Texaco, Inc. v. Wolverine Exploration Co. (In Re Texaco, Inc.)

218 B.R. 1, 1998 Bankr. LEXIS 196, 1998 WL 54782
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. New York
DecidedJanuary 16, 1998
Docket19-10618
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 218 B.R. 1 (Texaco, Inc. v. Wolverine Exploration Co. (In Re Texaco, Inc.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Texaco, Inc. v. Wolverine Exploration Co. (In Re Texaco, Inc.), 218 B.R. 1, 1998 Bankr. LEXIS 196, 1998 WL 54782 (N.Y. 1998).

Opinion

ADLAI S. HARDIN, Jr., Bankruptcy Judge.

Texaco reopened its 1987 Chapter 11 case and commenced this adversary proceeding in May 1996. The complaint seeks declaratory and injunctive relief with respect to claims asserted against Texaco by defendants Wolverine Exploration Company, et al. (collectively ‘Wolverine”) which have been litigated to an arbitral award in an arbitration proceeding. The claims here involved concern the pricing of natural gas purchased or required to be purchased by Texaco from Wolverine both pre- and post-Confirmation. It is Texaco’s position that Wolverine’s pricing claims were not arbitrable under state law because they were discharged, and that the arbitral award of $19,534,042.30 on the pricing claims is void under 11 U.S.C. § 524(a)(1) and paragraph 24 of the Confirmation Order.

Both sides have moved for summary judgment based upon documents and upon the record of the legal proceedings that have occupied the parties for much of the past decade. There is no triable issue of fact, and the dispute before this Court is ripe for determination.

The Court has jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. §§ 1334 and 157 and the standing order of reference dated July 10, 1984 signed by Acting Chief Judge Robert J. Ward pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 157(a).

*3 Background

This dispute arises out of a contract (the “Quasar Contract”) dated December 26,1979 between Texaco and Wolverine’s predecessor in interest under which Texaco agreed to take, or pay for if not taken, certain quantities of gas produced by Wolverine in the Powell South Field, Marshall County, Oklahoma.

On March 14,1988 Wolverine filed proof of claim no. 5449 (the “Proof of Claim”) in Texaco’s Chapter 11 case. The Proof of Claim covered a “take-or-pay” claim, based upon Texaco’s failure to purchase required quantities of gas under the Quasar Contract, and a “well-damage” claim. The well-damage claim is not at issue here. The Proof of Claim framed the take-or-pay claim alternatively if the contract were assumed, or if it were rejected. If the contract were assumed, the Proof of Claim asserted pre-petition contract damages (exclusive of interest) of $8,480,406 and post-petition contract damages through March 15, 1988 of $2,301,949, and if the contract were rejected, pre-petition contract damages of $20,697,164 after discount to present value. Calculation of the dollar amount of the take-or-pay claim obviously was a factor of multiplying price times volume. Neither the price element nor the volume element was specified in the take-or-pay claim.

By order dated March 23, 1988 (the “Confirmation Order”), this Court confirmed Texaco’s Second Amended Joint Plan of Reorganization (the “Plan”). Pursuant to Article VI(A) of the Plan, Texaco assumed “all exec-utory contracts or unexpired leases of the Debtors,” including the Quasar Contract, not rejected or the subject of a motion to reject.

Texaco moved to expunge the claims asserted in Wolverine’s Proof of Claim by “Notice of Hearing and Objection to Allowance of Claim” dated June 15, 1988. The motion did not take issue with the dollar amounts in the Proof of Claim or the price or volume components of the Claim but sought total expungement because “the books and records of the reorganized debtors do not reflect any amount due and owing to the claimant relative to the claim listed above.” The motion to expunge was resolved in a stipulation and order (the “Stipulation and Order”) so ordered by the Court on November 1, 1988. The Stipulation and Order recited that Wolverine had' commenced an action in the Tulsa District Court (the “Pending Action”) 'asserting claims for damages against Texaco based on post-Confirmation events* that Wolverine desired to amend the Pending Action “to assert claims against Texaco that were set forth in the Proof of Claim based upon events that occurred pre-petition and prior to entry of the Confirmation Order,” and that Texaco and Wolverine “desire to resolve the [Proof of Claim] and [Texaco’s motion to expunge] subject to the terms and conditions set forth below.” The parties agreed in the Stipulation and Order that Wolverine’s Proof of Claim and Texaco’s motion to expunge “shall be resolved and the Claim shall be deemed allowed in such liquidated amount as is determined in the Pending Action outside the bankruptcy court by final order.” The Stipulation and Order provided further:

2. Claimant and Texaco represent that the Pending Action will proceed as if no chapter 11 case had been commenced by Texaco.

On January 17, 1989 Wolverine filed a Second Amended Petition in the Pending Action. On February 6, 1989 Texaco commenced an adversary proceeding in this Court seeking a judgment declaring that Wolverine’s claim for punitive damages alleged in the Second Amended Petition was discharged and enjoining prosecution of the discharged claim. 1 The adversary proceeding did not allege that any of Wolverine’s pricing claims were barred by Texaco’s discharge. Instead, a few weeks later Texaco sought to compel arbitration of the pricing claims.

On February 24,1989 Texaco moved in the Tulsa District Court to dismiss or stay the Pending Action pending arbitration of the Wolverine claims, relying on a clause in the *4 Quasar Contract requiring arbitration of pricing disputes. Texaco argued that Wolverine’s claims relating to post-Confirmation gas purchases concerned. a pricing dispute which was not before the Bankruptcy Court and was not subject to Bankruptcy Court jurisdiction or the Stipulation and Order. After .the motion was denied, in a motion to reconsider Texaco referred to pricing disputes in Wolverine’s pre-Confirmation claim as well as its post-Confirmation claims, stating, inter alia, “The pre-confirmation take- or-pay claim is actually a dispute between Plaintiffs and Texaco as to the price to be paid by Texaco, if any, for gas not taken during the applicable time period.” See the quotations in Defendants’ Statement of Material Undisputed Facts Under L.B.R. 7056-1 ¶¶ 12-19 and Texaco’s Response thereto. Texaco’s motion regarding arbitrability was ultimately resolved by the Oklahoma Court of Appeals in December 1991, Wolverine Exploration Company v. Natural Gas Pipeline Company of America, Inc., 842 P.2d 352, 354-55 (Okla.App.1991), reh’g denied, June 8, 1992, cert. denied, November 17, 1992, which stated:

All [Wolverine’s] claims arising under Article Fourth of the [Quasar Contract] are subject to arbitration, and the arbitrator should consider any dispute regarding any provision relating to “price” in Article Fourth.

During the litigation in the OMahoma Courts concerning the arbitrability of Wolverine’s claims in the Pending Action, Texaco never stated or intimated that any of Wolverine’s pre- or post-confirmation pricing claims were not arbitrable under state law because they had been discharged under federal law.

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218 B.R. 1, 1998 Bankr. LEXIS 196, 1998 WL 54782, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texaco-inc-v-wolverine-exploration-co-in-re-texaco-inc-nysb-1998.