Pelto Oil Co. v. CSX Oil & Gas Corp.

804 S.W.2d 583, 1991 WL 5979
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 28, 1991
Docket01-89-00768-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 804 S.W.2d 583 (Pelto Oil Co. v. CSX Oil & Gas Corp.) 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
Pelto Oil Co. v. CSX Oil & Gas Corp., 804 S.W.2d 583, 1991 WL 5979 (Tex. Ct. App. 1991).

Opinion

OPINION

DUGGAN, Justice.

This appeal from a summary judgment centers on the appropriate remedy in a gas production misallocation case. Appellant, Pelto Oil Company (“Pelto”), brought this action for damages against appellee, CSX Oil & Gas Corporation (“CSX”). Part of Pelto’s share of gas production from an offshore platform for a 14-month period was sold to Texas Gas Transmission Corporation (“Texas Gas”), but was mistakenly allocated by the unit operator to CSX. Texas Gas paid CSX for the gas it bought, including the gas that should have been allocated to Pelto, and CSX refused to pay such proceeds to Pelto.

Pelto and CSX are coworking interest owners under oil and gas leases covered by the Ship Shoal Block 271 Unit (“the Unit”) in the Outer Continental Shelf, offshore Louisiana in the Gulf of Mexico. Other owners (as of February 1988) include CNG Producing Company (“CNG”), which is also the Unit operator, Columbia Gas Development Corporation, and Odeco Oil & Gas Company. The Unit is governed by the Unit Operating Agreement, effective June 10, 1966, as subsequently amended, to which all owners are parties. The owners are also parties to a Gas Balancing Agreement dated January 28, 1981.

Article 8 of the Unit Operating Agreement provides that each party has

the absolute and unqualified right at all times to take in kind all or any part of its interest in the oil and gas produced and saved from the unit property exclusive, however, of production which may be used in development and producing operations on the unit property or which may be unavoidably lost during the conduct of such operations, and each party shall have the sole and exclusive right to direct and effect the sale and disposition of its respective interest in such production. Under no circumstances shall any party hereto have the right to market any other party’s interest in production and each party shall be required to sign all division orders, contracts, agreements, options to purchase or sell, and all other instruments affecting the marketing, disposition or sale of such party’s interest in production from the unit property. Operator shall deliver each party’s proportionate share of production into the pipe line or lines to which the well or wells may be connected or to such other transportation facilities as may be available to the credit of such party, unless such party shall elect to receive all or any part of its proportionate share of such production in kind. Any additional expenditures, together with all risk incident thereto, incurred as a result of the taking in kind or the separate sale or disposition by any party hereto of its interest in production from the unit property shall be borne entirely by such party.

(Emphasis added.)

The Gas Balancing Agreement provides that each party has made, or will make, *585 arrangements to sell or utilize its share of gas production from the Unit’s offshore platform. After notice to the operator, a party may begin taking or delivering to a purchaser its full share of the gas produced. It is the operator’s obligation to maintain an account of the gas balances among the parties, and to furnish monthly to each party a statement showing the total quantity of gas produced, the portion used in platform operations or vented or lost, the total quantity of gas taken or delivered to market for the account of each party, and the monthly and cumulative “over” and “under” delivery of each party.

The Gas Balancing Agreement recognizes that, from time to time, “one or more of the parties may be unable to take or market its interest in the gas production.” Therefore, the parties agreed that

during any period when a party does not dispose of its full share of the gas produced from said platform, any other party may produce from said platform and take or deliver to purchaser, before any processing thereof, each month, all or a part of that portion of the gas production assigned thereto by any governmental body regulating same, which is not produced by a party taking less than its full share.

(Emphasis added.) When a party does not take its full share of the gas produced, it is credited with “gas in storage.” The Gas Balancing Agreement goes on to state that a party with “gas in storage” is entitled to take or deliver to a purchaser its current share of the gas produced, plus 50% of the gas attributable to a party or parties who are in an “overproduced” status. If the gas accounts are not balanced at the time production from the platform is discontinued, a financial settlement must be made among the parties.

Pelto entered into a “take or pay” style Gas Purchase Contract, dated March 30, 1981, with Texas Gas. At that time, and until September 30, 1987, CSX (known then as Texas Gas Exploration Corporation) was a wholly owned subsidiary of Texas Gas. 1 CSX also entered into a gas purchase agreement with Texas Gas.

Texas Gas notified Pelto and the unit operator, CNG, by various letters that it wished to have a certain volume of gas delivered to it under its contract with Pelto during the period September 1984 through October 1985. CNG delivered the specified volumes to Texas Gas, but mistakenly allocated the deliveries to CSX (which was also delivering to Texas Gas at this time under their contract) instead of to Pelto. The monthly statements, which CNG prepared and sent to all owners, show none of the gas production allocated during those months to Pelto to have been delivered to Texas Gas. Texas Gas paid CSX based on the monthly statements. The price was the maximum lawful price prescribed under the Natural Gas Policy Act of 1978, plus a gathering charge. The parties do not dispute that CNG mistakenly failed to allocate to Pelto that part of its share of production sold to Texas Gas. However, they do disagree about the remedy available to correct the mistake.

Pelto apparently did not discover the mistake until late November or early December 1985. Pelto made demand on CSX to pay it the amount CSX had received for Pelto’s share. CSX declined.

Pelto filed suit against CSX on November 24, 1987, alleging that CSX breached the Unit Operating Agreement, to which both were parties, by wrongfully marketing Pelto’s interest in gas produced from the Unit to Texas Gas. Pelto further alleged that CSX was unjustly enriched at Pelto’s expense when it retained the proceeds from the sale of Pelto’s share of the gas to Texas Gas, and that allowing CSX to retain the proceeds would be unconscionable. Pelto sought $641,691.16 in damages, attorney’s fees, and interest.

CSX filed a general denial on December 29,1987. It amended its answer on December 8, 1988 to state that: (1) under the Gas Balancing Agreement, when a party for *586

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Bluebook (online)
804 S.W.2d 583, 1991 WL 5979, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pelto-oil-co-v-csx-oil-gas-corp-texapp-1991.