United Specialty Insurance Co v. Sandhill Production Inc

CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Louisiana
DecidedMarch 17, 2021
Docket5:20-cv-00163
StatusUnknown

This text of United Specialty Insurance Co v. Sandhill Production Inc (United Specialty Insurance Co v. Sandhill Production Inc) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United Specialty Insurance Co v. Sandhill Production Inc, (W.D. La. 2021).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT WESTERN DISTRICT OF LOUISIANA SHREVEPORT DIVISION

UNITED SPECIALTY INSURANCE CO. CIVIL ACTION NO. 20-163

VERSUS JUDGE ELIZABETH E. FOOTE

SANDHILL PRODUCTION INC., ET AL. MAGISTRATE JUDGE HORNSBY

MEMORANDUM RULING

Before the Court is Defendant Sandhill Production, Incorporated’s (“Sandhill”) motion to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction and Plaintiff United Specialty Insurance Company’s (“USIC”) motion for summary judgment. Record Documents 8 and 18. Plaintiff opposed Sandhill’s motion to dismiss and Sandhill did not file a reply. Record Document 13. Sandhill opposed USIC’s motion for summary judgment and USIC responded. Record Documents 20 and 21. Defendant Wilshire Insurance Company (“Wilshire”) has filed an answer in this matter, but did not file a response to the motion to dismiss or to the motion for summary judgment. Record Document 11. Both motions are now ripe for review. For the reasons stated herein, Sandhill’s motion to dismiss [Record Document 8] is DENIED. USIC’s motion for summary judgment [Record Document 18] is GRANTED. I. Background This case stems from a dispute over the scope of insurance coverage provided by commercial general liability policies issued to Sandhill by USIC. Between May 22, 2016 and May 22, 2020, USIC issued a total of four insurance policies to Sandhill. Record 1 Document 18-25 at ¶ 1. Each policy was in effect for one year, lasting from May 2016 to May 2017, from May 2017 to May 2018, and so forth. In December 2017, Litel Explorations, LLC (“Litel”) filed suit against multiple

defendants, including Sandhill, in the 31st Judicial District for the Parish of Jefferson Davis, State of Louisiana (“ Suit”). Record Document 18-10; , Docket No.: C823-17. This legacy suit1 alleges that Litel’s property was “contaminated and/or otherwise damaged by defendants’ oil and gas exploration and production activities.” Record Document 18-10 at 2. Litel seeks monetary damages and injunctive relief. . at 23-24. Litel amended its petition twice, but the

fundamental claim did not change. Record Documents 18-11 and 18-12. In June 2018, USIC denied Sandhill coverage for the Suit, relying on the Pollution Exclusion in its policies with Sandhill. Record Document 20-3. In November 2018, the Office of Conservation of the Louisiana Department of Natural Resources (“OOC”) issued a compliance order (“OOC Compliance Order”) against Sandhill requiring it to repair G.A. Lyon Well #1, which was leaking, and remove surface contamination caused by the leak. Record Document 18-5. In May 2019, counsel for

Sandhill contacted USIC and explained that the G.A. Lyon Well #1 was still “leaking oil and gas and presenting a hazardous situation.” Record Document 20-5 at 2. Sandhill informed USIC that because of this leak at a well which it operated, it was subject to the

1 A “legacy lawsuit” is a suit filed by a landowner “seeking damages from oil and gas exploration companies for alleged environmental damage[.]” , 09-2368 (La. 10/19/10); 48 So. 3d 234, 238 n.1. These suits have this name “because they often arise from operations conducted many decades ago, leaving an unwanted ‘legacy’ in the form of actual or alleged contamination.” 2 OOC Compliance Order and requested coverage for compliance pursuant to the portion of the policies’ Insuring Agreement stating that USIC will “pay those sums that the insured becomes legally obligated to pay as damages because of ‘bodily injury’ or ‘property

damage’ to which this insurance applies.” Sandhill alsochallenged USIC’s earlier denial of coverage in the Suit. at 3. Sandhill argued that it did not think oil or gas fell into the Pollution Exclusion, but even if it did, there were claims such as breach of contract included in the Suit which USIC may be obligated to cover. Further, Sandhill explained that it now believed the well may be leaking due to a design defect, which is not subject to the Pollution Exclusion. Sandhill attached to this correspondence an

affidavit by an expert explaining that there was a “blowout” in the well and a correspondence with Litel’s counsel where she asserted that the leaking at the well is a blowout. Record Documents 20-4, 20-5 at 3, and 20-6. The record reveals no response from USIC to this correspondence or to a July 2019 email sent by Sandhill’s lawyer, though Sandhill asserts in its opposition to the motion for summary judgment that USIC responded via a “Reservation of Rights letter” in August 2019.2 Record Documents 20 at 5 and 20-7.

2 Sandhill’s statement of facts states, without citing a source in the record, that in the Reservation of Rights letter USIC informed Sandhill that it would: [P]articipate in the defense of the matter as set forth herein subject to the reservations herein until you are notified otherwise and/or unless you advise in writing that Sandhill is rejecting our offer of defense. If there is no “blowout” ongoing, USIC reserves the right to withdraw from the defense. Record Document 20 at 5. 3 By August 2019, the blowout at G.A. Lyon Well #1 became part of the Suit. First, Litel filed a motion seeking a mandatory injunction requiring Sandhill and other parties to plug and abandon G.A. Lyon Well #1 because of the blowout and the damage

the leak was causing. Record Document 20-8. In September 2019, the OOC filed a motion to intervene in the Suit. Record Document 20-10. Also in September 2019, another party to the litigation, Pioneer Natural Resources USA, Inc. (“Pioneer”), filed a crossclaim and third-party demand against Sandhill claiming that it was Sandhill, not Pioneer, which should be liable to stop the leaking well and for damages from the leak. Record Document 20-9. Sandhill filed its own crossclaim against Pioneer and other previous operators of

the G.A. Lyon Well #1. Record Document 20-11 at 1-5. Sandhill also filed a third-party demand against USIC for failing to provide a defense in the Suit and for failing to cover Sandhill’s “response cost” the OOC Compliance Order. at 6-9. While the parties have not submitted evidence to this effect, USIC’s complaint asserts that in November 2019, Sandhill dismissed the third-party complaint against USIC without prejudice. Record Document 1 at ¶ 27. USIC then filed the instant suit in February 2020 seeking a declaratory judgment that it has no duty to

defend or indemnify Sandhill in relation to the OOC Compliance Order and that it has no duty to defend or otherwise provide coverage to Sandhill in the Suit. at 11. In the event that USIC is found to have obligations to Sandhill under the insurance policies, USIC asserts that Wilshire, Sandhill’s previous insurer, and Sandhill are liable for a portion of the costs. at 12. Wilshire filed an answer in response to the complaint, and Sandhill filed a motion to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. Record Documents 8 and

4 11. Sandhill asserts that complete diversity between the parties is lacking and, therefore, that the case must be dismissed. Record Document 8. Before the Court issued a ruling regarding the motion to dismiss, USIC filed a

motion for summary judgment. Record Document 18. In this motion, USIC seeks a declaratory judgment that 1) “there is no coverage for the compliance order issued by the OOC because it does not fall with the terms of the Insuring Agreement of any of the USIC policies”; and 2) “there is no duty to defend the Litel Suit because the Pollution Exclusion precludes coverage.” Sandhill opposed the motion for summary judgment, and Wilshire filed no response. Record Document 20. Because USIC’s motion for summary

judgment is moot if the Court lacks jurisdiction, the Court will first address Sandhill’s motion to dismiss. II. Law and Analysis A. Sandhill’s Motion to Dismiss 1.

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United Specialty Insurance Co v. Sandhill Production Inc, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-specialty-insurance-co-v-sandhill-production-inc-lawd-2021.