Vess Oil Corp. v. SemCrude, L.P. (In re SemCrude, L.P.)

418 B.R. 98, 171 Oil & Gas Rep. 687, 2009 Bankr. LEXIS 3085
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Delaware
DecidedOctober 5, 2009
DocketBankruptcy No. 08-11525(BLS); Adversary No. 08-51142
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 418 B.R. 98 (Vess Oil Corp. v. SemCrude, L.P. (In re SemCrude, L.P.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vess Oil Corp. v. SemCrude, L.P. (In re SemCrude, L.P.), 418 B.R. 98, 171 Oil & Gas Rep. 687, 2009 Bankr. LEXIS 3085 (Del. 2009).

Opinion

[100]*100OPINION1

BRENDAN LINEHAN SHANNON, Bankruptcy Judge.

Before the Court are cross-motions for summary judgment and several ancillary motions and objections. These include the motion for summary judgment (the “Plaintiffs Motion”) [Docket No. 56] filed by plaintiff Vess Oil Corporation (the “Plaintiff’ or “Vess Oil”); the motion for summary judgment (the “Defendants’ Motion”) [Docket No. 58] filed by the defendants in this adversary proceeding, SemGroup, L.P. and Eaglwing, L.P. (“SemGroup” and “Eaglwing,” and collectively referred to hereinafter as the “Debtors” or the “Defendants”); and motions to strike the affidavit and supplemental affidavit of J. Michael Vess (collectively referred to hereinafter as the “Motions to Strike”) [Docket Nos. 63 and 77, respectively]. Also before the Court are objections to deposition testimony offered in support of the Plaintiffs Motion.

The key issue in this dispute is whether the Defendants hold certain funds in trust for the Plaintiff, thus entitling the Plaintiff to immediate recovery of the entirety of the funds, or whether the Plaintiff is simply a general unsecured creditor of the Defendants. For the following reasons, the Court finds that the Defendants do indeed hold the disputed funds in trust for the Plaintiff. Accordingly, the Court will grant the Plaintiffs Motion and deny the Defendants’ Motion.

I. BACKGROUND

In 2003, Vess Oil became the operator of certain oil and gas wells located in Texas, including those located in the Kurten Field in Brazos County, Texas (the “Kurten Field”). Vess Oil also has an affiliated ownership in part of the Kurten Field under the name VOC Brazos Energy Partners, L.P. (“VOC Brazos”).

As the operator of the Kurten Field wells, Vess Oil markets the oil and gas from the Kurten Field wells and arranges for its sale on behalf of numerous royalty owners and working interest owners, including VOC Brazos, each of whom is entitled to payments derived from the sale of oil and gas products from the Kurten Field. The amount of these payments varies based on the size of the respective shares held by the royalty owners and working interest owners.

When Vess Oil became the operator of the Kurten Field wells in 2003, it did not have the back-office capabilities to maintain division orders and manage the distribution of funds to the royalty owners and working interest owners. Having previously sold oil from other fields to subsidiaries and affiliates of SemGroup, Vess Oil was aware that SemGroup had the experience and ability to handle the distribution of funds and maintenance of division orders on properties similar to Kurten Field. Accordingly, Vess Oil contacted SemGroup and asked for assistance in providing these services. Vess Oh was directed to Eaglw-ing.

After several telephone conversations between J. Michael Vess (“Mr. Vess”) (on behalf of Vess Oil) and Kevin Foxx (“Mr. Foxx”) (on behalf of Eaglwing), Vess Oh and Eaglwing then entered into an agreement (the “Oral Agreement”). Defendant SemGroup was not a party to the Oral Agreement.

Pursuant to the Oral Agreement, Eaglw-ing agreed to receive the funds generated by all monthly sales of oil and gas products from the Kurten Field wells to third par[101]*101ties. Vess Oil forwarded the monthly gas revenue to Eaglwing each month directly, and instructed the purchasers of the Kur-ten Field oil — originally BP and later Teppco — to forward the monthly oil revenue to Eaglwing. Eaglwing then placed these funds into its Bank of Oklahoma operating account in Tulsa each month before paying out one-hundred percent of the funds, less small amounts of money that were to remain in its bank account pending clear title (commonly referred to as “suspense money”), to the Kurten Field royalty owners and working interest owners. To the extent that Eaglwing could not pay a Kurten Field interest owner because their interest was in suspense, Eaglwing retained and accumulated those funds until payment could be made. At no time did Eaglwing or SemGroup purchase oil or gas from the Kurten Field wells.

An unrelated third party, Iberia Management Systems (“Iberia”), was selected by Eaglwing to maintain a list of Kurten Field interest owners along with their respective fractional interests so that a proper distribution could be made each month. Iberia also prepared and mailed checks each month, drafted on Eaglwing’s operating account and made payable to the Kur-ten Field interest owners. For those Kur-ten Field interest owners who preferred to be paid by monthly wire transfer, Iberia gave instructions to Eaglwing regarding the amount of each transfer, and Eaglwing sent the wires each month.

Iberia performed all of these services for a variable monthly fee that averaged $1,791 each month between August 2003 and April 2005. Vess Oil initially paid Iberia’s monthly fee directly. In May 2005, however, Mr. Vess contacted Mr. Foxx to request that Eaglwing begin paying Iberia instead. The reason for this request was that Eaglwing was earning interest on the funds received from Vess Oil and Teppco for approximately 30 days each payment cycle — interest to which Mr. Vess claimed Vess Oil was entitled. Following this request, Mr. Foxx agreed that Eaglwing would pay the monthly fee in exchange for retaining the interest Eaglw-ing was earning on holding the funds received from Vess Oil and Teppco before distributing these monies to the Kurten Field interest owners. This new arrangement was facilitated by the fact that both Mr. Vess and Mr. Foxx regarded Iberia’s monthly fee and the interest earned on the Kurten Field proceeds to be a “wash.” (See Vess Dep. 316:21-323:11, Dec. 8, 2008; Foxx. Dep. 50:12-21, 75:7-11, March 2, 2009).

The record reflects that throughout the parties’ relationship, Vess Oil never told anyone at Eaglwing to place the funds into an escrow account, and did not instruct Eaglwing to refrain from commingling the Kurten Field monies with other Eaglwing funds. Along similar lines, no one from Eaglwing ever promised Vess Oil that the funds would be placed in a segregated account or that there would be any restrictions on the use of the funds by Eaglwing, and Mr. Vess did not believe that the funds were being kept in a segregated account by Eaglwing. Despite this intermingling of funds, however, the only persons involved in the making of the Oral Agreement — Mike Vess and Kevin Foxx— have each testified that the Kurten Field proceeds never belonged to Defendants. (See Foxx Dep. 21:15-22, March 2, 2009; Vess Dep. 285:11-13, Dec. 8, 2008). According to Mr. Foxx, Eaglwing would have returned the Kurten Field proceeds to Vess Oil at any time before July 2008, had Vess Oil asked for their return, because Eaglwing was merely holding them and distributing them each month in an attempt to provide an accommodation to Vess Oil, whom it regarded as a good [102]*102customer on other deals. (Foxx Dep. 65:10-23, March 2, 2009).

Despite the fact it was never memorialized in a written agreement, Vess Oil continued to use this payment structure to distribute the funds it collected in its role as operator of the Kurten Field wells. On July 22, 2008 (the “Petition Date”), however, SemGroup and certain direct and indirect subsidiaries, including Eaglwing, each filed a voluntary petition for relief under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code (the “Code”).

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418 B.R. 98, 171 Oil & Gas Rep. 687, 2009 Bankr. LEXIS 3085, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vess-oil-corp-v-semcrude-lp-in-re-semcrude-lp-deb-2009.