Shell Western E & P Inc. v. Dupont

152 F.R.D. 82, 1993 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 16664, 1993 WL 491708
CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Louisiana
DecidedSeptember 29, 1993
DocketCiv. A. No. 92-1067-B
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 152 F.R.D. 82 (Shell Western E & P Inc. v. Dupont) 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
Shell Western E & P Inc. v. Dupont, 152 F.R.D. 82, 1993 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 16664, 1993 WL 491708 (M.D. La. 1993).

Opinion

RULING ON DEFENDANT’S MOTION TO DISMISS FOR FAILURE TO JOIN AN INDISPENSABLE PARTY AND FOR LACK OF SUBJECT MATTER JURISDICTION

POLOZOLA, District Judge.

This action arises out of a dispute between the parties as to the rights of Shell Western E & P Inc. (Shell Western), a Delaware corporation with its principal place of business in Texas, under a mineral lease to eon-[84]*84duct oil production operations on a tract of land in Iberville Parish. The defendant, Joseph B. Dupont, a Louisiana domiciliary, is a co-owner in indivisión of the tract of land subject to the mineral lease.

In September of 1950, Jacob Baist in his capacity as president of Baist Cooperage & Lumber Company, Inc. (Baist Cooperage) granted a mineral lease in favor of Shell Oil Company over 642.51 acres in Iberville parish, hereafter referred to as the “Baist tract”. Baist Cooperage granted a surface lease over the same tract on December 13, 1967, in conjunction with the mineral lease. Pursuant to these leases, Shell constructed a central gathering and treatment facility to serve the Bayou Sorrel field. Half of this facility lies on the Baist tract. In the early seventies, Baist Cooperage was liquidated, and the ownership of the entire tract passed to its shareholders in indivisión. Presently, there are fifty-two co-owners, which include seven who are residents of Texas. Joseph B. Dupont, in his capacity as a co-owner and as a mandatary for other co-owners, controls nearly seventeen percent of the ownership in indivisión of the Baist tract.

On December 2, 1992, William C. Dupont, an attorney who purported to represent all of the Baist tract co-owners, sent a letter to Shell Western notifying it of the expiration of the surface lease which was dated December 13, 1967. The letter also demanded that Shell Western terminate disposal or the injection of salt water on the tract and sought removal of all pipelines and equipment from the tract within six months, as per the surface lease. Subsequently, three co-owners of the Baist tract filed a class action suit in state court against Shell Western and four of its employees, all of whom were residents of Louisiana. Contending that the four employees were fraudulently joined, Shell Western removed the action to federal court. At plaintiffs written request, the suit was dismissed without prejudice.1

In October of 1992, another class action suit was commenced against Shell Western in state court by the same three co-owners and an additional co-owner who was a resident of Texas. The plaintiffs alleged that: (1) Shell Western failed to bury pipelines located on the tract as required by the mineral lease; (2) such pipelines and voluminous trash and garbage constitute a nuisance; (3) Shell Western is causing irreparable harm to the property through the discharge of hazardous and noxious material; and, (4) Shell Western has arbitrarily refused to release property not under production in accordance with Louisiana law. The state court judge certified the case as a class action. Shell Western has appealed the certification of that suit as a class action to the Louisiana First Circuit Court of Appeal.

Shell Western, relying on 28 U.S.C. § 1332 as its basis for subject matter jurisdiction, then filed a complaint in this Court seeking a declaration of its rights under the mineral lease “despite the expiration of the surface lease.” Joseph B. Dupont was named as a defendant in the federal action individually and as mandatary for other co-owners. More specifically, Shell Western seeks to have this Court declare that: (1) Shell Western has the right to operate the central facility, pipelines, and equipment located on the Baist tract; (2) Shell Western has the right to inject salt water into injection wells located on the Baist tract even though the salt water is produced off the tract; (3) the defendant’s attempt to shut down the facility disturbs Shell Western’s right to the peaceable possession of the Baist tract and violates Article 119 of the Louisiana Mineral Code; and, (4) the defendant has no right to take further action against Shell Western without the consent of all the owners in indivisión of the Baist tract.

In response to Shell Western’s complaint, Joseph B. Dupont filed a motion to dismiss for lack of the requisite diversity of citizenship.2 The plaintiff has filed an amended and supplemental complaint, but no additional parties were added to the suit. In this amended complaint, Shell Western also seeks [85]*85a declaration that: (1) the defendant does not have the right to act on behalf of all the co-owners of the Baist tract; (2) the surface lease reeonducted on a year-to-year basis instead of expiring as alleged in the original complaint; (3) on the date of the execution of a new surface lease by a single co-owner of the Baist tract, the new lease became effective as of December 12, 1992; and, (4) Shell has the right to continue its surface operations under applicable unit agreements, orders and permits issued by the Commissioner of Conservation. For reasons which follow, the Court grants defendant’s motion to dismiss.

In a diversity case, the question of joinder is one of federal law. State law is relevant “in determining what interest the outsider actually has, but the ultimate question whether, given those state-defined interests, a federal court may proceed without the outsider is a federal matter.”3

Rule 19 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure is designed to eliminate the distinction between “necessary” and “indispensable” parties which had sometimes been made by courts.4 The rule now directs the Court to determine the indispensability of parties based on analysis of the effect of a potential party’s absence.5

Under Rule 19(a), any person who can properly be served and joined without depriving the court of subject matter jurisdiction should be joined if complete relief cannot be granted to those already parties without joinder. In addition, if a party’s absence might result in an impairment of its claimed interest in the subject matter of the action or in the exposure of any present party to a substantial risk of incurring multiple or otherwise inconsistent obligations, the person must be joined if feasible.

Shell Western argues that the remaining fifty-one co-owners are not persons who must be joined if feasible. It contends that the absence of the remaining co-owners does not prevent this Court from granting complete relief to the present parties because the absent co-owners have not requested Shell Western to cease operations on the Baist tract. Shell Western’s argument is inconsistent with its requests in paragraph 26(iv) of the amended complaint. In paragraph 26(iv) Shell Western seeks to have the Court determine whether the execution of the new surface lease by one co-owner binds all the remaining co-owners of the Baist tract. There is simply no decision which the Court can render which will bind the remaining co-owners unless the remaining co-owners are joined as parties.6

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Bluebook (online)
152 F.R.D. 82, 1993 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 16664, 1993 WL 491708, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shell-western-e-p-inc-v-dupont-lamd-1993.