Occidental of Umm Al Qaywayn, Inc. v. Cities Service Oil Co.

396 F. Supp. 461, 1975 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11532
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Louisiana
DecidedJuly 8, 1975
DocketCiv. A. 74-1192, 75-0033 and 74-868
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 396 F. Supp. 461 (Occidental of Umm Al Qaywayn, Inc. v. Cities Service Oil Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Occidental of Umm Al Qaywayn, Inc. v. Cities Service Oil Co., 396 F. Supp. 461, 1975 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11532 (W.D. La. 1975).

Opinion

EDWIN F. HUNTER, Jr., Chief Judge:

Plaintiff seeks to recover crude oil seized on board three tankers. The oil was extracted from the seabed of the Arabian Gulf at a point located nine miles off the coast of the Island of Abu Musa.

These consolidated cases represent only a small portion of the pending litigation arising out of the same set of facts. As of May 9, 1975, there were approximately 58 separate actions: 23 in the Western District of Louisiana, 12 in the Eastern District of Louisiana, 3 in the Eastern District of Texas, 2 in the Virgin Islands, 17 in the Calcasieu Parish, Louisiana State Court, and one in the Jefferson County, Texas State Court.

Buttes Gas & Oil Company and Occidental are holders of offshore oil concession agreements granted by two adjacent sheikdoms. Sharjah and Iran refused to recognize Occidental’s concession and instead recognized the concession of Buttes, thus enabling Buttes to commence drilling operations and produce the oil. This action, plaintiff argues, is tantamount to a confiscation, and the Hiekenlooper Amendment requires that we adjudicate the controversy.

Defendants originally filed a motion to dismiss, which motion, by the interaction of F.R.Civ.P. 12 and 56, has now been converted into a motion for summary judgment. Numerous authenticated documents and affidavits appear in the record.

Due to the many contradictory factual assertions, it is appropriate to synopsize the uncontested facts and to set out the most important of those contested. In 1970 plaintiff filed a federal cause of action under the Sherman Act and claimed a deprivation of the enjoyment of the precise gas concession here involved. Buttes Gas & Oil Company, the major defendant in that suit, moved to dismiss. The motion was granted in a thorough and well-reasoned opinion on March 17, 1971. The decision was pegged on the basic proposition that the Act of State doctrine precluded further adjudication and that the exception to the doctrine contained in the Sabbatino Amendment (Hiekenlooper) was by its terms extremely narrow and not applicable to the situation presented. Occidental Petroleum Corp. v. Buttes Gas & Oil Co., 331 F.Supp. 92, (C.D.Cal.1971). The Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit affirmed at 461 F.2d 1261 (1972). The United States Supreme Court denied a writ of certiorari, 409 U.S. 950, 93 S.Ct. 272, 34 L.Ed.2d 221 (1972).

There are two Trucial States, Sharjah and Umm Al Qaywayn, located on the *465 southeastern end of the Persian Gulf. Forty nautical miles into the Gulf is an island named Abu Musa. At the northern end of the Gulf, approximately 50 nautical miles from Abu Musa, is the country of Iran.

In 1964 the Rulers' of Umm and Sharjah allegedly entered into a treaty agreement establishing a seabed border agreement, pursuant to which the limit of the territorial waters of Abu Musa was three (3) nautical miles and the area beyond this three-mile limit was Umm Al Qaywayn’s continental shelf. 1 .Shar jah, by an unpublished decree of September 10, 1969, extended its territorial waters to a point 12 nautical miles off Abu Musa, a decree assertedly contrary to the 1964 treaty. 2

On November 18, 1969, plaintiff obtained from the Ruler of Umm a concession granting it the exclusive right to explore for and extract oil underlying the territorial and offshore waters of Umm. Subsequent to plaintiff’s obtention of its concession from Umm, Buttes was granted an oil and gas concession by Sharjah on December 29, 1969, encompassing the territorial waters of Sharjah, its islands, including Abu Musa, and the seabed and subsoil lying beneath those waters. Each concession agreement was approved by the British government. On April 7, 1970, Sharjah and Buttes executed an amendment to the original concession extending the concession area to 12 miles off Abu Musa’s coast. Plaintiff asserts that although the British Foreign Office was not “taken in” by the backdated decree and concession amendment, it endeavored to settle amicably the respective Territorial Waters claims of Umm and Sharjah by requiring both plaintiff and Buttes to cease any drilling operations and to submit their demands to mediation.

In the meantime, Iran, acting through the National Iranian Oil Company, set forth its claim to Abu Musa, and enunciated a 12-mile Territorial Waters jurisdiction. Great Britain left the Persian Gulf on or about December 1, 1971. Immediately prior thereto Sharjah and Iran settled their dispute pursuant to an agreement which called for the joint possession of Abu Musa and the disputed area. The agreement reserved the title question to the future. It called for a 50-50 split in any oil royalties. Iran also recognized the validity of the Sharjah lease concession agreement to Buttes. In April of 1972, Buttes commenced drilling operations in the disputed area (nine miles east of Abu Musa) and later entered into joint venture agreements with the other defendants and/or their subsidiaries. In June of 1973, before the oil in question was extracted from the disputed area, Umm — the source of Occidental’s concession rights —terminated that concession agreement, allegedly because of Occidental’s failure to pay monies required under the agreement. Under the auspices of Sharjah and Iran, Buttes began extracting oil from the contested area, storing it temporarily on the “Baraka 1” and then shipping it to the United States. In September of 1974 this oil began arriving in the United States.

Defendants argue that dismissal and/or summary judgment should be required on five independent grounds:

A. Application of res judicata doctrine ;
*466 B. Application of collateral estoppel doctrine;
C. The Act of States Doctrine precludes inquiry into the acts of foreign states called into question;
D. Resolution of the issues would require adjudication of a boundary dispute between foreign nations;
E. The absence of Sharjah, Iran and Umm Al Qaywayn, which are indispensable parties.

PLAINTIFF'S BASIC POSITION

Occidental strenuously insists that defendants are complicating the simple, and that we must look through “these eristic maneuvers.” In oral argument counsel stated:

“As surprising as it may sound, after the volume of briefs that have been filed, this is, in essence, a one issue law suit. The issue is: ‘was Umm al Qaywayn a sovereign on November 18, 1969 when the concession was granted?’ ”

This presents an issue of fact that will require the Court’s determination (Tr. 58-63). P ut another way:

“Occidental’s position is that the court must merely determine that Umm al Qaywayn was sovereign over the plaintiff’s entire concession on November 18, 1969. If the plaintiff’s concession was valid and in force in November, 1969, it remained valid and in force in November, 1971.

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Bluebook (online)
396 F. Supp. 461, 1975 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11532, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/occidental-of-umm-al-qaywayn-inc-v-cities-service-oil-co-lawd-1975.