Syrian American Oil Corp. v. Pecten Orient Co.

524 S.W.3d 350, 2017 WL 1955403, 2017 Tex. App. LEXIS 4351
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 11, 2017
DocketNO. 01-15-00424-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 524 S.W.3d 350 (Syrian American Oil Corp. v. Pecten Orient Co.) 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
Syrian American Oil Corp. v. Pecten Orient Co., 524 S.W.3d 350, 2017 WL 1955403, 2017 Tex. App. LEXIS 4351 (Tex. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

OPINION

Jane Bland, Justice

This case arises out of a settlement agreement reached between a royalty interest owner and an operator of Syrian oil [353]*353and gas properties.- In that settlement agreement, the parties released each other from- any and all claims against one another, known or unknown, as of the time it was made.

Seventeen years later, the royalty owner brought this suit against the operator for fraud, claiming that 'the' operator had fraudulently induced the owner into the settlement. The operator counterclaimed against the owner for Jbreach of the settlement agreement, seeking its attorney’s fees as damages for that breach.

A-jury found that the owner should have discovered any fraud in 1989, as of the date that the parties reached their settlement. As to the operator’s counterclaim for breach of the settlement agreement, the jury found that the owner had breached the settlement agreement by bringing this suit. But the jury also found that the operator had fraudulently induced the owner into entering the settlement agreement, and declined to- award damages to the operator. -The trial court entered a take-nothing judgment against both .parties’ claims.

In its appeal, Syrian-American Oil Corporation, N.A., the royalty owner, challenges the evidentiary support for the jury’s limitations finding against its claim for fraudulent inducement. SAMOCO contends that conclusive evidence establishes that it did not discover' any fraudulent inducement until 2006. It further contends that it is entitled to judgment on its fraudulent inducement claim because sufficient evidence exists to support the jury’s finding of fraud. Finally, SAMOCO contends that the trial court erred in granting partial summary judgment on part of an additional claim for breach of contract based on-post-settlement events.

In a cross-appeal, Pecten Orient Company, the operator, contends that the evidence supports the jury’s finding that SAMOCO breached the settlement agreement, but that no evidence supports the jury’s finding that Pecten fraudulently induced SAMOCO into entering that agreement. Pecten further contends that it proffered uncontroverted evidence of the attorney’s fees that it has expended in defending this case and thus the jury’s verdict of $0 in damages for SAMOCO’s breach of the settlement agreement is against the weight of the evidence.

In response to Pecten’s appeal, SAMO-CO replies that Pecten’s counterclaim for breach of the settlement agreement is time-barred and the evidence supports the jury’s award of $0 in damages on Pecten’s counterclaim.

We conclude that the trial court properly rendered judgment against SAMOCO’s claims as time-barred by the applicable statute of limitations. We further conclude that the trial court properly granted the partial summary judgment that is challenged on appeal. Finally, we conclude that Pecten’s counterclaim for breach of the settlement agreement was not time-barred and is not excused by the jury’s fraud finding, because the fraud the jury found was related to a pre-suit misrepresentation and not made in contemplation of the settlement of a claim identified in a yet-to-be-filed lawsuit.

Having found that SAMOCO breached the settlement 'agreement, the jury’s award of $0 in damages for attorney’s fees incurred in enforcing the agreement is not supported by the attorney’s fee evidence, which was uncontroverted at trial. We therefore affirm the judgment that SAMO-CO take nothing and reverse and remand Pecten’s claim for attorney’s fees for breach of the settlement agreement for a new trial.

BACKGROUND

The parties have a decades-long history relating to oil and gas concessions granted [354]*354by the Syrian government for development of oil and gas fields located in Syria.

A. Syria grants a service contract for exploration and production.

In 1977, SAMOCO’s predecessor-in-interest, the Syrian American Oil Corporation, executed a service contract with the Syrian government. A service contract is an agreement between an oil company and a foreign government in which the foreign government confers the exclusive right to explore and produce oil reserves in a specified geographic area. For a share of the production from these government-owned reserves, the oil company agrees-to bear the costs of exploration, development, and production. The 1977 service contract provided for a total exploration period of eight years, and it expired in October 1985.

The contract specified that, if development led to a commercially producing oil and gas well, a notice of a “Commercial Discovery” would convert the exploration area capable of production into a “Development Lease Area.” Once a DLA was established, the contractor had the exclusive right to produce oil and gas from it for 25 years after production began,' with the possibility of an additional 10-year extension.

The service contract also required the developer to select and relinquish acreage within the area that had not become part of a DLA during the exploration period: 25% of the acreage after four years of exploration and an additional 25% after six years. These partial relinquishments were scheduled for 1981 and 1983/ In October 1985, at the end of the service contract’s eight-year term, SAMOCO was required to relinquish any remaining portion of the original exploration area that had not been converted to a DLA.

B. SAMOCO assigns its rights to Pecten but retains an interest.

Shortly after executing the service contract, SAMOCO assigned 60% of its interest in the contract to the Coastal Oil and Gas Corporation. In August 1982, SAMO-CO and Coastal assigned their interests in the service contract to Pecten and its affiliate, Syria Shell Petroleum Development B.Y. The assignment agreement provided in section 6 that SAMOCO and Coastal would retain a combined 6% share—known as an overriding royalty interest—of Pec-ten and Shell Syria’s combined 62% share of the value of the production: SAMOCO retained 4% and Coastal retained 2%. The assignment agreement granted SAMOCO and Coastal the right to monitor these section 6 payments.

In 1983, Pecten and Shell Syria relinquished 25% of the exploration area not yet converted to a DLA, as required under the service contract.

C.Pecten makes agreements with the Syrian government to continue exploration beyond the initial concession period without notifying SAMOCO.

In the summer of 1984, the parties drilled a well on the DLA known as the Deir Ez Zor block. The successful well, known as the Thayyem well, resulted in a series of “annexes” to the original service contract with the. Syrian government. The first annex, executed in 1984, extended Pecten’s exploration rights for a year beyond the service contract’s 1985 original expiration date. After a nonsubstantive second annex, Pecten procured a third annex, which extended the exploration period fqr an additional year. These annexes did not change the fiscal terms of .the original service contract.

.In October 1987, Pecten, - Shell Syria, and the Syrian government entered into a fourth annex. The fourth annex occurred after the government had obtained a competitive bid from an unrelated third party to re-lease the fields. Like, the previous [355]*355three annexes, the fourth annex extended the exploration period.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
524 S.W.3d 350, 2017 WL 1955403, 2017 Tex. App. LEXIS 4351, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/syrian-american-oil-corp-v-pecten-orient-co-texapp-2017.