Valiant Petroleum, Inc. v. Michael McCormick, Wade Williams, Pablo Fernandez, Jeff McKenzie, and Dale Sumpter

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 3, 2013
Docket13-11-00674-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Valiant Petroleum, Inc. v. Michael McCormick, Wade Williams, Pablo Fernandez, Jeff McKenzie, and Dale Sumpter (Valiant Petroleum, Inc. v. Michael McCormick, Wade Williams, Pablo Fernandez, Jeff McKenzie, and Dale Sumpter) 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
Valiant Petroleum, Inc. v. Michael McCormick, Wade Williams, Pablo Fernandez, Jeff McKenzie, and Dale Sumpter, (Tex. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

NUMBER 13-11-00673-CV

COURT OF APPEALS

THIRTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

CORPUS CHRISTI - EDINBURG

VALIANT PETROLEUM, INC., Appellant,

v.

FMC TECHNOLOGIES, INC., ET AL., Appellees.

NUMBER 13-11-00674-CV

CORPUS CHRISTI – EDINBURG

MICHAEL McCORMICK, WADE WILLIAMS, PABLO FERNANDEZ, JEFF McKENZIE, AND DALE SUMPTER, Appellees. NUMBER 13-12-00020-CV

FMC TECHNOLOGIES, INC., Appellee.

On appeal from the 117th District Court of Nueces County, Texas.

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Justices Rodriguez, Benavides and Longoria Memorandum Opinion by Justice Benavides This appeal involves a contractual dispute between appellant, Valiant Petroleum,

Inc. (“Valiant”) and appellees, FMC Technologies, Inc., Michael McCormick, Wade

Williams, Pablo Fernandez, Jeff McKenzie, and Dale Sumpter (collectively “FMCTI”).

By six issues, Valiant appeals the trial court’s orders granting FMCTI’s partial motion for

summary judgment and other requested declaratory relief and denying Valiant’s partial

motion for summary judgment and declaratory relief. We reverse and render, in part,

and affirm, in part.

2 I. BACKGROUND

A. Underlying Dispute and Settlement Agreement

In April 2010, representatives acting on behalf of Valiant and FMCTI signed a

written settlement agreement (“the agreement”)—prepared and reviewed by each

party’s respective counsel—that resolved a pending lawsuit in Nueces County district

court.1 The seven-page agreement imposed several obligations and duties upon both

parties.

Paragraph 3(A) of the agreement provided, in relevant part, that Valiant promised

to pay FMCTI the principal sum of four-hundred thousand dollars ($400,000), in addition

to any sums articulated in Paragraph 3(B), to be used to cover Valiant’s expenses

through the end of June 2010. The paragraph further stated that “[t]hese borrowings in

terms of repayment and security would be treated similar [sic] to advances under the

line of credit . . . .” The paragraph outlined a repayment schedule specifically related to

the $400,000 over three payment deadlines.

Paragraph 3(B) of the agreement provided, in relevant part, that Valiant promised

to pay FMCTI the principal sum of $2 million, “or so much thereof as may be disbursed

to,” for the benefit of Valiant’s subcontractors, vendors, and/or suppliers on the projects

by FMCTI.” As in Paragraph 3(A), this sum created a “line of credit agreement”

between Valiant and FMCTI. According to the agreement, the discretion to lend such

money rested with FMCTI. The paragraph outlined a monthly repayment schedule,

assuming that the full $2.4 million was owed, beginning on January 1, 2011.

1 The lawsuit was brought by Valiant against FMCTI and other parties wherein Valiant alleged that more than $1 million in unpaid change orders were due. The change orders related to an oil project off the coast of Angola known as the “PAZFLOR project” in which Valiant served as a subcontractor to FMCTI.

3 B. Present Dispute

On December 28, 2010, Valiant filed suit against FMCTI and other individuals

asserting various claims of promissory fraud, fraud in the inducement, and breach of a

settlement agreement. Valiant alleged in its original petition that the settlement

agreement included consideration of “future no-bid negotiated work” promised by

FMCTI and its officers during negotiations of the agreement. According to Valiant’s

petition, FMCTI promised future jobs to Valiant that were worth in the gross range of

$8–10 million for 2010. Valiant further asserted that, without such oral assurances,

Valiant would not have signed the agreement. As a result, Valiant claimed that FMCTI

did not comply with the terms of the agreement that addressed future jobs. Valiant also

sought a bill of review, made claims against other parties not subject to this appeal, and

a declaration of its rights under “the various instruments as they may have been

amended in oral communications or written communications, including the waiver of any

written terms of such agreements.”

FMCTI answered Valiant’s lawsuit and asserted several affirmative defenses,

counterclaims. It also sought a declaratory judgment that the agreement reached was

binding and without ambiguity.

Valiant thereafter filed its first amended original petition, which specifically

requested the trial court to construe the meaning of the term “potential future projects”

and “what the parties intended” by using that term in the settlement agreement. The

disputed term is found in a clause on the first page of the agreement which provides, in

relevant part:

WHEREAS, FMCTI as general contractor and VALIANT as FMCTI’s subcontractor, in view of their business relationship on the

4 PAZFLOR PROJECT and any other current or potential future projects, desire to settle, compromise and resolve as full and final settlement of claims as set forth herein and in VALIANT’S lawsuit against FMCTI and FMCTI’s temporary injunction on an amicable basis, without admission of any fact, liability or responsibility of any kind on each Party’s part.

(Emphasis added.)

On May 20, 2011, FMCTI filed a partial motion for summary judgment and sought

dismissal of Valiant’s claims that were based on any oral agreement that could not be

performed within one year under the Statute of Frauds, Texas Rule of Civil Procedure

11, and/or the Parol Evidence Rules.2 FMCTI attached evidence that supported why

the alleged oral agreement on future work could not be completed within one year of the

date of the written contract (April 12, 2010), including:

(1) an affidavit from Valiant’s former president, Cole Leath, who stated, among other things, that the future projects and work would continue “indefinitely into the future;”

(2) various discovery responses from Valiant which stated that it was damaged “because it did not receive $2 million in anticipated profit in 2010 “and at similar levels during each of the ensuing years for the foreseeable future; and

(3) Valiant’s First Amended Petition which alleged oral promises that went from 2011 “and beyond;”

FMCTI also sought a declaration of rights and duties under the settlement

agreement. More specifically, FMCTI requested that the disputed “potential future

projects” language be interpreted and construed “exactly as written and declare that [it]

means exactly that, [and] nothing more.” FMCTI contended that the parties agreed that

it was “possible they may or may not do business in the future and the settlement

2 FMCTI asserted in its motion that a ruling in its favor would extinguish all of Valiant’s claims, but not FMCTI’s breach of the written settlement agreement, including fraud, fraud in the inducement, promissory estoppel, breach of contract based on the alleged oral agreement, and its request for a bill of review.

5 agreement did not foreclose that possibility.” FMCTI also asked the trial court to declare

that the agreement’s language stated clearly that “no waiver shall be binding unless

executed in writing by the party” and that the settlement agreement language expressly

stated that it could not be modified without a signed writing. FMCTI further requested

that other clauses be interpreted exactly as written, without any ambiguity.

In its response to FMCTI’s motion for partial summary judgment, Valiant asserted

that (1) the recitals, including the disputed “potential future projects” term, were made

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Valiant Petroleum, Inc. v. Michael McCormick, Wade Williams, Pablo Fernandez, Jeff McKenzie, and Dale Sumpter, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/valiant-petroleum-inc-v-michael-mccormick-wade-wil-texapp-2013.