MCR Oil Tools, LLC v. Halliburton Energy Services, Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 13, 2024
Docket02-23-00300-CV
StatusPublished

This text of MCR Oil Tools, LLC v. Halliburton Energy Services, Inc. (MCR Oil Tools, LLC v. Halliburton Energy Services, Inc.) 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
MCR Oil Tools, LLC v. Halliburton Energy Services, Inc., (Tex. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

In the Court of Appeals Second Appellate District of Texas at Fort Worth ___________________________ No. 02-23-00300-CV ___________________________

MCR OIL TOOLS, LLC, Appellant

V.

HALLIBURTON ENERGY SERVICES, INC., Appellee

On Appeal from the 236th District Court Tarrant County, Texas Trial Court No. 236-293104-17

Before Sudderth, C.J.; Womack and Walker, JJ. Opinion by Chief Justice Sudderth OPINION

After the parties’ licensing agreement expired and their relationship soured,

Appellee Halliburton Energy Services, Inc. alleged that Appellant MCR Oil Tools,

LLC was interfering with its contracts, and an arbitration panel found in Halliburton’s

favor. MCR challenges the trial court’s confirmation of the arbitration award, arguing

that the arbitration panel exceeded its powers by issuing the award because

Halliburton’s claims were based on its affiliates’ contracts so there was no arbitration

agreement. When challenging the existence of an arbitration agreement and seeking

vacatur under the Texas Arbitration Act (TAA), the party seeking vacatur must show

that it did not participate in the arbitration hearing without first raising the objection.

Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code Ann. § 171.088(a)(4). MCR did not do so. Accordingly,

we will affirm.

I. Background

MCR licenses specialized oilfield tools, and for approximately 16 years,

Halliburton had a licensing agreement with MCR for the use of such tools (the

Licensing Agreement). The Licensing Agreement contained a broad arbitration

provision that required “[a]ny dispute, controversy, or claim arising out of or relating

to th[e] Agreement, or the breach, termination[,] or invalidity thereof” to be “settled

by arbitration in accordance with the UNCITRAL Arbitration Rules” and governed

by substantive Texas law.

2 A. Licensing Agreement Lapse and Unused Tools

When the Licensing Agreement lapsed in 2017, Halliburton had unused MCR

tools on hand that it had paid for but was no longer authorized to use. So,

Halliburton—acting through its affiliates—contracted with other MCR licensees to

use the oilfield tools (the affiliate contracts). MCR intervened and demanded that the

tools be returned to it and that Halliburton pay a disposal fee, but Halliburton balked

and, later, advised MCR that it would destroy the unused tools itself. MCR sought the

intervention of a Dallas County court, Halliburton agreed not to destroy the tools,

and the parties entered into a Rule 11 agreement that the tool-related dispute would

be resolved in arbitration.1

B. Alleged Interference and Litigation

Within days of the parties’ Rule 11 agreement, MCR sent a memorandum to its

licensees vaguely referencing its lawsuit against Halliburton and instructing the

licensees not to work with the company. Then, in a related writing, MCR told a

licensee that an injunction was in place. Because, according to Halliburton, those

communications interfered with the affiliate contracts with MCR’s licensees,

Halliburton sued MCR in Tarrant County court for tortious interference. But after

MCR responded with defenses related to the Licensing Agreement, Halliburton

1 The parties later agreed that the cost of shipping the tools back to MCR would be resolved in the arbitration proceeding, and in the interim, they provided a procedure for Halliburton’s return of the tools to MCR. The agreed return procedure fell through after one shipment, and the alleged breach of this agreement became another issue for the arbitration panel to resolve.

3 concluded that its tortious interference claims were subject to arbitration, so it

nonsuited the claims and filed a notice of arbitration.2

D. Standing Challenge and Arbitration Hearing

At arbitration, Halliburton sought to recover not only for MCR’s alleged

tortious interference with its contracts but also for declaratory relief related to the

Licensing Agreement and the unused MCR tools. MCR, in turn, brought

counterclaims for breaches of the Licensing Agreement, breaches of various Rule 11

agreements, fraudulent inducement, and tortious interference with contracts and

business relations.

Just before the final arbitration hearing, in MCR’s pre-hearing brief, it raised a

new argument: that Halliburton lacked standing to bring its tortious interference

claims because it was not a signatory to the affiliate contracts on which the claims

were based—its affiliates were the signatories.3 Halliburton responded that MCR’s

standing challenge had been waived by stipulation; that it was untimely under the

UNCITRAL rules; and that, regardless, Halliburton’s nonsignatory status was a matter

2 Prior to nonsuiting, Halliburton moved the Tarrant County court to compel arbitration. MCR resisted, arguing that its counterclaims fit within the Licensing Agreement’s carveout and that Halliburton had waived the right to compel arbitration. But later, the parties agreed to submit all claims and counterclaims (other than injunctive claims) to arbitration, and the Tarrant County court stayed its case. 3 MCR claimed that it had mentioned the standing argument to Halliburton in its disclosures and in a pre-hearing conference call. But the arbitration panel found that MCR had not raised the argument until its pre-hearing brief and had not brought the issue to the panel’s attention until the start of the final arbitration hearing.

4 of capacity rather than standing and had been cured by Halliburton’s since having

obtained assignments from its affiliates.4

Although the parties discussed Halliburton’s standing at the outset of the

arbitration hearing,5 the arbitration panel carried the issue and ordered the parties to

address it in post-hearing briefing, which MCR did by filing a plea to the jurisdiction.

In its plea, MCR acknowledged that the Licensing Agreement’s arbitration provision

required adherence to the UNCITRAL rules and that those rules provided for waiver

of untimely jurisdictional challenges. Nonetheless, MCR sought to demonstrate that

it had not waived its standing challenge. It further noted that the Licensing

Agreement’s arbitration provision established the application of substantive Texas

law, and under Texas law, standing cannot be waived.

The arbitration panel ultimately rejected MCR’s standing challenge, explaining

that the challenge was both untimely and contrary to the parties’ stipulated facts.6 It

4 Halliburton did not obtain assignments from its affiliates until after MCR raised the standing argument in its pre-hearing brief. 5 When the parties discussed the standing issue at the beginning of the arbitration hearing, their arguments focused on whether Halliburton’s nonsignatory status was a matter of standing or capacity, whether the issue could be waived, and whether MCR had waived it by failing to raise it earlier in the proceeding. 6 Specifically, the panel concluded that MCR’s standing challenge was contrary to its stipulation that “[u]pon expiration of the License Agreement, Halliburton began subcontracting with MCR licensees.”

5 found in Halliburton’s favor on the tortious interference claims—the only claims at

issue in this appeal—and it issued an award accordingly.

E. Confirmation Proceeding

Even before Halliburton sought judicial confirmation of the award, MCR filed

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