Phoenix Canada Oil Co. v. Texaco, Inc.

842 F.2d 1466, 1988 WL 26076
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedMarch 30, 1988
DocketNos. 87-3375, 87-3389
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 842 F.2d 1466 (Phoenix Canada Oil Co. v. Texaco, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Phoenix Canada Oil Co. v. Texaco, Inc., 842 F.2d 1466, 1988 WL 26076 (3d Cir. 1988).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

WEIS, Circuit Judge.

As the beneficiary of a royalty arrangement, plaintiff Phoenix seeks compensation for its proportionate share of oil production rights in Ecuador which defendant oil companies allegedly conveyed to that government. The district court found that Ecuador had paid defendants only for unam-ortized capital assets and supplies but nothing for production rights. Consequently, plaintiff did not succeed on that claim. The district court, however, did award plaintiff damages for past-due royalties which had been earned but calculated improperly, finding only defendant subsidiaries liable, not their parent corporations. We will remand for further factual development of a possible agency relationship between parent and subsidiary corporations, but otherwise will affirm.

After a nonjury trial, the district court entered judgment against plaintiff Phoenix Canada Oil Company, Ltd. on its claim for recovery of the value of petroleum production rights, and in favor of Phoenix on its claim for payment of past-due production royalties. The automatic stay provision of the Bankruptcy Code, 11 U.S.C. § 362, precluded entry of a final judgment as to defendant Texaco, Inc. However, the district court entered judgment with respect to the other three defendants, certifying there was no cause for delay.

Phoenix’s predecessors obtained a concession from the Government of Ecuador to explore for oil in the eastern lowlands of that South American country. Subsequently, Phoenix and a Canadian co-venturer succeeded to these exploration rights, and they, in turn, assigned a portion of their concession territory to Gulf and Texaco in exchange for an immediate cash payment and a royalty on any oil extracted. Although Gulf and Texaco successfully produced oil in the assigned territory, a series of government actions reduced the profitability of the venture, and Gulf eventually sold its interest back to the Ecuadorian government. As a result of this sale, Phoenix’s royalty base was reduced significantly. Phoenix brought this suit to recover damages for its lost royalty interests.

I.

In 1961, the Ecuadorian government granted Minas y Petróleos del Ecuador a concession to explore for oil and, if discovered, exploit the reserves found in an eleven million acre tract. In 1965, Minas entered into a contract with a consortium of Gulf and Texaco subsidiaries. Under the provisions of the agreement, the subsidiaries succeeded to Minas’ exploitation rights in a portion of the original concession, a large area of land identified in the contract as the “Coca Concession”.1 In return, the subsidiaries made a cash payment to Mi-nas’ two corporate owners, Phoenix and Norsul,2 agreeing to pay a royalty calculated at two-percent of the net value of any crude oil or natural gas produced from the area. The government formally approved the transfer, but was not informed of the two-percent royalty arrangement.

Oil was discovered in the Coca Concession in 1969, and actual production began [1469]*1469in 1972. To transport the crude to market, the Gulf-Texaco consortium financed and constructed a 318-mile pipeline across the Andes Mountains down to the Pacific Coast. The pipeline cost the consortium $108 million.

Following the 1969 announcement that oil had been discovered, the government required renegotiation of all concession arrangements. The Coca Concession consequently was reduced in area, and the government royalties were nearly doubled from 6% to 11.5%.

In 1971, Ecuador enacted the new Hydrocarbons Law which declared that “[t]he deposits of hydrocarbons and accompanying substances ... located in the national territory ... belong to the inalienable and imprescriptible patrimony of the State.” Although originally enacted to be prospective in effect, the new law was made retroactive when a military government took power in 1972.

The 1971 Hydrocarbons Law further reduced the size of concessions and again raised the government’s royalty. In addition, the statute provided that the government’s royalty and income taxes would henceforth be computed for all producers on the basis of a uniform “reference price”, which could be set either by agreement with the producers or unilaterally by the government. The law also mandated governmental participation in oil production through “association contracts” to which the national oil agency, Corporación Estatal Petrolera Ecuatoriana (CEPE), would be made a party.

The consortium requested indemnification from the government for the area that had been returned in compliance with the Hydrocarbons Law. The government refused, explaining that the payment of compensation for the return of “the inalienable interests of the Nation” was inconsistent with the petroleum policy of the “Nationalistic and Revolutionary Government of the Armed Forces.”

Citing the increasing costs of doing business under the new military government, the consortium insisted that the original provisions of the 1965 contract had been frustrated and demanded renegotiation of the two-percent royalty proviso with Phoenix. In early 1973, the parties reached an “Interim Agreement” to govern the calculation of the royalty payments due for the last two quarters of 1972 and the first quarter of 1973. This document, however, stipulated that the signatories were not waiving their rights under the original 1965 contract.

Although the Interim Agreement expired after the first quarter of 1973, its terms were followed through the third quarter of 1973. A dispute between the parties arose when the consortium continued to calculate the two-percent royalty under the Interim Agreement for the final quarter of 1973 and the first and second quarters of 1974. The district court’s ruling on that point is one of the issues in this appeal.

The Interim Agreement renegotiation drew the government’s attention to the previously unknown two-percent royalty arrangement. The Ecuadorian Natural Resources Minister reacted with hostility to the news of the discovery, declaring it an “illegal” and “immoral” attempt to partition a national resource belonging inalienably to the people of Ecuador. Rather than voiding the royalty outright, as the Resources Minister urged, the government instead imposed an 86% retroactive tax on the payment of the two-percent royalties.

In 1973 the government issued a decree establishing the terms of a new model contract, which the consortium and other oil producers were bound to accept in lieu of existing agreements. The model contract granted CEPE the right to acquire up to a 25% participation in the “rights and actions conferred in this contract and in the assets acquired by the contractors for purposes of this agreement.” Also included were a tax reference price unilaterally set by the government, a provision shortening the Coca Concession exploitation period, and an expansion of state-imposed discounts for oil purchased for domestic use in Ecuador.

Consortium efforts to negotiate a mutually advantageous purchase price for the 25% interest proved unavailing. Instead, the government stated flatly that CEPE [1470]*1470would begin its 25% participation on June 6, 1974 and that compensation would be computed on the basis of net book value, or the unrecovered actual investment in producing and pipeline assets. An independent auditor was engaged to establish the exact value of the unrecovered investment.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
842 F.2d 1466, 1988 WL 26076, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phoenix-canada-oil-co-v-texaco-inc-ca3-1988.