Stack v. Tenneco, Inc.

641 F. Supp. 199, 91 Oil & Gas Rep. 535, 1986 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 23693
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Mississippi
DecidedJune 25, 1986
DocketCiv. A. E83-0143(L)
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 641 F. Supp. 199 (Stack v. Tenneco, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stack v. Tenneco, Inc., 641 F. Supp. 199, 91 Oil & Gas Rep. 535, 1986 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 23693 (S.D. Miss. 1986).

Opinion

AMENDED MEMORANDUM OPINION

TOM S. LEE, District Judge.

This cause came before the court for a hearing on the motion of plaintiff J.E. Stack, Jr. for a preliminary injunction. In the motion, plaintiff requests that this court order defendants Tenneco, Inc. and Tennessee Gas Pipeline Co. (Tennessee) (1) to desist from recouping prepayments previously tendered at a rate in excess of the thirty percent rate established in the contract between the parties, (2) to immediately pay plaintiff at least the minimum amount presently owing under the contract, and (3) to begin taking gas from the J.E. Stack-Fernwood Lumber Company Well No. 1 (the new well) which was completed in November 1985 and shut-in by Tennessee on January 20, 1986. Following review of the evidence adduced at the bench hearing, the court makes the following findings of fact and conclusions of law.

The pertinent facts are briefly summarized. 1 The gas contract between Stack and Tennessee was ratified by Stack and signed by representatives of Tennessee on March 22, 1982. The contract contains no market-out clause. It does contain a “take- or-pay” provision which requires Tennessee to take-or-pay for gas at a rate of eighty-five percent of Stack’s deliverability capacity. Additionally, the contract provides that Tennessee make pre-initial delivery payments (prepayments) to Stack for gas dedicated to the contract but not taken by Tennessee. In 1982, Tennessee made such prepayments to Stack in the total amount of some $3,400,000.00. This figure represented payment for some 435,000,000 cubic feet (referred to herein as 435,000 Mcf, Mcf representing thousand cubic feet) of gas at prices ranging between $7.00 and $9.00 per Mcf. Through March 1986, Tennessee had received 256,101 Mcf of gas from the Stack wells in the Morgantown area of Marion County, Mississippi, leaving a deficit of some 179,000 Mcf against the prepayment amount. The contract expressly limits Tennessee’s right to recoup the prepayment amount to receiving a credit of up to thirty percent on all gas volumes subsequently taken from Stack’s wells. Tennessee’s obligation to make monthly payments to Stack for the remaining seventy percent of the gas taken remained unaffected by the prepayment, so long as Stack retained sufficient gas reserves in his wells to allow Tennessee to recoup all volumes for which it had prepaid. The contract grants Tennessee the right to demand cash repayment from Stack for all unrecovered volumes should the reserves fall below a level sufficient to allow Tennessee to recoup its prepayment.

On April 29, 1983, Tennessee announced its Emergency Gas Purchase Program (EGPP), whereby Tennessee unilaterally reduced the price it would pay for gas actually taken and its annual minimum payment on its take-or-pay and severance tax obligations under the contract. The EGPP declared that Tenneco would pay no more than 110% of the No. 2 fuel oil index as published monthly for all amounts of gas actually taken from Stack’s wells. As to its take-or-pay obligation under the Stack contract, Tennessee declared through its EGPP that it would pay for no more than the lesser of fifty percent of Stack’s delivery capacity of each category of gas or the minimum contract quantity provided under the contract. Stack refused to accede to Tennessee’s demand that he agree to the *201 EGPP within one month, and Tennessee thereafter terminated all take-or-pay obligations.

On June 13, 1983, Tennessee notified Stack that it had determined that insufficient gas reserves were present in Stack’s wells to allow it to recoup its prepayment, and demanded that Stack immediately repay the balance owing on the prepayment. Stack likewise refused to accede to this demand and Tennessee began recouping its prepayment from 100% of Stack’s production, in direct contravention of the contract provision allowing recoupment at a maximum of thirty percent of production. Stack has received no payments whatever from Tennessee since July 1983, although Tennessee has continued to take gas from Stack’s wells.

Oil and gas exploration in the Morgan-town area did not cease in the wake of Tennessee’s actions in 1983. In November 1985, Stack completed and tested the new well in the area of the Morgantown field dedicated to the Stack-Tennessee contract. Tennessee began taking gas from the new well on January 14, 1986, but then shut-in the well on January 20, 1986. The testimony from the various experts who testified during the hearing clearly established that the reserves existing in the new well exceed the level required to allow full recoupment of the prepayment by Tennessee under the terms of the contract at a rate of thirty percent of production. Tennessee did not substantially deny that such reserves exist in the new well. Instead, Tennessee engaged in high sophistry at trial, arguing that it did not begin complying with the contract provisions for recouping the prepayment because of a company policy, not to be found in the contract, allowing recoupment to be made only against those wells extant and dedicated to the contract at the time of prepayment, and because of a contract provision allowing Tennessee to nominate the gas it will take and in what amounts, which provision, Tennessee argued, gives it the right to shut-in wells. Tom Matthews, Tennessee’s vice-president in charge of world-wide gas transmission and the author of the EGPP, testified that he interpreted the contract to give Tennessee the right to make prepayment, to shut-in all producing wells dedicated to a contract upon determining that no gas was needed, and then, so long as the reserves remain sufficient over the life of the contract, to recoup the full prepayment from the producer at the end of the contract term. In essence, Matthews concluded, the contract gave Tennessee the right to make a long-term, no-interest loan to producers in exchange for their tying up their producing wells for the life of the contract. The court has no hesitation in rejecting such interpretation which entirely frustrates the intent and purpose underlying the contract. Tennessee alternatively argued that damage to the new well occasioned by the shut-in can be alleviated by Stack’s selling the gas to Endevco, Inc., an interstate pipeline system, which has offered to buy the gas at a price some $5.00 to $6.00 less per Mcf than Tennessee is required to pay under the contract. Tennessee lastly argued that since the EGPP expired by its own terms on December 31, 1985, new developments in the nature of regulatory actions by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission have constituted events of force majeure allowing it to suspend its obligations under the contract. For his part, Stack contends that the well machinery and the underground reservoir tapped by the well will suffer irreparable damage if the well is left shut-in. Much testimony was adduced by Stack’s experts concerning the high concentration of carbon dioxide in the well deposits, which, if the well were left shut-in, would mix with water to produce carbonic acid causing irreparable damage to well tubing and casing. Stack concludes that the potential damage to the productive sands, combined with the possibility that offset wells could drain the reservoir, constitutes a loss for which payment in money damages is incalculable.

It is undisputed that the gas produced and available for production from Stack’s wells qualifies as deregulated, high-cost gas under § 107 of the Natural Gas Policy Act of 1978. It is undisputed that Tennes *202

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
641 F. Supp. 199, 91 Oil & Gas Rep. 535, 1986 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 23693, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stack-v-tenneco-inc-mssd-1986.