Thompson & Knight LLP v. Patriot Exploration, LLC

444 S.W.3d 157, 2014 WL 4072120, 2014 Tex. App. LEXIS 9164
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 19, 2014
Docket05-13-00104-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 444 S.W.3d 157 (Thompson & Knight LLP v. Patriot Exploration, LLC) 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
Thompson & Knight LLP v. Patriot Exploration, LLC, 444 S.W.3d 157, 2014 WL 4072120, 2014 Tex. App. LEXIS 9164 (Tex. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

OPINION

Opinion by

Justice MOSELEY.

This is a legal malpractice case. The client, Patriot 1 (plaintiff/appellee) alleged that its former law firm, Thompson & Knight (T & K) (defendant/appellant), failed to discover a gap in legal title to its oil and gas working interests. Rectifying that gap in title delayed Patriot from selling those interests by five months according to Patriot. Patriot eventually sold its interests in September 2008 for $5.5 million. However, Patriot asserted it would have obtained a sales price $960,000 higher five months earlier, as the spot market price for natural gas was higher at that time.

After reaching a partial settlement, Patriot and T & K agreed to a bench trial on whether Patriot was entitled to recover economic damages based on its claim; for purposes of that bench trial T & K stipulated to liability. The trial court found for Patriot and rendered judgment for $960,000 against T & K.

We conclude the expert’s opinion on damages is based on invalid assumptions and constitutes legally insufficient evidence of damages. We also conclude there is no evidence the buyer of the interests would have paid more for the interests in April than it did in September. Thus, there is no evidence T & K’s negligence proximately caused any damages. Accordingly, we reverse the trial court’s judgment and render judgment that Patriot take nothing from T & K.

Background

T & K represented Patriot in part of a complex oil and gas transaction involving *160 Eastern Shelf Partners, LLC, a related company, MexTex Operating Company, and Apollo Resources International, Inc. Eastern Shelf and MexTex controlled the rights to develop and operate oil and gas leases (Leases) covering several thousand acres of property northwest of San Antonio. In 2006, Eastern Shelf and Apollo Resources entered into an Acquisition Agreement whereby Apollo Resources acquired the Leases from Eastern Shelf (with Eastern Shelf retaining a ten percent working interest) in exchange for funding the drilling of hundreds of wells on the property. Eastern Shelf and Apollo Resources agreed to engage MexTex as the operator of the Leases.

Apollo Resources later assigned some of its rights and obligations under the Acquisition Agreement to Patriot. Eastern Shelf, MexTex, Apollo Resources, and Patriot entered into an omnibus agreement confirming Patriot’s participation in the project. Patriot and Apollo Resources formed a partnership to own, operate, maintain, and dispose of Apollo Resource’s interests in the Leases. Patriot entered into a participation agreement with Apollo Resources to provide $5 million to drill twelve wells on acreage located in Sutton County, Texas (a portion of the land covered by the Leases). Ultimately, Patriot drilled only nine of the planned wells, at a cost of $5.4 million. Of those nine wells, three were dry holes and three others were not economic and were shut in. The three producing wells did not meet the production specifications in the partnership agreement and the partnership dissolved by its terms effective January 31, 2008.

Anticipating the drilling operations would not meet the partnership agreement’s production specifications, in 2007 Patriot began taking steps to liquidate the partnership assets. In late August 2007, however, Patriot learned the recorded assignments from Eastern Shelf had not been to Apollo Resources but to its subsidiary, Apollo Natural Gas Company, LLC. As a result, there was a gap in title to the property Apollo Resources had purportedly assigned to the partnership formed with Patriot. The parties refer to this title problem as the Title Gap.

When it learned of the Title Gap, T & K drafted corrected assignments between Eastern Shelf and Apollo Natural Gas, but Apollo Natural Gas never executed the assignments. T & K terminated its representation due to the conflict of interest with Patriot and Patriot retained attorney Dick Watt to cure the Title Gap.

On behalf of Patriot, Watt filed suit in Sutton County against Apollo Resources, Apollo Natural Gas, Eastern Shelf, Mex-Tex, and a party who claimed a lien for work performed on some of the wells. Patriot sought declaratory and other relief, including an order compelling Apollo Natural Gas to assign the Leases to Patriot; Patriot also sought to remove MexTex as operator of the Leases.

The court in Sutton County rendered a default judgment against Apollo Resources and Apollo Natural Gas on May 8, 2008. The default judgment ordered Apollo Natural Gas to assign the Leases to Patriot and declared that Patriot was the owner of those properties. The Sutton County trial court severed the default judgment from the remaining claims against Eastern Shelf, MexTex, and the other party, and the default judgment became final on July 7, 2008. The effect of this final judgment was to remedy the Title Gap.

In June 2008, Patriot (through Watt) negotiated with MexTex (the operator) and Eastern Shelf (the other working interest owner) about liquidating the assets of Patriot’s partnership with Apollo Resources and settling the remaining parts of the *161 Sutton County lawsuit. They entered into a letter agreement dated September 18, 2008 whereby Patriot agreed to sell Mex-Tex all of its existing interest in the assets of the partnership (including the wells and the Leases) and in the various agreements (collectively the Patriot Interests) for $5.5 million. Patriot also agreed to cause the release of funds held in suspense by purchasers of production to MexTex. Patriot, MexTex, and Eastern Shelf agreed to dismiss the remaining portion of the Sutton County lawsuit with prejudice on the closing date of the purchase.

After Patriot concluded the transactions called for by the September 18, 2008 letter agreement, it filed this suit against T & K for legal malpractice. Eventually Patriot and T & K reached a partial settlement. As a part of that settlement, the parties agreed to a bench trial on Patriot’s claim that the Title Gap prevented it from selling the Patriot Interests on April 1, 2008 for a price higher than it received from MexTex in September. T & K stipulated to liability for purposes of that trial, but contested Patriot’s right to recover any economic damages.

Patriot’s expert, Gregory Scheig, testified he prepared an economic model for arriving at the $5.5 million amount that MexTex paid for the Patriot Interests in September 2008. He then' applied that same model to a hypothetical April 1, 2008 sale — with adjustments for a decline in the spot market and future prices of natural gas and for a five-month delay in drilling and other development activities. (In doing so Scheig assumed Patriot had a potential buyer for the April 1 date.) Based on this analysis, he concluded the delay and reductions in natural gas prices resulted in “reduced sale proceeds to Patriot compared to what they would have been expected to receive in April 1, 2008.” The amount of that reduction was (rounded) $960,000.

The trial court rendered judgment awarding Patriot economic damages in the amount of $960,000. The trial court also signed findings of fact and conclusions of law. Those findings challenged by T & K 2 on appeal are summarized as follows:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
444 S.W.3d 157, 2014 WL 4072120, 2014 Tex. App. LEXIS 9164, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-knight-llp-v-patriot-exploration-llc-texapp-2014.