alpetco altered its goals and decided to build merely a refinery rather than a petrochemical facility. 5 This, coupled with disagreement about whether Alpetco had obtained the financial commitments required by the contract, was not well received by some members of the legislature. The state asserts that even then there was a threat of litigation about the contract, which disturbed Alpetco. For whatever precise reason, a legislative committee suggested that the contract be amended to resolve some of the disagreements that had arisen.

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Bluebook (online)
633 P.2d 281, 1981 Alas. LEXIS 539, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mckinnon-v-alpetco-co-alaska-1981.