Virginia Power Energy Marketing, Inc. v. Apache Corp.

297 S.W.3d 397, 171 Oil & Gas Rep. 105, 2009 Tex. App. LEXIS 6142, 2009 WL 3109740
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 6, 2009
Docket14-07-00787-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by48 cases

This text of 297 S.W.3d 397 (Virginia Power Energy Marketing, Inc. v. Apache Corp.) 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
Virginia Power Energy Marketing, Inc. v. Apache Corp., 297 S.W.3d 397, 171 Oil & Gas Rep. 105, 2009 Tex. App. LEXIS 6142, 2009 WL 3109740 (Tex. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

OPINION

KENT C. SULLIVAN, Justice.

This business dispute involves the application and effect of force majeure provisions in a natural-gas supply contract between the seller, Apache Corporation, and Virginia Power Energy Marketing, Inc. (“VPEM”), the purchaser. The parties agreed that Apache was to deliver natural gas to VPEM at two specific locations in September and October of 2005. However, during that time period, Hurricanes Katrina and Rita struck the Gulf Coast, damaging gas-production platforms and portions of the natural-gas pipelines. After Apache failed to deliver the agreed-upon quantity of natural gas at either location, a lawsuit ensued. The trial court ruled, by summary judgment, that Apache’s performance was excused under the force majeure provisions of the parties’ agreement.

Appellants, which consist of VPEM and its parent company, Dominion Resources, have appealed the summary judgment and raise two arguments. First, they contend that, although the hurricanes prevented Apache from delivering gas to one of the two agreed-upon locations, a “reasonable *400 efforts” clause in the contract required Apache to make alternate delivery arrangements. We affirm that portion of the summary judgment. Second, as to the other delivery location, which was undamaged, appellants claim that Apache had an available gas supply to satisfy VPEM’s contract needs. We conclude that a fact issue exists; therefore, we reverse that portion of the summary judgment, and remand the dispute to the trial court.

Background

In 2003, Apache and VPEM reached agreement on the basic terms that would govern a series of natural-gas sales from Apache, a producer, to VPEM, an energy marketer. Those general terms are contained in a “Base Contract,” a form contract that was originally prepared by the North American Energy Standards Board (“NAESB”) but whose terms can be altered according to the contracting parties’ particular needs. The Base Contract contains only the basic provisions that apply to any subsequent natural-gas sales between the parties, and does not recite details for any specific transaction. Instead, the details of each subsequent sale were to be memorialized in written “Transaction Confirmations” (the “Confirmations”).

Thus, the parties’ entire agreement is governed by both the general Base Contract and the more specific Confirmation that would include the sales terms as to each individual transaction. 1 Generally, the parties agreed that Apache would bear the sole responsibility for transporting the contract amount of natural gas, according to each Confirmation, to a designated “Delivery Point” where it would be received by VPEM.

In August 2005, the parties executed three Confirmations reflecting Apache’s commitment to sell and deliver, and VPEM’s obligation to pay for, natural gas during September and October 2005. The relevant terms of these commitments were as follows:

(1) In September 2005, Apache was to deliver 300,000 MMBtu 2 of natural gas to VPEM along the Tennessee Gas Pipeline to a Delivery Point identified as the Zone L Leg 500 Pooling Area (“Tennessee L-500”);
(2) In October 2005, Apache would deliver an additional 310,000 MMBtu to VPEM at the same Tennessee L-500 Delivery Point; and
(3) In October 2005, Apache would also deliver 310,000 MMBtu to VPEM at Station 65, a Delivery Point along the Transcontinental Pipeline (“Transco-65”).

All three commitments were designated as “firm” transactions which, according to the Base Contract, meant that either party could interrupt performance without liability “only to the extent that such performance is prevented for reasons of Force Majeure.” 3 Relevant to this case, the Base Contract specifically mentioned “hurricanes” as a possible force majeure event.

*401 On August 27, 2005, the approach of Hurricane Katrina to the Gulf Coast prompted Apache to evacuate numerous offshore platforms and onshore production facilities. In the next few days, Apache invoked the force majeure provisions in the Base Contract and notified VPEM that the September delivery to Tennessee L-500 would be curtailed. As it turned out, the hurricane caused significant damage to portions of the Tennessee Gas Pipeline that precluded the delivery of gas to the L-500 pooling area, the agreed destination point for VPEM’s September gas. VPEM asked Apache to deliver to an alternate location, but Apache declined. Thus, VPEM received only 15,588 MMBtu of the contract quantity of 300,000 MMBtu that was to be delivered to Tennessee L-500.

The following month, Apache once again evacuated its offshore platforms in preparation for Hurricane Rita. Again invoking the Base Contract’s force majeure provisions, Apache notified VPEM that its October deliveries to both Delivery Points, Tennessee L-500 and Transco-65, would be suspended or curtailed. Accordingly, VPEM received 149,781 MMBtu at Tran-sco-65, but only 38,727 MMBtu at Tennessee L-500, which remained damaged after the second hurricane.

To cover the shortfall between the contracted-for amounts and that actually delivered by Apache, VPEM purchased additional gas on the Intercontinental Exchange “spot market,” 4 at $2.25 million more than it would have paid under its contract with Apache. However, after completing the anonymous spot-market purchases made necessary following Apache’s force majeure declaration, VPEM discovered that the seller in several of those spot-market transactions was, in fact, Apache.

Concluding that Apache had improperly invoked force majeure to sell natural gas on the spot market at higher prices, VPEM offset $2.25 million from its other payments to Apache. Apache demanded payment of the offset amount from Dominion Resources, VPEM’s parent company that had guaranteed prompt and complete payment of VPEM’s “due but unpaid obligations.”

After Dominion failed to pay the demanded amount, Apache sued VPEM and Dominion for breach of contract. VPEM counterclaimed, alleging that Apache breached the Base Contract by improperly invoicing force majeure and refusing to deliver the contract amount of natural gas. Apache moved for partial summary judgment on its contract claims against VPEM and Dominion, arguing that its own performance was excused under the Base Contract’s force majeure provisions but that appellants breached the contract by paying less than the full amounts due to Apache. The trial court granted Apache’s motion for partial summary judgment, which became final after the parties stipulated to all remaining issues.

Here, appellants contend Apache was not entitled to summary judgment, for two reasons. First, they contend that a “reasonable efforts” provision in the Base Contract obligated Apache to provide the Tennessee L-500 gas at a different delivery location.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
297 S.W.3d 397, 171 Oil & Gas Rep. 105, 2009 Tex. App. LEXIS 6142, 2009 WL 3109740, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/virginia-power-energy-marketing-inc-v-apache-corp-texapp-2009.