Otter Oil Company v. Exxon Company, U.S.A.

834 F.2d 531, 1987 WL 21263
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 9, 1988
Docket87-4022
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 834 F.2d 531 (Otter Oil Company v. Exxon Company, U.S.A.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Otter Oil Company v. Exxon Company, U.S.A., 834 F.2d 531, 1987 WL 21263 (5th Cir. 1988).

Opinion

JOHN R. BROWN, Circuit Judge:

This case arises from a transaction or series of transactions among appellant Otter Oil Company (Otter), appellee Exxon Company, U.S.A. (Exxon), and a third entity, Crosby Chemicals, Inc. (Crosby). Their course of dealings is set out in a series of separate writings. The particular documents at issue in this case are: (i) a letter from Otter to Exxon dated December 20, 1983 (the “Letter Agreement” 1 and (ii) a *532 document headed “Geophysical Option Agreement” made between Crosby and Otter and also dated December 20, 1983. 2

Let’s Make a Deal

In the Geophysical Option Agreement, Otter obtained from Crosby a license to conduct geophysical and other types of surveys upon 42,000 acres of land owned by Crosby in an effort to ascertain the presence of oil and gas. That license contained an express option to permit Otter to obtain from Crosby within 270 days an oil and gas lease on all of some of those 42,000 acres. That option in turn contained an express requirement that if Otter chose to exercise this option, Otter had to lease at least 10,000 of the 42,000 acres. Rather than obtain a mineral lease for itself, Otter assigned its option to Exxon, reserving to itself a specified portion of the bonus, rental, and royalty that Otter stood to receive had Otter itself taken a lease from Crosby. 3

*533 Exxon never exercised the option, and so the option expired on September 15, 1984, at the end of the 270-day period. Exxon subsequently took from Crosby an oil and gas lease covering only 4,387.08 acres 4 out of the same 42,000 acres to which the option had applied. Because that lease was made after the expiration of the option, paragraphs [3] and [4] of the Letter Agreement did not entitle Otter to a share of the bonus, rental, and royalty stemming from that lease. Exxon incurred obligations under those paragraphs only if it exercised the option.

Paragraph [5] of the Letter Agreement, however, contained an ordinary “extension- and-renewal” clause of the sort which is common in the oil and gas industry. The extension-and-renewal clause provided that if Exxon acquired a mineral lease on all or part of the 42,000 acres within one year after the expiration of the option, then Otter would be entitled to receive the same payments under paragraphs [3] and [4] as it would have had the option been exercised.

Without the extension-and-renewal clause, it would have been in both Exxon’s and Crosby’s economic interest for Exxon not to exercise the option. Instead, Exxon and Crosby would both be better off if Exxon could afford to wait and take a mineral lease after the expiration of the option. In that event, Exxon and Crosby could divide between them the monetary value that would have gone to Otter had the option been exercised. Exxon would pay bonus, rental, and royalty only to Crosby. To the extent of the overriding royalty benefits, the amount would be less than Exxon would have paid to Crosby and Otter together.

This course of action is commonly known in the oil and gas industry as a “washout” of the intermediary. Had a washout not been contractually precluded, Otter could not safely have undertaken to assign the option to Exxon.

Exxon of course did in fact trigger the extension-and-renewal clause by taking a mineral lease from Crosby within one year after the option expired. Exxon has acknowledged some obligation to Otter under the extension-and-renewal clause. It has recognized its obligation to pay — and has paid — to Otter a 2% of 8/8 overriding royalty on the 4,387 acres that it claims, pursuant to paragraph [4], constitute “all acreage selected.” That overriding royalty is all that Exxon contends that it owes to Otter due to the operation of the extension- and-renewal clause. Otter, however, contends that the extension-and-renewal clause obligated Exxon to pay to Otter (i) a bonus of $30 per acre on all acreage leased, with a minimum of 10,000 acres to be leased; (ii) delay rentals, if any, of $5 per acre on a minimum of 10,000 acres to be leased; and (iii) a 2% of 8/8 overriding royalty on all acreage selected, with a minimum of 10,000 acres to be selected and leased 5 .

The source of the divergence in their respective contentions is a dispute between Otter and Exxon as to (i) whether the 10,-000-acre-minimum requirement in the option is included in the set of “obligations, duties, and rights” which the extension- and-renewal clause revives and makes applicable to Exxon, and (ii) whether paragraph [3] of the Letter Agreement requires payment of bonus and rental when fewer than 10,000 acres are leased. Exxon contended below that both questions should be answered in the negative, and so convinced the District Court. We reverse.

Here’s the “Beef’ — But Where’s the Agreement?

The extension-and-renewal clause said that if Exxon acquired a mineral lease on all or part of the 42,000 acres within one year after the expiration of the option, “then the obligations, duties and rights set forth herein shall apply to such extension, renewal or new lease” (emphasis added). *534 At trial, Exxon seized upon the word “herein” to argue that since the 10,000-acre-min-imum requirement does not appear within the text of the Letter Agreement itself, that particular obligation or duty is not one which is set forth “herein”, i.e., within the Letter Agreement. Therefore, contends Exxon, although the 10,000-acre-minimum requirement would have applied had Exxon exercised the option during the 270-day term of the option 6 and obtained at that time a mineral lease from Crosby, once the option had expired the extension-and-renewal clause was ineffective to revive the obligation to lease at least 10,000 acres. On this view, the 10,000-acre-minimum requirement did not apply at the time Exxon leased from Crosby and so Exxon was perfectly free to lease fewer acres, which it did. Finally, since the table [3][6] in the Letter Agreement doesn’t provide for any bonus or rental to be paid when fewer than 10,000 acres are leased, Exxon contends, the “2% of 8/8 overriding royalty ... on all acreage selected ” (emphasis added) set out in paragraph [4] of the Letter Agreement is therefore the only obligation Exxon now owes Otter. Since Exxon has paid and continues to pay that royalty to Otter on the 4,387 acres that Exxon selected and actually did lease from Crosby, Exxon reasons that it has no additional obligation to Otter and goes so far as to label Otter’s appeal as “border[ing] on the frivolous.”

There’s No Beef in Exxon’s “Beef’

Exxon’s set of contentions is problematic in two respects. First, by admitting that the 10,000-acre-minimum requirement would have applied had the option been exercised during its 270-day term, 7

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

OIL VALLEY PETROLEUM v. MOORE
2023 OK 90 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 2023)
Olympia Minerals, LLC v. Hs Resources, Inc.
171 So. 3d 878 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 2014)
Reynolds-Rexwinkle Oil, Inc. v. Petex, Inc.
1 P.3d 909 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 2000)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
834 F.2d 531, 1987 WL 21263, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/otter-oil-company-v-exxon-company-usa-ca5-1988.