Samedan Oil Corp. v. Louis Dreyfus Natural Gas Corp.

52 S.W.3d 788, 152 Oil & Gas Rep. 299, 2001 Tex. App. LEXIS 3429, 2001 WL 575442
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 24, 2001
Docket11-00-00041-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 52 S.W.3d 788 (Samedan Oil Corp. v. Louis Dreyfus Natural Gas Corp.) 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
Samedan Oil Corp. v. Louis Dreyfus Natural Gas Corp., 52 S.W.3d 788, 152 Oil & Gas Rep. 299, 2001 Tex. App. LEXIS 3429, 2001 WL 575442 (Tex. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

Opinion

McCALL, Justice.

The trial court entered a summary judgment on the ground that a Colorado judgment in a suit involving these same parties was res judicata of the issues in this case. We modify the trial court’s judgment to make it clear that its holding of res judica-ta does not bar future disputes that could not have been decided in the Colorado litigation. As modified, we affirm.

The dispute between the parties to this case arose out of agreements entered into by their predecessors in interest. Louis Dreyfus Natural Gas Corporation (LDNG) is the successor in interest to Britoil Ventures, Inc. (Britoil). Samedan Oil Corporation (Samedan) is the successor in interest to McMoRan Oil & Gas Company (McMoRan). In 1985, Britoil entered into a Purchase and Participation Agreement (Participation Agreement) with McMoRan to acquire oil and gas producing properties in a number of states, including the Bow-doin Field in Montana. Under the terms of the Participation Agreement, McMo-Ran, as operator, agreed to perform additional administrative services for Britoil relating to the latter’s Bowdoin Field oil and gas wells. For these services, McMo-Ran charged additional overhead fees. Britoil subsequently was acquired by American Exploration Company (American), a large company capable of handling the administrative services then being performed by McMoRan. When American attempted to terminate the Participation *790 Agreement, McMoRan agreed to the 1988 Letter Agreement which involved a change in the method for determining overhead fees.

In 1993, Samedan purchased McMo-Ran’s oil and gas interests. Believing that the Participation Agreement, as amended by the 1988 Letter Agreement, terminated when McMoRan sold its interests, American reduced the amount of overhead fees it was paying on certain wells in the Bowdoin Field. Disagreeing with American, Same-dan filed suit in Colorado against American in 1996. LDNG subsequently acquired American; hence, our discussion of the litigation will refer to LDNG and not to American.

Samedan’s petition in Colorado requested a stay of proceedings pending an agreed arbitration of certain matters that were the subject of the litigation. To preclude a later application of the statute of limitations, Samedan’s petition set forth its claims. The petition’s first claim for relief contained a request for a declaratory judgment by the Colorado court that the Participation Agreement was still in effect between Samedan and LDNG, that Samedan’s calculation of overhead fees and rates on oil and gas properties in the Bowdoin Field was correct, and that Sam-edan was entitled to reimbursement for the amounts that LDNG had refused to pay. Samedan’s second claim for relief asserted that LDNG had breached their contract, and its third claim for relief claimed unjust enrichment; both claims requested damages, interest, attorneys’ fees, and court costs. Samedan’s fourth claim for relief requested the placement of an equitable or constructive trust on all of LDNG’s oil and gas interests in the Bow-doin Field and an award of damages to Samedan. Samedan’s fifth claim for relief requested an accounting, and its sixth claim for relief asserted tortious breach of contract and wrongful withholding of monies due. Thus, Samedan’s petition asserted six causes of action based upon the premise that LDNG had improperly underpaid overhead fees to Samedan.

After Samedan filed the Colorado suit, the parties represented to the court that all issues raised in Samedan’s petition were being submitted to arbitration. The arbitration panel ruled in Samedan’s favor as follows:

A majority of the Panel concluded that Paragraph 4 of the Letter Agreement of October 28, 1988 is not sufficiently explicit to terminate the Purchase and Participation Agreement of March 20, 1985 in the event of an assignment by McMoRan and that the position of Sam-edan on this contract interpretation issue should be adopted.
A majority of the Panel thus concludes that Samedan is entitled to charge and receive payment of monthly overhead fees or rates as provided in the Purchase and Participation Agreement of March 20, 1985, as amended in the October 28, 1988 Letter Agreement, as to wells and properties in the Bowdoin Area of Phillips and Valley Counties, Montana, in which Samedan and [LDNG] are the only parties who own interests.

Upon Samedan’s request, the Colorado court entered the award as the judgment of the court. The parties disagreed as to the effect of the arbitration award judgment. LDNG took the position that, although the award judgment declared that the Participation Agreement was still in effect, issues remained that involved the interpretation of the Participation Agreement. LDNG contended that the award did not decide whether Samedan had properly invoiced LDNG for oil and gas wells in which Samedan and LDNG were the only parties owning interests or for oil and *791 gas wells in which third parties were involved and that it did not address whether LDNG’s deductions from the amounts invoiced by Samedan were proper under the Participation Agreement. Accordingly, LDNG filed a motion requesting a court scheduling order to allow the other issues in the case to be decided.

Samedan opposed LDNG’s motion, filing a brief and a motion to enforce the Colorado judgment on the basis that it was final, that the Colorado court was without jurisdiction to do anything but enforce the judgment, that the court should order LDNG to pay $978,614.61 to Samedan, and that the court should order that LDNG pay prospectively all overhead fees as billed by Samedan. LDNG claims that it filed this declaratory action in Texas because Samedan’s motion to the Colorado court argued that the Colorado court had lost jurisdiction and because Samedan was demanding the payment of $978,614.61.

Despite the pending post-judgment motions in Colorado, LDNG’s petition requested that the Texas court decide the proper calculation of overhead fees under the Participation Agreement. Samedan’s response in Texas was that “[a]ll matters and claims which are the subject of this litigation have been fully and fairly litigated in the Colorado Lawsuit.” Samedan pleaded the affirmative defenses of arbitration and award, collateral estoppel, and res judicata.

LDNG subsequently changed its position in this case to agree that the Colorado judgment was a final judgment and that it was res judicata as to all causes of action that Samedan asserted in the Colorado case. The reason for the reversal in LDNG’s position was that, after LDNG filed this Texas case, the Colorado court entered an order agreeing with Samedan that its earlier judgment was final and that the court had lost jurisdiction of the case. However, the Colorado court rejected Samedan’s motion to enforce judgment, observing that its final judgment provided no basis for ordering LDNG to pay Same-dan $978,614.61 or for ordering LDNG to pay prospectively all overhead fees as billed by Samedan. The Colorado court’s September 1998 order denied the relief sought by the post-judgment motions of both parties for the stated reason that the court no longer had jurisdiction. Neither party appealed the September 1998 Colorado order, although an appeal might have determined whether the earlier judgment was interlocutory, as LDNG had contended, or was final and should have awarded damages, as Samedan contended.

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Bluebook (online)
52 S.W.3d 788, 152 Oil & Gas Rep. 299, 2001 Tex. App. LEXIS 3429, 2001 WL 575442, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/samedan-oil-corp-v-louis-dreyfus-natural-gas-corp-texapp-2001.