The B & a Pipeline Co. v. Steve Dorney, D/B/A Scd Production Co., Intervenor-Plaintiff-Appellant v. Enserch Corporation, D/B/A Lone Star Gas Co., the B & a Pipeline Co., and Atlantic Richfield Co.

904 F.2d 996
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedAugust 14, 1990
Docket89-2119
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 904 F.2d 996 (The B & a Pipeline Co. v. Steve Dorney, D/B/A Scd Production Co., Intervenor-Plaintiff-Appellant v. Enserch Corporation, D/B/A Lone Star Gas Co., the B & a Pipeline Co., and Atlantic Richfield Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The B & a Pipeline Co. v. Steve Dorney, D/B/A Scd Production Co., Intervenor-Plaintiff-Appellant v. Enserch Corporation, D/B/A Lone Star Gas Co., the B & a Pipeline Co., and Atlantic Richfield Co., 904 F.2d 996 (5th Cir. 1990).

Opinion

904 F.2d 996

The B & A PIPELINE CO., Plaintiff,
v.
Steve DORNEY, d/b/a SCD Production Co., Intervenor-Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
ENSERCH CORPORATION, d/b/a Lone Star Gas Co., The B & A
Pipeline Co., and Atlantic Richfield Co.,
Defendants-Appellees.

Nos. 89-2119, 89-2670.

United States Court of Appeals,
Fifth Circuit.

July 6, 1990.
Rehearing Denied Aug. 14, 1990.

Michael G. Carroll, Otis Carroll, Ireland, Carroll & Kelley, Tyler, Tex., for Steve Dorney.

Jack Pew, Jr., Jackson, Walker, Winstead, Cantrell & Miller, Dallas, Tex., for Enserch Corp.

Larry D. Carlson, Ronald L. Palmer, Baker & Botts, Dallas, Tex., Rex A. Nichols, Nichols, Bailey & Watson, Longview, Tex., for B & A Pipeline and Atlantic Richfield.

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Texas.

Before WISDOM, JOHNSON, and DUHE, Circuit Judges.

WISDOM, Circuit Judge:

* We AFFIRM the district court's grant of summary judgment but REMAND the case for appropriate modification of the court's injunction.

II

An understanding of the case requires a detailed summation of the facts. On May 10, 1982 Henderson Clay Products (HCP) entered into a gas purchase contract with B & A Pipeline. B & A, an intrastate pipeline company in Texas, was wholly owned by HCP. The May 10 gas purchase contract provided that HCP would sell and deliver to B & A, at the maximum lawful price, natural gas produced from the leases HCP then held or later acquired within an area outlined on a map referred to in the contract as Exhibit "A".

On May 11, 1982, B & A entered into a gas purchase contract with Enserch Corporation (d/b/a Lone Star) by which B & A would sell gas to Lone Star at B & A's cost plus a transportation charge. This May 11 contract provided that B & A dedicate its "marketable interest in gas produced from the gas reserves underlying the lands and leases described in Exhibit 'B' and all of the gas produced from the lands and leases, subject to the gas purchase contracts described in Exhibit 'A' ".1

Both the May 10 and the May 11 contracts required the buyers (B & A and Lone Star, respectively) to take 85 percent of the delivery capacity of the wells on the contract acreage or to pay for that percentage of the delivery capacity even if the gas were not actually taken. Each contract had a ten year term.

During the period in which the May 10 and 11 contracts were being negotiated, B & A's employee, Wilhite, was negotiating with Dorney, who held leases on approximately 1190 acres in Rusk County, Texas. Dorney alleges that he and Wilhite struck a tentative agreement on the terms of a farmout agreement before May 10 and that Wilhite promised that HCP, through B & A, would market the gas from Dorney's acreage by dedicating it to B & A's upcoming contract with Lone Star. The farmout agreement, however, was not memorialized until November 4, 1982. It provided, among other things, that if HCP and its purchaser ever lowered their sale price below the maximum lawful price, Dorney had the right either to ratify the lower price or to market his gas to third parties. It also provided that, in the event of any payments made for gas not actually taken (such as might occur under a take-or-pay clause), Dorney would share in his proportionate part of all such payments. Dorney points to these two terms as evidence that the farmout agreement implied and the parties understood that HCP agreed to market Dorney's gas through B & A by dedicating Dorney's gas to B & A's May 11 contract with Lone Star.2 The farmout agreement between Dorney and HCP, however, does not mention dedication, B & A, Lone Star, or the May 10 and 11 gas purchase contracts.

On April 15, 1983, HCP, B & A, and Lone Star modified the May 10 and 11 contracts to reduce the sale price to an amount less than the maximum lawful price. Dorney's approval for the reduction was secured pursuant to the farmout agreement.

Lone Star's performance under its May 11 contract with B & A began to falter as the market price of gas fell. On January 25, 1985, B & A filed suit in state court against Lone Star, seeking to recover under the take or pay provisions of the May 11 contract.

On June 1, 1985, Atlantic Richfield Company (ARCO) purchased HCP; this purchase included HCP's full ownership interest in B & A. ARCO stepped into HCP's shoes in relation to the farmout agreement and took over the handling of B & A's take-or-pay litigation against Lone Star.

Dorney filed a plea of intervention on December 27, 19853 claiming entitlement to what he alleged was his proportionate part of the proceeds of B & A's take-or-pay claim against Lone Star. Dorney based his claim in intervention on the fact that gas from his wells was marketed by B & A to Lone Star under the May 11 contract.

In February 1986, ARCO, B & A, and Lone Star reached a tentative settlement. That settlement was not made final until April 6, 1988. Pursuant to the settlement, B & A dismissed its claims against Lone Star in the state court action.4 The settlement took the form of an amendment to the May 11 gas purchase contract between B & A and Lone Star and required that Lone Star buy large quantities of gas above the market price. Lone Star also agreed to transport gas for B & A, ARCO, and ARCO's affiliates at a very favorable rate.

On July 10, 1986, B & A amended its May 10 gas purchase contract with HCP in two ways to comport with the tentative settlement B & A had reached with Lone Star in February. First, the new dedication provision of the contract listed specific wells rather than outlining areas on maps, the method utilized in the initial gas purchase contracts. The defendant/appellees describe this change as a clarification rather than a modification of the wells included. The second amendment deleted B & A's take or pay obligations. Those two changes, Dorney argues, significantly reduced the value to Dorney of the May 10 HCP/B & A contract.5

On April 19, 1988, Dorney amended his plea of intervention adding several federal claims and including ARCO and Lone Star as parties. Although B & A's state court action against Lone Star (in which Dorney had intervened) was dismissed, ARCO then filed an action in federal court (Dallas) seeking a declaratory judgment that ARCO had no liability for any of Dorney's claims. Dorney, as intervenor in the state court action, then had the state court action reinstated. The defendants removed that state case to federal court (Tyler) in May 1988. It is from this (first) Tyler case that this appeal arises. In July 1988, Dorney filed a second amended complaint in that Tyler suit. The Tyler trial court granted ARCO, B & A, and Lone Star's Motion for Summary Judgment as to Dorney's claims on December 12, 1988.

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