Occidental Permian Ltd. v. the Helen Jones Foundation, BP America Production Co.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 31, 2011
Docket07-09-00059-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Occidental Permian Ltd. v. the Helen Jones Foundation, BP America Production Co. (Occidental Permian Ltd. v. the Helen Jones Foundation, BP America Production Co.) 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
Occidental Permian Ltd. v. the Helen Jones Foundation, BP America Production Co., (Tex. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

NO. 07-09-00059-CV

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS

FOR THE SEVENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

AT AMARILLO

PANEL E

JANUARY 31, 2011

OCCIDENTAL PERMIAN LTD.,

                                            APPELLANT/CROSS-APPELLEE

v.

THE HELEN JONES FOUNDATION, ET. AL.,

                                               APPELLEES/CROSS-APPELLANTS

BP AMERICA PRODUCTION COMPANY, ET. AL.,

                                                      CROSS-APPELLEES

___________________________

FROM THE 286TH DISTRICT COURT OF HOCKLEY COUNTY;

NO. 06-01-20302; HONORABLE ANDREW J. KUPPER, JUDGE

Before CAMPBELL and PIRTLE, JJ., and BOYD, S.J.[1]

OPINION

Owners of royalty interests[2] in lands in the Slaughter Field[3] brought suit seeking damages for underpaid royalties on casinghead gas[4] against the current lease operator, Occidental Permian Ltd. (“OPL”), and two former operators of the leases.  The royalty owners also asserted a claim against OPL for royalties on carbon dioxide.  The trial court granted summary judgment for the operators on some claims, and a jury heard the remaining claims.  After a verdict in favor of the royalty owners, the trial court signed a judgment disregarding the jury’s award of attorney’s fees against OPL but otherwise awarding the damages found by the jury as to OPL.  The judgment ordered that the royalty owners take nothing from the former operators.

The royalty owners appeal the trial court’s grant of summary judgment, its denial of their attorney’s fees and the take-nothing judgment against the former operators.  OPL appeals the judgment against it. 

We will render judgment that the royalty owners take nothing from OPL.  We will affirm the summary judgment, the denial of attorney’s fees and the take-nothing judgment as to the former operators.  We will remand the case for entry of a new judgment consistent with this opinion and law.  We will otherwise affirm the judgment. 

Background

As to the royalties on casinghead gas, six oil and gas leases are at issue.  The parties agree that the royalty on casinghead gas under four of the leases is one-eighth of the “amount realized from such sale” when gas is sold at the wells. The other two leases, the parties also agree, provide a royalty on casinghead gas of three-eighths of its “market value in the field.”[5]

            The six leases range in date from 1934 through 1944.  The Slaughter Field is an oil-producing field, and the casinghead gas was flared until sometime in the 1940s when, according to testimony, the Railroad Commission prohibited the practice.  In the late 1940s, eight lessees, including the defendants’ predecessor Stanolind Oil and Gas Company, jointly constructed the Slaughter Gas Processing Plant.  The plant began operation in 1949.

The lessees individually entered into Casinghead Gas Contracts, beginning in 1947, by which they sold the casinghead gas produced on their leases to the plant owners.  The gas contracts were “percentage of proceeds” contracts, by which the plant agreed to pay the lessees 50% of the proceeds from the sale of processed residue gas and 33.3% of the proceeds from the sale of natural gas liquids (NGLs) from the plant.[6]  The term of these gas sales contracts was for the life of the Slaughter Plant.[7]

In the 1960s, units were formed for the purpose of conducting secondary recovery operations, such as waterfloods, to enhance production of oil in the field.   Then in the 1980s tertiary recovery operations were commenced, by which carbon dioxide is injected into the producing formation, also for the purpose of maintaining and enhancing production of oil.  The injected CO2 becomes commingled with hydrocarbons in the producing formation and comes back to the surface along with the casinghead gas. 

            High levels of CO2 interfere with the processing of gas in the Slaughter Plant.[8]  As the CO2-injection program expanded in the field, levels of CO2 in the casinghead gas increased.  And the injected CO2 migrated to nearby units, so casinghead gas produced from wells outside the units in which CO2 was being injected also experienced increased CO2 levels.  During the mid-1980s, the owners of the Slaughter Plant constructed the adjoining Mallet Plant to process gas with high CO2 concentrations.  The CO2

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Occidental Permian Ltd. v. the Helen Jones Foundation, BP America Production Co., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/occidental-permian-ltd-v-the-helen-jones-foundatio-texapp-2011.