Pharaoh Oil & Gas, Inc. v. Ranchero Esperanza, LTD.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 1, 2011
Docket08-10-00144-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Pharaoh Oil & Gas, Inc. v. Ranchero Esperanza, LTD. (Pharaoh Oil & Gas, Inc. v. Ranchero Esperanza, LTD.) 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
Pharaoh Oil & Gas, Inc. v. Ranchero Esperanza, LTD., (Tex. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS EIGHTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS EL PASO, TEXAS

§ PHARAOH OIL & GAS, INC., No. 08-10-00144-CV Appellant, § Appeal from the § V. 112th District Court of § of Crockett County, Texas RANCHERO ESPERANZA, LTD., § Appellee (TC# 08-09-07081-CV) §

OPINION

Pharaoh Oil & Gas, Inc. brings this accelerated appeal from a temporary injunction

granted in favor of Ranchero Esperanza, Ltd. We reverse the injunction order and remand for

trial on merits.

Since late 2004, Ranchero has been the owner of the surface estate and one-half of the

mineral estate in a 20,000-21,000 acre ranch located in Crockett County, Texas. Approximately

one year after Ranchero acquired its interest, Pharaoh began operating oil and gas wells on

multiple sections of the Ranch. The wells had previously been owned and operated by William

Tidwell since March of 1982.

Ranchero filed suit in 2008 alleging that Pharaoh was using land located on Section 18,

which it referred to as the “Top Yard,” and Section 2, which it referred to as the “Bottom Yard,”

for storage of equipment and materials not being put to current use for the production of minerals

from the specific oil and gas leases associated with the surface lands on which the Top and Bottom Yards are located.1 Ranchero alleges that storage of the equipment and materials was

causing a loss of vegetation in the pasture and would contribute to soil erosion. Additionally, the

pleadings allege that the oilfield equipment would likely leak fluids onto the surface damaging it.

The suit includes claims for trespass, violation of Texas Railroad Commission rules,

unreasonable use of the surface, and negligence. Ranchero also sought a temporary injunction

prohibiting Pharaoh from storing the equipment and materials on the Ranch when it is not being

put to immediate use for the purpose of exploring for, producing, or marketing oil and gas from

the lease where the equipment is situated. The hearing on the temporary injunction application

was not held until April 21, 2010.

At the temporary injunction hearing, Ranchero introduced evidence showing that the

Texas Railroad Commission had, on April 28, 2009, issued an order requiring Pharaoh to plug,

sever, and seal all of the open wells in Section 18. Kenneth Hartman, the ranch foreman,

testified that the Ranch is currently a recreational hunting ranch. The Ranch is participating in a

brush management program with the Natural Resource Conservation Service (NRCS).

Additionally, Texas A&M had been on the Ranch for two years studying wildlife and vegetation.

The Ranch was also conducting deer surveys as part of a Texas Department of Parks and Wildlife

program with the goal of promoting the deer population on the Ranch.

Prior to becoming the ranch foreman, Hartman had worked for Marathon Oil for twenty

years as a pumper. From that experience, Hartman was familiar with the customary operation of

oil wells. Hartman photographed the equipment and materials located on both the Top and

1 The Top Yard is located adjacent to the A.C. Hoover Well No. 10 (API# 105-32285) on Section 18, Block 1, GC&SF Ry. Co. Survey. The Bottom Yard is located adjacent to the Big State Ranch 2M Well No. 1 (API# 105-33357), on Section 2, Block FF, A.C. Hoover Survey.

-2- Bottom Yards and twenty-seven of these photographs were introduced into evidence. Plaintiff’s

Exhibit 7 consists of twelve photographs of the Top Yard taken between March 4, 2010 and

March 31, 2010. Hartman noted that a rusted out tank, casing, sucker rods, pipe rack, pump

jacks, scaffolding, and swab units depicted in some of the photographs had been moved to the

Top Yard from the Bottom Yard during this same time period. Other equipment, including

rusted barrels containing unknown fluids, were also stored on the Top Yard near a storage

building. Hartman found evidence of leakage around these barrels. The photographs also

showed that Pharaoh had used a backhoe on March 22, 2010 to clear away vegetation and trees in

order to expand the size of the Top Yard. According to Hartman, none of the equipment and

materials stored on the Top Yard was necessary for plugging a well. Further, the equipment and

materials were not being used for any current operations.

Section 2, on which the Bottom Yard is located, has only one active well on it. Plaintiff’s

Exhibit 8 consists of eight photographs of the Bottom Yard taken by Hartman on September 15,

2008, March 2, 2009, March 4, 2010, and March 17, 2010. Plaintiff’s Exhibit 8.1 shows an old

pumping unit gear box, tubing, a stand for a fuel tank, and a fuel tank. None of the equipment

was in a condition to be put to current use and it was not necessary for the production of the

adjacent well on the lease. Plaintiff’s Exhibits 8.2 and 8.3 depict two trucks parked on the

Bottom Yard. One of the trucks had not been moved for three years but Hartman had seen the

other truck being used around the Ranch and on other Pharaoh leases. The functional truck is

parked on the Bottom Yard overnight. Pump jacks, a pump jack base, tubing, and “junk pipe”

shown in Plaintiff’s Exhibit 8.3 were not being put to current use. With the exception of the

pump jack base, the equipment could not be put to current use because of their condition.

-3- Hartman had seen a third truck depicted in Plaintiff’s Exhibit 8.4 being used on all the leases

operated by Pharaoh on the Ranch. Pharaoh is using the Bottom Yard as a parking lot for these

three trucks. A storage building is also found on the Bottom Yard. Several barrels are found

next to the storage building and some contain unknown liquids. As was the case on the Top

Yard, Hartman found evidence of leakage around some of the barrels. With the exception of the

pump jack, Hartman had not seen Pharaoh put any of the equipment stored on the Bottom Yard

to use in the production of the adjacent well. In Hartman’s opinion, it was not reasonably

necessary for an oil and gas operator to create a yard such as the Bottom Yard to operate the

adjacent well.

Deborah Sport Moore is the president of Sport Environmental Services, an environmental

engineering consulting firm. The firm provides various services to the oil and gas industry,

including environmental liability and acquisition of site assessments, risk management, air

permitting, waste water treatment plants, and remediation. Ranchero had retained Sport

Environmental to evaluate the environmental issues on the Ranch including the Top and Bottom

Yards. Moore had been to the Yards several times with the most recent visit just a few days

before the temporary injunction hearing. She observed that the amount of equipment and

materials stored on the Top and Bottom Yards had increased and she found stainage on the

surface from the pipes and barrels. In her opinion, Pharaoh was not addressing the

environmental issues present on the Top Yard through either prevention or management of raw

materials. On the Bottom Yard, Moore found leakage around the trucks parked at that location

as well as the barrels and pipes. She believed that the storage of equipment and materials had

caused an environmental injury to the Ranch. Moore estimated that it would cost $100,000 or

-4- more to clean up both the Top and Bottom Yards.

Donny McClure, a partner in Ranchero, testified that he has been in the oil and gas

business for over thirty years as an operator. Ranchero purchased the Ranch with the intent of

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