Southeastern Pipe Line Co., Inc. v. Tichacek

997 S.W.2d 166, 1999 WL 374149
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 9, 1999
Docket98-0728
StatusPublished
Cited by198 cases

This text of 997 S.W.2d 166 (Southeastern Pipe Line Co., Inc. v. Tichacek) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Southeastern Pipe Line Co., Inc. v. Tichacek, 997 S.W.2d 166, 1999 WL 374149 (Tex. 1999).

Opinion

Justice O’NEILL

delivered the opinion for a unanimous Court.

Southeastern Pipe Line Co. acquired certain oil and gas leases from Frances and Victor Tichacek, Henry and Darlene Divin, Reed and Lou Ann Kubena, and John Rabius (collectively, “lessors”). When the leases were about to expire for nonproduction, Southeastern extended them by pooling the leases with producing acreage to form a unit. The lessors sued, claiming that Southeastern had pooled in bad faith and failed to protect their leases from substantial drainage. The jury upheld Southeastern’s formation of the pooled unit, but found that Southeastern *168 failed to protect the individual leases from drainage. The drainage liability and damages questions, as framed, did not account for the pooled unit by distinguishing between pre-pooling drainage from the leases and post-pooling drainage from the unit. The jury awarded damages based upon estimated production from a hypothetical unit the lessors’ experts testified should have been formed to protect the leases. The court of appeals affirmed the trial court’s judgment on the verdict, and remanded for a recalculation of prejudgment interest. 977 S.W.2d 393.

We must decide whether the drainage questions were erroneous for failure to account for the pooled unit and, if so, whether that error made the questions immaterial or defective. If they were immaterial, then Southeastern would be entitled to judgment in its favor. If, however, the questions were defective, then the lessors are entitled to a new trial. We hold that the lessors may not premise recovery for drainage on their own pooling preferences, as reflected in their experts’ hypothetical unit, when the lessee’s formation of a different unit is made in good faith. Therefore, the drainage questions, which did not account for the pooled unit, were erroneous. We also hold that the questions submitted were defective rather than immaterial, and that the lessors are entitled to a new trial on the drainage claim. Accordingly, we reverse the court of appeals’ judgment in part and remand to that court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

I

Background

In the late 1950s, Stanley C. Woods began taking leases and drilling for natural gas in the western part of the East Bernard Field in Wharton County. 1 Some thirty years later he decided to explore the eastern part of the field, and in 1990 his company, Southeastern, drilled a “wildcat” test well on a lease that it had acquired from W.C. and Zela Leveridge. 2 The test well, known as the W.C. Leveridge Well No. 4, was successful, ultimately producing more than three million cubic feet of gas per day.

With the success of Well No. 4, Southeastern sought to protect its interest in the field from drainage by another operator, and in late 1990 and early 1991 negotiated three-year leases on the lessors’ adjacent property to the north. Southeastern did not drill on the lessors’ tracts to the north, but drilled two more successful wells on the W.C. Leveridge tract, Well No. 5 in 1992 and Well No. 6 in 1993.

In August 1993, Southeastern sought to extend its leases on the northern acreage for three more years. The lessors, believing that Southeastern had not diligently developed their acreage, refused. On December 15, 1993, four days before the first of the northern leases was to expire, Southeastern pooled the leases with acreage surrounding the W.C. Leveridge Well No. 5 to form a 350-acre unit. 3 Half of the unit’s acreage came from the Leveridge leases and the other half from the lessors’. Because there was production on the pooled unit from Well No. 5, the lessors’ leases were automatically extended.

The lessors, who had anticipated new leasing opportunities when their leases expired, believed that Southeastern had pooled their leases in bad faith. They *169 notified Southeastern that the pooling was invalid and that the leases had therefore expired. In response, Southeastern filed this suit seeking a judgment declaring the leases to be valid. The lessors filed counterclaims alleging that Southeastern had pooled the leases in bad faith and had breached the implied covenant to protect their leases from substantial drainage.

Before trial, Southeastern sought to bifurcate and resolve the bad-faith pooling question before determining the drainage issue. It claimed, among other things, that resolution of the pooling question would affect submission of the drainage issue. Although the trial court initially granted Southeastern’s request, it ultimately denied the motion on rehearing. The trial court realigned the lessors as plaintiffs and Southeastern as defendant, and the case proceeded to trial.

The lessors’ experts, petroleum engineer Ricardo Garza and geologist Robert Hilty, testified that there were substantial gas reserves beneath the northern leases that had been substantially drained by the W.C. Leveridge Well Nos. 4, 5, and 6. Garza was of the opinion that, in order to protect the leases, Southeastern should have drilled two off-set wells on the lessors’ acreage, one in January 1992 and the other in January 1993. Garza proposed two hypothetical units upon which the wells should have been drilled, and calculated drainage damages based upon the pre-trial and post-trial royalties the lessors would have received had the units been formed and the proposed wells drilled. The lessors’ experts did not take into account the unit that Southeastern actually pooled. Southeastern countered with its own expert testimony that it had acted as a reasonably prudent operator in forming the W.C. Leveridge No. 5 Unit as and when it did because of uncertainty regarding the location and effect of a fault running through the northern leases and Zela Leveridge’s prior refusal to pool.

The jury found that Southeastern did not pool in bad faith, thus validating the Leveridge No. 5 Unit. It did find, however, that Southeastern had failed to protect the individual leases from substantial drainage. Neither the drainage liability nor damages question accounted for the Lever-idge No. 5 Unit by segregating pre-pooling drainage of the individual leases from post-pooling drainage of the unit. The jury awarded damages based upon Garza’s calculations of what the lessors would have received if a well had been drilled on his first hypothetical unit in 1992. The trial court rendered judgment on the verdict, awarding ten percent prejudgment interest compounded daily. The court of appeals affirmed the trial court’s judgment, but reversed and remanded for the trial court to recalculate prejudgment interest as simple interest. 977 S.W.2d at 401.

Southeastern contests the drainage award on two grounds. First, it contends the award, which is based upon estimated production from Garza’s first hypothetical unit, is unsupported because the lessors’ leases contain pooling restrictions that expressly prohibit formation of the proposed unit, and it had no duty as a reasonably prudent operator to seek lease amendments that would obviate these restrictions. Second, Southeastern claims that, once the jury upheld formation of the Lev-eridge No.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
997 S.W.2d 166, 1999 WL 374149, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southeastern-pipe-line-co-inc-v-tichacek-tex-1999.