Patrick Petroleum Corporation of Michigan v. Callon Petroleum Company

531 F.2d 1312
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJuly 2, 1976
Docket75--1461
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 531 F.2d 1312 (Patrick Petroleum Corporation of Michigan v. Callon Petroleum Company) 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
Patrick Petroleum Corporation of Michigan v. Callon Petroleum Company, 531 F.2d 1312 (5th Cir. 1976).

Opinion

GODBOLD, Circuit Judge.

A seller and a buyer of gas well interests agreed on a damage formula to cover possible mistakes in the transaction. A highly material mistake of fact underlying the contract came to light. Should a court grant rescission under the principle that when parties enter into a contract as the result of a mutual mistake about a material fact, a court of equity may set the contract aside? Or should the court enforce the contractual damage provision? That is the question presented by this Mississippi diversity case.

I

Callón Petroleum Company 1 sold to Patrick Petroleum Corporation of Michigan 2 a presently existing partial interest in a gas well in Walthall County, Mississippi, and a reversionary interest in three additional gas wells. The sale was in the form of an assignment, and the price (excluding brokerage fees) was $50,000. By the terms of the trade, Patrick was to receive an interest immediately in the Gartman well. It was *1314 to receive an interest in each of the other three wells — McDonald, Willie Moses, and Needham-Jones — after they had reverted back from Ada Oil Co. (Ada), an earlier assignee of Callon’s. Reversion of each well would take place, or so the parties believed, when Ada had attained payout for that particular well, that is, after proceeds from the sale of gas had restored to Ada 100% of its cost in purchasing the leases and in testing, completing, and operating the well.

Negotiations began in October 1970 and extended over about three months’ time. On January 18, 1971, Dale McKibben, Callon’s attorney, prepared a title opinion for Patrick certifying that Callón owned a reversionary interest in the Needham-Jones well. He based this opinion on a letter agreement between Callón and Ada, dated March 14, 1969. Patrick made no independent investigation into the validity of Callon’s title with respect to any of the wells.

On January 20, 1971, representatives of both sides met to discuss the sale. Callón was ready to close, but Patrick’s attorney, Martha Gerald, was unwilling to accept the assignments as written. She asked that the agreement be amended so that it would include specific legal descriptions of the interests being conveyed and a warranty that Callón owned them. Because of her request, and for other reasons, the sale was not consummated at that time.

The next day McKibben and Gerald conversed several times by telephone in an attempt to resolve their differences. They finally agreed that the warranty required by Gerald could be provided in a separate instrument rather than by revising the previously executed assignments. McKibben thereupon dictated a proposed “Supplemental Agreement” to Gerald’s secretary. Gerald made revisions in the transcribed copy of this agreement, and the two sides signed her final text. The sale was completed a few days later.

The Supplemental Agreement described the exact boundary lines of the four wells in which interests were being conveyed and warranted the percentage of net revenue that Patrick was to derive from each. Added together, these four percentages totalled about 17%. The Supplemental Agreement went on to state that if the warranty was breached as to any well, Patrick’s recovery would be limited to a partial refund of the purchase price. The proportion to be refunded would be determined by taking the percentage of revenue that Callón had tried to convey in the well affected by the breach and dividing it by 17, the total of the percentages. Thus, since the total purchase price (exclusive of brokerage fees) was $50,-000, Callón would be liable under the formula for approximately $3,000 for each percentage point of net revenue interest that Patrick failed to realize. The Supplemental Agreement added: “By the acceptance of the assignments herein mentioned, and this agreement, the Assignee concurs as to the measure and means of apportionment of the loss in the event of failure of title of Assignee in whole or in part. . . ,” 3

About a year later the parties discovered that they had made an error with respect to *1315 the Needham-Jones well. That well, it turned out, was not covered by the March 14, 1969, agreement between Callón and Ada, as McKibben’s title opinion had stated, but rather by a later agreement between those two companies made in 1970. Under the 1969 agreement, the right to receive proceeds from the sale of gas from any particular well would revert from Ada to Callón when Ada had reached payout for that well. This agreement did cover the McDonald and Willie Moses wells, as Callón had warranted when it had assigned its rights to Patrick. But under the 1970 agreement, which pertained to the Need-ham-Jones well, no reversion would occur until Ada had reached payout for all of its oil extraction operations within a rather large, specifically defined territory in Walt-hall County. No evidence suggests that the error was anything but innocent. It appears that when Callón and Patrick made their contract neither of them, nor even Ada, realized that the reversion of interests in the Needham-Jones well would be delayed so long. Nevertheless, when the mistake came to light it was immediately clear, and it is undisputed now, that Callon’s warranty to Patrick had been breached.

Patrick promptly wrote to Callón, requesting rescission of the contract. Callón refused, claiming that it was protected by the Supplemental Agreement. Under the formula in that agreement only about 1V2% of the assets conveyed by Callón were allocable to the Needham-Jones well. Accordingly, Callón took the position that Patrick was entitled to only $843.90 out of the $50,000 purchase price.

Patrick brought suit for rescission and prevailed in the District Court. In testimony that the District Judge evidently credited, Patrick’s officers claimed that they had viewed the Needham-Jones well interest as the most valuable in the “package deal” and that they would not have signed the contract if they had known the nature of Callon’s title to that well. 4 The District Judge relied on authorities stating generally that in a proper case equity will rescind a contract procured by fraud, misrepresentation, or mutual mistake. He indicated that a proper case for equitable relief would be one in which the plaintiff had no adequate legal remedy, and he held that Callon’s tender of $843.90 was a totally inadequate remedy at law. Callón appeals from the judgment of rescission.

II

It is unquestioned that if Patrick had sued Callón on a breach of contract theory, its recovery would have been $843.90. The Supplemental Agreement set forth a precise formula for computing the assignee’s damages in the event that title failed. Title did fail. In this situation a court will ordinarily award the damages fixed by the contract and no more, without regard to whether the promisee’s actual damages were different. The explanation for this rule is that the nonbreaching party is deemed to have assumed the risk that he would lose under the formula; his willingness to take that risk is viewed as one of the elements of the parties’ bargain. As Professor Corbin writes: ,

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

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
531 F.2d 1312, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patrick-petroleum-corporation-of-michigan-v-callon-petroleum-company-ca5-1976.