Schlumberger Technology Corp. v. Baker Hughes Inc.

355 S.W.3d 791, 2011 Tex. App. LEXIS 8226, 2011 WL 4925996
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 13, 2011
Docket01-11-00562-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by56 cases

This text of 355 S.W.3d 791 (Schlumberger Technology Corp. v. Baker Hughes Inc.) 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
Schlumberger Technology Corp. v. Baker Hughes Inc., 355 S.W.3d 791, 2011 Tex. App. LEXIS 8226, 2011 WL 4925996 (Tex. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

OPINION

MICHAEL MASSENGALE, Justice.

Schlumberger Technology Corporation and Baker Hughes Incorporated are in the midst of an arbitration proceeding to resolve patent disputes. A disagreement has arisen about whether the presiding panel of arbitrators has jurisdiction to determine a discrete subissue raised by Baker Hughes in the proceeding. Schlumberger contends that the subissue should be resolved by the same panel, but Baker Hughes argues that the issue is governed by a prior settlement agreement between the parties and must be resolved by the mediator who facilitated that agreement.

Baker Hughes initiated court proceedings, and both parties filed motions to compel arbitration in accordance with their respective positions. The trial court granted Baker Hughes’s requested relief and denied Schlumberger’s motion. Schlumberger now appeals from the trial court’s interlocutory order that denied its motion to compel arbitration. We conclude that we have jurisdiction over this interlocutory appeal. We further conclude that the parties agreed to let the arbitrators resolve their disagreement about the proper arbitral forum for their dispute and that the trial court should have compelled arbitration of that issue. Accordingly, we reverse the trial court’s order denying Schlumberger’s motion, and we remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

*794 Background

Schlumberger and Baker Hughes are competitors in the business of developing, manufacturing, and marketing tools for use in the oil and gas industry. Both own or control patents related to such tools. At various times, disputes have arisen about each party’s alleged infringement of the other’s patents. One of these disputes involved reciprocal claims relating to sensor tools used to gather information and fluid samples from oil and gas wells. Baker Hughes claimed that Schlumberger’s tool infringed a certain patent, and Schlumberger alleged that Baker Hughes’s tool infringed certain of its patents. The parties mediated this dispute, and in October 2004 they executed a settlement agreement. The parties granted each other reciprocal licenses to the patents at issue in that dispute, and they released and discharged each other from “any and all claims, demands or suits, known or unknown, fixed or contingent, liquidated or unliquidated whether or not asserted in the above case, as of this date, arising from or related to the events and transactions which are subject matter to this case.” The 2004 settlement agreement also contained the following dispute resolution provision:

If a dispute arises with regard to the interpretation and/or performance of this agreement or any of its provisions, the parties agree to attempt to resolve same by phone conference with the Mediator who facilitated this settlement. If the parties cannot resolve their differences by telephone conference, then each agrees to schedule a day of mediation with the Mediator within thirty (30) days to resolve the disputes and to share the costs of the same equally. If a party refuses to mediate, then the parties agree to submit the issue to binding arbitration before the Mediator in this matter and the party bringing the arbitration shall be entitled to recover attorney’s fees or costs in such arbitration.

After the 2004 settlement agreement was finalized, additional disputes arose between the parties concerning their intellectual property. To facilitate efficient resolution of these disputes, in 2009 the parties entered into two additional agreements: the Patent Dispute Resolution Agreement and the Patent Dispute Procedure Agreement. The Resolution Agreement provided that its purpose was to address and resolve then-current disputes and to provide a process for addressing future disputes about the infringement and validity of each party’s patents. That agreement defined “Current Disputes” as “those Disputes for which assertions have been made prior to the signing of this Agreement,” and it expressly referenced an attached exhibit that listed the Current Disputes. The Resolution Agreement also defined “Dispute” as:

... any dispute between the Parties arising out of or relating to or in connection with a claim of 1) infringement or the damages arising therefrom, or 2) the invalidity or unenforceability of either Party’s Patents. “Dispute” shall also include disputes relating to the interpretation, construction, alleged breach of this Agreement, the Procedure Agreement, a license agreement or covenant not to sue relating to a Patent or Patents, or amounts paid under such a license agreement or covenant not to sue. Disputes arising under existing licenses or covenants not to sue shall be treated in accordance with Section 3.2, below.

Schlumberger and Baker Hughes agreed that “any Current Disputes or future Disputes ... shall be solely resolved as set forth in the Procedure Agreement.”

Section 3 of the Resolution Agreement carved out an exception for disputes aris *795 ing from any preexisting patent or license agreement that contained its own dispute resolution procedures. By that provision the parties agreed:

3. TREATMENT OF EXISTING AND FUTURE PATENT AGREEMENTS
3.1 Existing, unexpired patent agreements and licenses between the Parties will remain in effect and this Agreement and the Procedure Agreement shall have no impact on their terms, including negotiated royalty rates, royalty base, or restrictions on field of use.
3.2 Unless a dispute resolution process is set forth in an existing or future patent agreement or license, breaches of those agreements shall be subject to resolution in accordance with the terms of this Agreement.

Consistent with this provision, a merger clause provided that the Resolution Agreement constituted the parties’ “entire agreement ... with respect to the same subject matter hereof’ and superseded “all other agreements, whether written or oral except as provided by Section 3.1.... ”

If direct negotiations should fail to resolve a dispute encompassed by the Resolution Agreement, the Procedure Agreement specifies resolution by arbitration before a panel of American Arbitration Association arbitrators, pursuant to AAA rules. Pursuant to the Resolution and Procedure Agreements, the parties began arbitration before a panel of three AAA arbitrators to resolve a dispute as to whether a module of Baker Hughes’s sensor tool infringes Schlumberger’s patents. The parties agree that this dispute, which they reference as the “four-patent dispute,” was one of the Current Disputes expressly identified in the Resolution Agreement. During the course of that proceeding, Schlumberger submitted a report from its damages expert. Baker Hughes contends that Schlumberger’s expert did not confine his analysis to the module and patents at issue in the four-patent dispute but instead included damages relating to the entire sensor tool. Baker Hughes argues that Schlumberger’s damages model includes damages arising from alleged infringement of the patents that were licensed to Baker Hughes in the 2004 settlement agreement. Baker Hughes also contends that this damages claim was itself a breach of the 2004 settlement agreement.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
355 S.W.3d 791, 2011 Tex. App. LEXIS 8226, 2011 WL 4925996, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schlumberger-technology-corp-v-baker-hughes-inc-texapp-2011.