Saia v. City of Memphis Light, Gas & Water Division, Inc.

508 F. Supp. 206, 1981 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9417
CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Louisiana
DecidedFebruary 5, 1981
DocketCiv. A. No. 79-403-B
StatusPublished

This text of 508 F. Supp. 206 (Saia v. City of Memphis Light, Gas & Water Division, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Saia v. City of Memphis Light, Gas & Water Division, Inc., 508 F. Supp. 206, 1981 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9417 (M.D. La. 1981).

Opinion

[207]*207MEMORANDUM OPINION

JOHN V. PARKER, Chief Judge.

This is a diversity suit arising out of the sale and purchase of various mineral interests in a north Louisiana gas field known as the “Bayou Galion Field.” The primary legal issue involves application of Louisiana’s parol evidence rule. It is well settled that in a diversity action a federal court is bound to apply the parol evidence rule of the state in which it sits. Harville Rose Service v. Kellogg Company, 448 F.2d 1346 (5th Cir. 1971), cert. den., 405 U.S. 987, 92 S.Ct. 1248, 31 L.Ed.2d 453.

The legal issues are not particularly complicated, but it will be necessary, in order to understand the situation and the Court’s reasons for its holdings, to state the facts in more detail than is normally done.

Plaintiff is an electrical contractor in Baton Rouge with very little experience in oil and gas transactions. He is the vendee or “owner” under a document entitled “Oil, Gas and Mineral Lease and Drilling Contract,” dated July 2,1973, between plaintiff and Lo-Ho-Fi Corporation and Glen D. Loe, vendors and “contractor” under the terms of which plaintiff purportedly acquired “[a]ll of the working interest, being 100 per cent of the working interest of a 70 per cent net production interest in and to those certain oil, gas and mineral leases” covering a described forty-acre tract in the Bayou Galion Field. Under the terms of the agreement, the “contractor” was to drill a well for the “owner” upon the described forty-acre tract. The agreement recites that the consideration is $40,000, $25,000 cash and a note executed by the “owner” in the amount of $15,000. Plaintiff paid only $18,000 and testified that he was never called upon by anyone to pay the balance. The parties have stipulated that plaintiff paid by means of a check dated December 31,1973 (some six months subsequent to the date of the instrument), payable to the order of Glen D. Loe in the amount of $18,000 which cleared the drawee bank on February 15, 1974.

Plaintiff brings this suit against Williams Exploration Company (“Williams”) and City of Memphis Light, Gas & Water Division, Inc., a Division of the City of Memphis, Tennessee (“the City”), because they refused to pay him the sum of $23,817.05 when they, in succession, acquired the gas field.

It appears that a man named Glen D. Loe, individually and through Lo-Ho-Fi Corporation, Glen D. Loe, Inc., Loe Oil & Gas Corporation and Energyline Pipeline, Inc. (“Loe”), corporations which he either owned or controlled, acquired and developed the Bayou Galion Field. Loe got into serious financial difficulties in 1976 or 1977, perhaps earlier. In any event, two of his larger creditors were the American Bank & Trust Company of Baton Rouge, to whom he owed some $4.2 million and Williams, to whom he owed some $2.2 million.

Loe worked out an agreement with Williams to transfer the entire field to Williams in exchange for cancelling the debt to Williams and in consideration of Williams paying various other creditors of Loe. Subsequent to that agreement, the City of Memphis, which apparently operates its own utilities system, expressed an interest in acquiring the field; and an agreement dated July 14,1977, was worked out whereby Loe would reacquire all outstanding interest in the field and convey all leases, equipment, pipelines, et cetera, to Williams, which, in turn, would contemporaneously convey the field to the City.

Mr. F. Henri Lapeyre, Jr., of the law firm of Jumonville, Hartley, Plauche’ & Broadhurst of New Orleans and Lafayette, represented the City in the Bayou Galion Field transaction. He testified that there were numerous title problems, particularly in that portion of the field known as the “Bennett Lease.” In that area Loe had executed double conveyances of the same interest in some instances, the wrong Loe vendor had executed some conveyances, and many documents were unrecorded. Although Mr. Lapeyre took the position that unrecorded conveyances from the Loe interests were invalid, lead counsel for Loe, Mr. Lewis Ray Sleeth of Jena, Louisiana, desired that all [208]*208outstanding claims against his clients be concluded. The City eventually decided that it would be willing to pay at least something toward the cost of acquiring such outstanding claims. The evidence does not establish the method used for determining the amount which would be paid but the contract document (agreement of purchase and sale, dated July 14, 1977) established a class of “Outside Investors” which included persons “who have or who claim to have drilled or participated in the drilling of wells ... who presently own or claim an interest in such wells or a portion of” the leases in the Bayou Galion Field.

The closing agreement obligated Loe to deliver valid title and further provided that Loe would attempt to acquire “all interests of the Outside Investors.” The assignments “and other documents” relating to acquisition of such interests were to be held in escrow by the American Bank. The agreement further provided that Williams and the City “each in that order” would fund purchases of these “interests of the ‘Outside Investors’ ” not to exceed a prescribed amount at actual cost to Loe, and the agreement further gave Williams and the City the option of accepting all of the “Outside Investor” interests or less than all, if all did not tender the proper documents.

Loe apparently contacted all of the “Outside Investors” and furnished documents for reconveyance of any outstanding interest to Loe. Detailed instructions were sent which specifically informed each “Outside Investor” that in order to get paid, it would be necessary for him to execute and deliver two documents. The first required document was an “acceptance of offer” in which the “Outside Investor” accepted the offer of Loe, declared himself satisfied that the offer was a fair value and further waived and relinquished all claims of any kind against Loe relating to the Bayou Galion Field. The final paragraph of that document provided that the releases also ran in favor of Williams and the City. The attorney for Loe, Mr. Sleeth, insisted upon securing these releases for his clients. The second document required was an assignment of all interest in the field to Loe.

The closing date was fixed for July 22, 1977, in Tulsa, Oklahoma. The transfer was a complicated transaction taking some two days and involving transfer of the entire gas field, of which the “Outside Investors” represented only a small part. A list of twenty-six “Outside Investor” contracts was drawn up and a proposed disbursement in the amount of $23,817.05 was shown for plaintiff, Mr. Saia. At the closing all “Outside Investors” except the plaintiff and one other delivered both the “acceptance of offer” form and the executed assignment. Williams and the City refused to reimburse Loe for the cost of these two contracts, and, since Loe did not receive his release, he also objected. Accordingly, these two “Outside Investors” were not paid and this suit is the result.

The parties have stipulated that if Mr. Saia had submitted both executed documents at the closing in Tulsa, he would have received the amount specified.

Plaintiff claims that at the closing, Williams and the City agreed to a sixty-day extension of time for Mr. Saia to furnish the executed “acceptance of offer” form.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
508 F. Supp. 206, 1981 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9417, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/saia-v-city-of-memphis-light-gas-water-division-inc-lamd-1981.