St. Paul Fire & Marine Insurance Company and St. Paul Surplus Lines Insurance Company v. Petroplex Energy, Inc.

474 S.W.3d 454, 2015 Tex. App. LEXIS 9308, 2015 WL 5173035
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 31, 2015
Docket11-13-00104-CV
StatusPublished

This text of 474 S.W.3d 454 (St. Paul Fire & Marine Insurance Company and St. Paul Surplus Lines Insurance Company v. Petroplex Energy, 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
St. Paul Fire & Marine Insurance Company and St. Paul Surplus Lines Insurance Company v. Petroplex Energy, Inc., 474 S.W.3d 454, 2015 Tex. App. LEXIS 9308, 2015 WL 5173035 (Tex. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

OPINION

MIKE WILLSON, JUSTICE

This appeal involves whether Petroplex Energy, Inc. (Petroplex), which claimed it owned 100% of the working interest in a gas well, the Quinn 1-6H Well in Reeves County, Texas (Quinn Well or Well), can recover, under two policies of insurance, 1 the expenses, damages, and costs that occurred as a result of a blowout ,on that Well. The trial court granted the motions for partial summary judgment filed by Pe-troplex and denied the cross-motions for summary judgment filed by St. Paul Surplus Lines Insurance Company (St. Paul Surplus) and St. Paul Fire & Marine Insurance Company (St.PauI). The parties agreed to an interlocutory appeal of the partial summary judgment orders. 2 We affirm because the trial court correctly ruled on each of the motions and cross-motions for partial summary judgment.

I. Background Facts

The events involved in this appeal surround the blowout of the Qúinn Weil. Pe-troplex sought to recover “insured” or “covered” ’expenses, damages, and costs incurred from the blowout and related litigation in Reeves County, while St. Paul Surplus and St. Paul asserted they were not obligated to pay under either the well-control policy or the CGL policy. 3

A.' Petroplex’s and Endeavor’s Arrangements

The summary judgment evidence indicated, that Petroplex and Endeavor Energy Resources, LP 4 (Endeavor) had many oil and gas deals together. Stephens, on behalf of Endeavor, and the president of Petroplex, S. Javaid Anwar, orally agreed *457 to partner on the Quinn Well. Anwar explained that Endeavor provided. the rig and technical help. Petroplex reentered the Quinn Well and completed it in 2006. Petroplex agreed to assign 80% of the working interest in the. Quinn Well to Endeavor, while Petroplex would retain 20% of the working interest; Petroplex would be the operator. Petroplex executed a partial assignment (Partial Assignment) on July 11, 2006, and proposed a joint operating agreement (JOA), but because disagreements over blowout insurance and a few other things arose, Petroplex and Endeavor never signed the JOA. As a result, Endeavor reassigned the 80% interest back to Petroplex (Endeavor Assignment) on July 25, 2006, effective July 11, 2006. The Endeavor Assignment identifiéd the property on which the Quinn Well was located, and it was' executed, notarized, and delivered, but never recorded.

In return for the Endeavor Assignment, Petroplex orally agreed to assign to Endeavor interests that Petroplex .owned in comparable wells in Midland County and Martin County. While drilling continued, and until the relative value of all wells was known, the parties agreed to account for the wells, including the Quinn Well, as if nothing had changed. Petroplex and Endeavor agreed that they both exchanged expenses for wells on behalf of each other, and Petroplex asserted that, although title to the Midland County and Martin County wells had not yet transferred, Endeavor was firmly entitled to those interests. In addition, both Petroplex and Endeavor agreed that they would account to each other for the., expenses exchanged the Quinn Well and the Midland County and Martin County wells, on behalf of each other and' would make adjustments, as needed, on a dollar-for-dollar basis.

B. Bloivout on Quinn Well

Pressure .from a buildup of gas developed in the annulus between the production tubing and the production casing (the backside). When Petroplex discovered the increased pressure, it initially installed a relief valve on the backside that tied into the sales line., When the pressure increased to a certain level, the relief valve activated and allowed Petroplex to capture and sell the gas collected from the backside, Later, as workers removed the test tubing in an effort to find and repair the cause of the problem, the Well “took a kick.” A blowout preventer installed on the Well failed; the Well blew out; and Petroplex, the operator of record, lost control of the Well on September 14, 2007.

Among other things, the blowout polluted the .area and resulted in damage to equipment owned by third parties. Various third-party claims were subsequently filed, both by and against Petroplex, in connection with the damages that arose from the blowout of the Well. 5 Petroplex was invoiced for various expenses related to the blowout of the Quinn Well. Petro-plex paid those expenses and also settled some claims. In addition, Endeavor advanced blowout expenses for the Quinn Well to Petroplex, as did Anwar’s mother, Tahira Khatoon. 6

*458 C. Insurance Policies

On June 29, 2007, St. Paul Surplus issued a well-control policy to Petroplex that covered the Quinn Well, well number “16” on a list of forty-nine wells, while St. Paul issued a commercial liability policy to Pe-troplex that went into effect on May 10, 2007. Petroplex paid the premiums for both polices. For the well-control policy, for which St. Paul Surplus billed up front, Petroplex timely' paid its total up-front premium of $39,479, which included a charge of $1,728.92 attributable to the Quinn Well. 7 Within thirty days following the end of the quarter, Petroplex made quarterly reports of well activity, and the underwriter for' St. Paul Surplus billed Petroplex additional premiums due for reported activity in' that quarter. St. Paul Surplus acknowledged that the rate schedule in the well-control policy included rates for the Quinn Well and that the Quinn Well was a “well insured,” as a “producing well,” at the inception of the policy. Before the- end of the quarterly reporting period for the well-control policy, the Quinn Well suffered a blowout during the coverage periods for both policies. St. Paul Surplus contends the Well was not “producing” at that time but was in a “workover.”

D. Procedural History

The dispute between the parties to this appeal arises under the well-control and the CGL policies of insurance. St. Paul Surplus issued a reservation-of-rights letter and asserted that the well was not insured. Later, St. Paul Surplus and St. Paul claimed Petroplex was not the working interest owner. When St. Paul Surplus and St. Paul failed to pay Petroplex’s claims under the two policies, Petroplex filed suit. The parties filed multiple motions and cross-motions for partial summary judgment on several issues. Those contested issues included the following: (1) Who was the working interest owner? (2) Was the Quinn Well insured? (3) Were there “insured” or “covered” losses under the two policies? (4) Did Petroplex incur “insured” or “covered” losses? (5) Could Petroplex recover any “insured” or “covered” losses under the two policies where Petroplex’s partner, Endeavor, or others, paid for the expenses, damages, and costs on the Quinn Well?

E. Rulings of the Trial Court

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474 S.W.3d 454, 2015 Tex. App. LEXIS 9308, 2015 WL 5173035, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-paul-fire-marine-insurance-company-and-st-paul-surplus-lines-texapp-2015.