Seeco, Inc. v. Hales

22 S.W.3d 157, 341 Ark. 673
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJuly 13, 2000
Docket99-800
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 22 S.W.3d 157 (Seeco, Inc. v. Hales) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Seeco, Inc. v. Hales, 22 S.W.3d 157, 341 Ark. 673 (Ark. 2000).

Opinions

Robert L. Brown, Justice.

The appellants, SEECO, Inc. stice. Western Gas Company (AWG), and Southwestern Energy Company (SWN) appeal an adverse jury verdict and judgment which awarded the class of royalty owners $62,136,827 in compensatory damages and $31,085,330 in prejudgment interest for a total award of $93,222,157. The appellants raise sixteen issues on appeal. We find no reversible error in the issues raised, and we affirm the judgment.

This is the fourth appeal to come before us in this case. In SEECO, Inc. v. Hales, 330 Ark. 402, 954 S.W.2d 234 (1997) (SEECO I), we affirmed the certification of a class of royalty owners in litigation brought against appellants SEECO, AWG, and SWN. In SEECO, Inc. v. Hales, 334 Ark. 134, 969 S.W.2d 193 (1998) (SEECO, II), we affirmed the trial judge’s disqualification of co-counsel for SEECO, AWG, and SWN from participating in this case because he had announced his candidacy for the same judicial position held by the trial judge. In SEECO, Inc. v. Hales, 334 Ark. 307, 973 S.W.2d 818 (1998) (SEECO III), we affirmed the trial judge’s notice order to a subclass of royalty owners, which had the effect of permitting the trial to proceed as scheduled.

Appellants SEECO and AWG are wholly-owned subsidiaries of appellant SWN.1 Appellees are royalty owners by virtue of their oil and gas leases with SEECO and class representatives of approximately 7,000 lessors of oil and gas leases held by SEECO (“royalty owners”). SEECO is a gas producer and leases gas properties from the royalty owners. AWG is a public utility that buys gas from SEECO and in turn furnishes gas to its ratepayers. SWN is the holding company for its two affiliates, SEECO and AWG. At all relevant times, Charles Scharlau was the Chairman of the Board and CEO for the holding company and its two subsidiaries.

On July 24, 1978, SEECO and AWG entered into a 20-year contract for the sale of gas produced from leases held by SEECO, known as Contract 59. Pursuant to Contract 59, SEECO dedicated substantial gas reserves in Franklin, Johnson, Washington, Logan and Crawford Counties to AWG. In return, AWG promised to pay the market-value price throughout its 20-year term. The volume requirements set forth in the contract were intended to frilly deplete all of SEECO’s dedicated gas reserves by the end of Contract 59’s twenty-year term. The contract contained a take-or-pay obligation, which provided that AWG would buy a certain volume of gas at the contract price or pay a specified price without taking the gas.2 The pricing terms and other provisions of Contract 59 were approved by the Arkansas Public Service Commission (APSC) in 1979, and both SEECO and AWG confirmed to APSC that the two companies would be guided by the terms of the contract.

On December 10, 1984, AWG, by a letter from its Chairman of the Board and CEO, Charles Scharlau, to SEECO froze the price of gas purchased from SEECO at $3.85 per thousand cubic feet (Mcfi). On January 16, 1990, AWG filed an application with the APSC for approval of a general change in its rates and tariffs. On December 21, 1990, the APSC approved the overall revenue requirement and associated tariffs. However, the APSC expressed concern over AWG’s gas purchasing practices, its affiliate transactions with SEECO, its allocation of gas costs, and its transportation practices. The APSC initiated proceedings to address these issues, and following those proceedings, it issued Order No. 41 on November 29, 1993, in which it addressed the propriety of AWG’s contracting practices with SEECO. The APSC specifically noted that it must decide whether the market prices set in Contract 59 were reasonable so to allow them to be passed on to AWG’s ratepayers. In its Order No. 41, the APSC found that the relationship between SEECO and AWG was “fraught with conflicts of interest.” It further found that AWG was not in compliance with Ark. Code Ann. § 23-15-103 (1987), the least cost purchasing statute3. The APSC ordered that for purposes of the cost of gas charged to its Arkansas ratepayers, AWG’s purchases from SEECO under Contract 59 must henceforth be indexed to an appropriate market price based on published prices. On October 31, 1994, AWG, SEECO, the APSC, the Arkansas Attorney General, and the Northwest Arkansas Gas Consumers entered into a Stipulation and Agreement whereby Contract 59 was amended to reflect the APSC’s findings in Order No. 41. The APSC published this stipulation in its Order No. 52 on January 5, 1995. As part of the Stipulation and Agreement, SEECO agreed to waive all take-or-pay pricing, buy-down demands, and other contractual claims arising under Contract 59 prior to July 1, 1994.

On May 24, 1996, Allen Hales and the other named appellees filed suit on behalf of themselves and other similarly situated royalty owners under SEECO gas leases, asserted numerous causes of action in contract and tort, and claimed royalty payments due from SEECO and not paid. Their claims arose out of SEECO’s administration of several contracts entered into between SEECO and AWG. The royalty owners later amended their complaint to focus solely on claims arising out of Contract 59.

In their complaint, the royalty owners alleged that throughout the term of Contract 59, SEECO never requested nor required AWG to pay the market price or take the volumes of gas set out under the express terms of the contract. The complaint also referred to the fact that in 1984, AWG froze the price of gas to be paid SEECO for gas produced and sold under Contract 59. The royalty owners asserted that this freeze violated the pricing provisions of Contract 59, and they contended that SEECO did nothing to contest the price freeze implemented by AWG. Because the price freeze was not to SEECO’s advantage, the royalty owners asserted that the freeze was only implemented to benefit AWG and significantly reduced the amount of royalty payments the royalty owners would receive under Contract 59.

The royalty owners further alleged causes of action in tort. As part of the fraud and constructive fraud claims, the complaint contended that in a 1983 letter, SEECO advised certain royalty owners that it had entered into a gas-sales contract with Natural Gas Pipeline (NGP) which would result in reduced royalties. The royalty owners claimed that SEECO failed to disclose that the same gas dedicated under the NGP contract was already dedicated under Contract 59, with its take-or-pay provision, at a significantly higher purchase price. In this same vein, the complaint asserted that in 1987, SEECO solicited the purchase of mineral interests from certain royalty owners and misrepresented the market price for natural gas. In the solicitation letter, SEECO noted that gas prices had been declining in recent years, but, according to the complaint, SEECO failed to disclose that under Contract 59, AWG was obligated to make minimum volume purchases of gas and to pay for that gas at a certain price as part of the arrangement for having the gas reserves dedicated for its use for twenty years. They further claimed that SEECO fraudulently concealed its failures under Contract 59 by intentionally refusing to document the pricing and other deficiencies under the contract and by failing to reveal Contract 59 pricing on check stubs and in the monthly royalty statements.

On June 13, 1996, SEECO, AWG, and SWN moved to dismiss the complaint, alleging that venue was improper in Sebastian County.

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Bluebook (online)
22 S.W.3d 157, 341 Ark. 673, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seeco-inc-v-hales-ark-2000.