Phillips Pipe Line Company v. Diamond Shamrock Refining and Marketing Company

50 F.3d 864, 1995 U.S. App. LEXIS 5525, 1995 WL 113356
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedMarch 17, 1995
Docket94-5096
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 50 F.3d 864 (Phillips Pipe Line Company v. Diamond Shamrock Refining and Marketing Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Phillips Pipe Line Company v. Diamond Shamrock Refining and Marketing Company, 50 F.3d 864, 1995 U.S. App. LEXIS 5525, 1995 WL 113356 (10th Cir. 1995).

Opinion

JOHN P. MOORE, Circuit Judge.

The issue presented by this appeal is whether Phillips Pipe Line Company and Diamond Shamrock Refining and Marketing Company have entered into an agreement for the transportation of product through a pipeline subject to the terms of the Interstate Commerce Act, which governs interstate oil pipelines. 49 U.S.C. §§ 1 et seq. The question is whether this regulatory scheme embodied by the filed rate doctrine supersedes a portion of the agreement relating to the lease of pipeline capacity by requiring Phillips to charge Diamond Shamrock Phillips’ filed tariff rather than the lease rate in the agreement. The district court, resolving cross motions for summary judgment, held it *866 did. Because we believe the agreement creates valid periodic leases of the ownership interests in the pipeline under which the lessee is a carrier, not a shipper, the Phillips’ tariff does not apply. Thus, we disagree with the conclusion reached by the district court and reverse.

I.

Phillips and Diamond Shamrock are co-owners of undivided interests in the throughput capacity 1 of the Colorado Products Pipeline (Pipeline), an interstate pipeline which begins in Hutchinson County, Texas, traverses parts of Oklahoma and Colorado, and terminates near Stapleton Airport in Denver. Although their percentages of ownership vary in different segments of the Pipeline, Phillips owns approximately seventy percent and Diamond Shamrock owns the balance. More importantly, to the extent of their ownership interests, Phillips and Diamond Shamrock are common carriers for product transported in the portion of the capacity each owns. Consequently, each has filed tariffs with FERC. These facts become essential in our resolution of the issues of this case.

Notwithstanding each party is a carrier of product in accordance with its ownership interests, Phillips is the operator of the Pipeline. This responsibility requires Phillips to manage the daily operations of all pump stations, terminals, and Pipeline facilities.

The relationship between the parties was memorialized initially in 1946 by Phillips’ and Diamond Shamrock’s predecessor companies in an agreement which they amended in 1971 (the Agreement). Denominated a contract “to construct, maintain and operate a petroleum products pipeline system,” the Agreement provided Phillips and Diamond Shamrock would convert certain existing six-inch segments of the Pipeline into a uniform eight-inch system. Integral to that contract was the establishment of a formula for their respective capital commitments and resulting ownership interests. In part, the different ownership interests resulted from Phillips’ providing the majority of capital to effect improvement of the Pipeline.

Article VI of the Agreement addressed the “Use of Pipeline Capacities by Parties” and provided in Section 1 that each party was entitled to use its throughput capacity and should not accept additional capacity that would exceed its authorized barrels per day. However, Section 2 of Article VI (the Lease) stated, in part:

If, during the term of Agreement, commencing April 1, 1972, either party has additional space (throughput capacity) in said system out of McKee that it does not plan to utilize during any month, such party shall notify the other party thereof on or before the 24th day of the month preceding and the other party may elect to lease all or any part of such additional space by giving notice thereof on or before the 26th day of the month preceding. At the end of each such month that a party elects to lease such additional space the lessor party shall invoice the lessee party at the rate of $.15 per barrel for all space so leased. The lessee party shall make payment to the lessor party for such rental within 15 days after receipt of invoices.

Stripped of its turgid syntax, the Lease states if either party determined it would not utilize its throughput capacity, the other party could have access to it, following the procedure for notification and payment. Routinely, Phillips’ and Diamond Shamrock’s pipeline schedulers communicated, Phillips’ attempting to determine what the respective nominations of capacity would be so that all capacity was utilized. Because maximizing capacity is an important element of the Pipeline’s profitability, each party took advantage of the Lease.

In 1990, however, Phillips rejected Diamond Shamrock’s tender of the Lease payment for the excess capacity it used on the ground that payment “may be in violation of the Interstate Commerce Act and could subject Phillips to enforcement action by the *867 Federal Energy Regulatory Commission or a lawsuit by another shipper.” Phillips explained that although Diamond Shamrock had been the only shipper to use the excess capacity in the 1970’s, by the 1980’s other shippers began to use the Pipeline and would not tolerate the rate discrimination between Phillips’ tariff on file with FERC and the “modest 15c per barrel charge to Diamond Shamrock.” This action to collect its tariff followed.

Resolving the key legal issue presented upon cross motions for summary judgment, the district court found “Diamond Shamrock utilized Phillips’ idle capacity in a shipper-carrier relationship” and, therefore, Phillips’ filed rate applied notwithstanding the Lease provision. To reach this conclusion, the district court relied on analogous railroad/motor carrier ease law, a closer fit, it believed, than Natural Gas Act cases.

Phillips fortifies this result on appeal by characterizing the Lease as a sham contrived by the parties to evade its filed rate. Bereft of the indicia of a true lease in which there is a definite term and the liability for payment whether or not the capacity is used, this Lease, Phillips contends, fosters discriminatory and preferential rates which the filed rate doctrine was designed to eliminate. By looking instead at the substance of the Lease, and not its form, Phillips urges the filed rate doctrine trumps its terms.

Diamond Shamrock, however, contends the district court erroneously condensed the separate and specific roles each party plays to conclude a shipper-carrier relationship exists, mandating the application of the filed rate doctrine. Instead, it states, the Lease conveys a genuine leasehold estate triggered by Phillips’ notifying Diamond Shamrock of its excess capacity. Upon its acceptance and obligation to pay for all space leased, Diamond Shamrock states it becomes a carrier of the product to be shipped during the Lease period, pays Phillips $.15 per barrel plus operating expenses for its use of the space, and charges its subsidiary Diamond Shamrock’s own filed rate, which it is bound to do as a common carrier. Thus, it distinguishes, Diamond Shamrock utilizes Phillips’ excess capacity along with its “owned capacity,” to transport its product. Diamond Shamrock urges Phillips’ characterization of the Lease as a sham is a red herring. The parties bargained for this provision to ensure full utilization of the Pipeline at all times, it insists.

II.

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50 F.3d 864, 1995 U.S. App. LEXIS 5525, 1995 WL 113356, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phillips-pipe-line-company-v-diamond-shamrock-refining-and-marketing-ca10-1995.