Russell v. Panhandle Producing Co.

975 S.W.2d 702, 1998 WL 461202
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 5, 1998
Docket07-97-0077-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 975 S.W.2d 702 (Russell v. Panhandle Producing Co.) 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
Russell v. Panhandle Producing Co., 975 S.W.2d 702, 1998 WL 461202 (Tex. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

REAVIS, Justice.

This is an appeal from a take nothing summary judgment. Appellants are nineteen working interest owners of an oil and gas lease in Hutchinson County known as the Bearkiller lease. They filed this suit in Potter County to recover contract damages based upon the alleged breach of a gas purchase and sales agreement which was entered into by and between appellee, Panhandle Producing Company (Panhandle) and W.R. Edwards Jr. (Edwards), the prior owner of the lease. The trial court granted summary judgment in favor of Panhandle and appellants brought this appeal. By ten points of error, they contend the trial court erred in granting summary judgment in favor of Panhandle, and in denying their motion for partial summary judgment. Panhandle presents one conditional cross-point contending the trial court erred in denying its motion to transfer venue to Bexar County. Based upon the rationale and authorities expressed herein, we reverse the summary judgment and remand the cause to the trial court for transfer to Bexar County.

PARTIES

Collectively, appellants are herein referred to as “sellers.” However, because some of the sellers joined as plaintiffs by amended petitions, and because limitations questions are presented, we have divided the sellers into groups based upon the dates they joined the lawsuit.

On April 22, 1992, appellants Michael A. Russell, Jack Ramey, Wayne Snider, Sandra S. Christner, Tabor Scott, the Noban Group (its members being Frank Baughman, Harold Ochsner, Dan Neely and Ben Neely), Glenn McMennamy, S & J Investments, and American Star Energy and Minerals Corporation (American Star), herein collectively referred to as the “Russell Group,” filed their original petition. On August 19,1992, appellants Catherine C. Campisi, Paul Coble Klein, K.K. Davidson, Richard P. Klein, Helen Reynolds and David Walker, herein collectively referred to as the “Campisi Group,” joined the “Russell Group” as plaintiffs upon the filing of the first amended petition. On February 14, 1994, appellant Judy Walker, joined as a plaintiff upon the filing of the fourth amended petition.

On February 14, 1995, Edwards filed a plea in intervention but, upon Panhandle’s motion in opposition, the trial court disallowed his intervention. Edwards was therefore not a party to the lawsuit and is not a party to this appeal.

*705 HISTORY

On January 12, 1981, Edwards, who was then the owner of the BearHUer oil and gas lease in Hutchinson County, entered into a written contract prepared by Panhandle, (hereafter referred to as the Edwards contract) in which he agreed to sell, and Panhandle agreed to buy, casinghead gas produced from 22 wells on the lease. 1 The relevant provisions of the Edwards contract are summarized as follows:

• The seller agreed “to sell and deliver into buyer’s gathering line the maximum allowable production of each well, for the life of the leases.”
• Seller shall deliver the gas at a point or points below seller’s separators, compressors or lines of pipe, at which point or points, “title to the gas and all components thereof shall pass to and vest in Buyer.”
• Article IV specified the quality of the gas. Article V entitled “Quality Tests” provided that (a) an initial quality test for BTU content would be made; (b) subsequent tests for quality could be made by either party at its election and cost; and (e) the results of the last prior test remained controlling until a subsequent test was conducted.
• Article VI entitled “Measurement” provided for gas measurement. In summary it provided that (a) the meter or meters would be furnished, installed and kept in repair by Panhandle; (b) either party could request that the meter or meters be tested to determine accuracy and that a registration within two percent would be considered correct; (e) any inaccurate equipment was to be restored by Buyer to a condition of accuracy; and (d) settlement for any periods of inoperation or inaccurate measurement shall be estimated per specific provisions.
• Article XI provided that the contract was to remain in effect for the life of the lease; however Article XV (hereafter referred to as the unprofitable clause) provided that “Buyer shall not be required to continue taking gas from, and Buyer shall have the right to disconnect from, any well of Seller when, in the Buyer’s sole judgment, such connection is no longer profitable to Buyer.”
Article VII, entitled Price and Payment, provided that (a) the initial price is to be 90% of the maximum lawful price per the Natural Gas Policy Act (NGPA); (b) in the event the NGPA no longer applies, the price of gas is to be the price in effect during the last month in which the NGPA applies (hereafter the price in effect provision); and (c) “Each party hereto shall have the right at all reasonable times to examine the books and records of the other party to the extent necessary to verify the accuracy of any statement, charge, computation or demand made under or pursuant to the contract. Any statement shall be final as to both parties unless questioned within two (2) years after payment thereof has been made.”

Having the duty to deliver the gas to Panhandle, Edwards installed a gathering system to deliver casinghead gas from 22 oil wells to a point off the lease where the gas was metered by Panhandle. After the gas was separately metered, it flowed into Panhandle’s pipeline, known as the “Riemer System,” where it was commingled with gas from six other leases and sold to Phillips 66 Natural Gas Company (Phillips).

Around the same time the Edwards contract was consummated, Edwards made a partial assignment of his working interest in the lease. Although Edwards’s partial assignment of the working interest to some of the sellers was dated December 24, 1980, it was not recorded until June 4,1981. 2

*706 1985 PRICE AMENDMENT

By letter of June 14,1985, Panhandle notified Edwards that due to a dramatic decline in the price for gas, it would cease taking gas deliveries under the Edwards contract on July 1, 1985 unless Edwards agreed to a reduced price of $2.40 per Mcf. To support its invocation of the unprofitable clause, Panhandle claimed the original contract price was, and had been, well above market levels, while the costs of gathering gas continued to escalate. Moreover, the letter stated that Panhandle had been forced to yield to price and “take” concessions demanded by the down stream purchaser of residue gas. By letter of June 27, 1985, Tabor Scott, Edwards’s attorney, and a member of the Russell Group, advised Panhandle that Edwards agreed to the requested price reduction on a day-to-day basis, but that Edwards reserved the right to sell the gas to any other buyer.

Thereafter, for reasons not explained in the record or briefs, the Russell Group and the Campisi Group, except Richard P. Kline, KK. Davidson, and Judy Walker, signed division orders to Panhandle effective October 10, 1986.

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975 S.W.2d 702, 1998 WL 461202, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/russell-v-panhandle-producing-co-texapp-1998.