Morsey v. Chevron, USA, Inc.

94 F.3d 1470, 1996 U.S. App. LEXIS 23193, 1996 WL 501749
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 4, 1996
Docket95-3165
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 94 F.3d 1470 (Morsey v. Chevron, USA, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morsey v. Chevron, USA, Inc., 94 F.3d 1470, 1996 U.S. App. LEXIS 23193, 1996 WL 501749 (10th Cir. 1996).

Opinion

*1473 ENGEL, Circuit Judge.

Plaintiff-Appellant Chase Morsey (“Mor-sey”) appeals from various decisions of the district court in this diversity case for damages arising out of the operation of a water flood on a geological formation in Kansas known as the Rhodes Field, a common source of oil and gas. At issue is whether the court erred in (1) entering judgment as a matter of law against Morsey on grounds that he failed to present sufficient evidence of temporary damages to his leasehold; (2) granting summary judgment against him on his claim for punitive damages; and (3) granting summary judgment against him on his claim for damages inflicted on the leasehold before he acquired it. We affirm.

FACTS

Although complicated in their detail, the facts of this case are, in all material respects, straightforward and undisputed. They are well set out in the pertinent decisions of the district court, which guide our reference to them here. As explained by the district court, the Rhodes Field produces oil and gas primarily from the Mississippian formation approximately 4,450 feet below ground level in Barber County, Kansas. It is a common source of oil supply subject to numerous leases. Morsey owns a lease on the Rhodes Field covering Section 20, Township 33 South, Range 20 West (“Section 20”). At the time he acquired his lease, Defendant-Appel-lee Chevron, USA, Inc. (“Chevron”) owned several neighboring leases.

Section 20 was first developed by Conoco in the 1950’s. By 1955, Conoco had drilled at least seventeen producing wells on it and had obtained an average production of about 14,-000 barrels of oil per month. Production increased to over 17,000 barrels of oil per month by 1957, but then decreased sharply in subsequent years. By 1963, the average monthly production of oil on Section 20 was only about 3,700 barrels. As of 1957, Conoco had produced 1.1 million barrels of oil from the lease, which it estimated as approximately 70% of Section 20’s primary recovery, and in 1958, it conducted a pilot water flood project on the lease to test secondary recovery prospects.

During the same period, other operators, including Barbara Oil Company (“Barbara”), Sinclair Oil & Gas Company (“Sinclair”), and Gulf Oil Corporation (“Gulf’), developed surrounding leases in Sections 16, 17, and 21 of the Rhodes Field (collectively the “Rhodes Unit”). Primary production on the Rhodes Unit peaked in 1955 at about 36,000 barrels of oil per month. Thereafter, production decreased sharply, and by 1962, it averaged approximately 6,000 barrels per month.

In response to declining bottom hole pressures and a corresponding decline in the rate of production, Conoco, Barbara, Gulf, Sinclair, and other operators agreed to undertake a cooperative water flood project of the Rhodes Field in 1963. Under the project, water was injected through pipes into the field to raise the pressure and make recoverable otherwise unrecoverable reserves. After initiation of the project, which was operated with the approval of the Kansas Corporation Commission (“KCC”), the rate of production on Section 20 increased in 1964 and 1965 and reached a high of about 8,000 barrels per month in 1966. It then began to decline again, decreasing to 4,000 barrels per month in 1968. By 1972, production was 1,400 barrels per month. Similarly, production on the Rhodes Unit increased to 20,000 barrels per month in 1966 before declining to 13,000 barrels per month by 1968.

In 1966, Conoco sold Section 20 to Clinton Oil Company (“Clinton”). By the end of 1966, a cumulative total of 5.9 million barrels of water had been injected into the lease since the initiation of water flooding. Clinton continued operation of the water flood for several more years, and by 1971 a total of 9.5 million barrels of water had been injected into Section 20. Meanwhile, production of oil on the field continued to decline from an average of about 5,700 barrels per month in 1967 to 1,400 barrels per month in 1972. By that time, Clinton had plugged and abandoned nine producing and injection wells, as well as several water supply wells. In March of that year, it considered the producing wells to be “depleted” and ceased all injection efforts on Section 20.

*1474 Although Clinton ceased flooding Section 20 in 1972, the operators of the Rhodes Unit continued their secondary efforts after 1972, as permitted by the cooperative water flood agreement. By January 1973, the cumulative water injected into the Rhodes Unit since the inception of the project was in excess of fifty million barrels. Taking account of water recovered through production, thirty-seven million barrels were unaccounted for.

Clinton sold Section 20 to another operator in 1975; that operator held that lease until 1987. During that period, production declined from an average of about 700 barrels a month to about 300 barrels a month. In 1987, the lease was sold to Brito Oil Company, Inc. (“Brito”). During 1988, Section 20 produced approximately 280 barrels per month. By then, the lease had produced a cumulative total of approximately 1.5 million barrels of oil. On January 9,1989, Brito sold Section 20 to Morsey for $70,000, the approximate salvage value of the equipment on the lease. Subsequently, Morsey spent between $150,000 and $200,000 reworking that equipment.

Thereafter, Kewanee Oil Company, and then Gulf, acquired and operated the leases previously owned by Barbara and Sinclair. When Gulf merged with Chevron in 1984, Chevron acquired the Rhodes Unit leases and continued to flood them until 1989.

Sometime after Morsey purchased Section 20 in 1989, Richard Armer, who was employed by him to supervise the lease, complained to the KCC that Chevron was watering out the producing zone in Section 20 because “every time their injection pumps go down the fluid level drops very dramatically in my wells and my production increases drastically.” A tracer test was undertaken to determine if there was communication of water from the Rhodes Unit to Morsey’s lease, and the test revealed some communication between them. In October of 1989, Chevron ceased all fresh water injections and then sold the Rhodes Unit in 1992.

In August 1989, shortly before Chevron ceased injecting water into the Rhodes Field, Morsey began this action, charging that the water flood operated by Chevron and its predeeessors-in-interest interfered with and damaged the oil producing capabilities of his lease. On April 16, 1991, he filed an amended complaint asserting causes of action for trespass, conversion, private nuisance, breach of contract, breach of duties owed to owners of a common pool, and strict liability. His Amended Complaint alleges and seeks recovery for both permanent and temporary damages, as well as punitive damages and prejudgment interest.

As set out in the Pretrial Order, Morsey maintained that he was damaged by Chevron’s water flood in two ways. First, he contended that it caused more than 1.2 million barrels of oil, valued at approximately $16,000,000, to become unrecoverable. Second, he urged that the water flood caused permanent damage “to the formation and the environment” in the Rhodes Field. Although he acquired his interest in Section 20 in 1989, Morsey submitted that his predecessors-in-interest assigned all of their rights to him and that he was therefore entitled to recover for damage done to the leasehold before as well as after he acquired it.

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Bluebook (online)
94 F.3d 1470, 1996 U.S. App. LEXIS 23193, 1996 WL 501749, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morsey-v-chevron-usa-inc-ca10-1996.