Florida Gas Transmission Company, LLC v. Texas Brine Company, LLC ( 2019 )


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  •                             STATE OF LOUISIANA
    COURT OF APPEAL
    FIRST CIRCUIT
    NO. 2018 CA 0907
    FLORIDA GAS TRANSMISSION COMPANY, LLC
    VERSUS
    TEXAS BRINE COMPANY, LLC, ET AL.
    Judgment Rendered: " AUG .2 9 2015,
    On Appeal from
    The 23rd Judicial District Court,
    Parish of Assumption, State of Louisiana
    Trial Court No. 34316
    The Honorable Thomas J. Kliebert Jr., Judge Presiding
    Leopold Z. Sher                               Attorneys for Appellant/ Defendant,
    James M. Garner                               Texas Brine Company, LLC
    Peter L. Hilbert Jr.
    Jeffrey D. Kessler
    New Orleans, Louisiana
    Robert Ryland Percy III
    Gonzales, Louisiana
    Travis J. Turner
    Gonzales, Louisiana
    Glen E. Mercer                                Attorneys     for   Appellee/ Third-Party
    Kourtney Twenhafel                            Defendant,
    New Orleans, Louisiana                        Steadfast Insurance Company
    Mary S. Johnson                               Attorneys for Appellees/ Third-Party
    Chad J. Mollere                               Defendants,
    Mandeville, Louisiana                         AIG Specialty Insurance Company,
    Lexington Insurance Company, and
    National Union Fire Insurance
    Company of Pittsburgh, PA.
    BEFORE: McDONALD, CRAIN, AND LANIER, JJ.
    CRAIN, J.
    Texas Brine Company, LLC, appeals a judgment dismissing its claims
    against    Steadfast   Insurance   Company,   AIG     Specialty   Insurance   Company,
    Lexington Insurance Company, and National Union Fire Insurance Company of
    Pittsburgh, PA., in their respective capacities as insurers of Adams Resources
    Exploration Company ( collectively " insurers").    We affirm.
    FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    This is one of several lawsuits arising out of a sinkhole in Assumption
    Parish that developed on or about August 3,        2012, following the collapse of the
    Oxy- Geismer # 3 ( OG3), a pressurized salt cavern in the Napoleonville Salt Dome.
    The OG3 was drilled by Texas Brine in 1982 on property owned by Occidental
    Chemical Corporation, then known as Hooker Chemical Corporation. Texas Brine
    operated the OG3 until 2011, when the cavern was plugged and abandoned.
    Occidental owned an adjacent piece of property that was subject to an oil
    and gas lease granted to Colorado Crude ( Colorado Crude lease).       In 1986, Adams
    Resources, an assignee of the Colorado Crude lease, drilled an oil and gas well on
    that property, the Adams -Hooker No. 1 ( AHI well). Before it was drilled, Texas
    Brine approved the surface and bottom hole locations for the AHI well.           When
    completed, the well did not penetrate or otherwise contact the Napoleonville Salt
    Dome or the OG3 cavern.        In May 1986, before any actual production from the
    AHI reservoir, Adams Resources assigned its operating interest in the AHI well to
    HECI Exploration Company, LLC. The well produced until it was permanently
    shut- in in 2001, approximately 11 years before the development of the sinkhole.
    After the sinkhole appeared, Florida Gas Transmission Company sued Texas
    Brine,    among other defendants, alleging Texas Brine' s operation of the OG3
    caused the collapse of the cavern and the resulting sinkhole, which damaged two of
    Florida Gas' s pipelines.    Texas Brine filed incidental demands against several
    2
    parties associated with the AM well, including Adams Resources and its insurers,
    alleging the drilling and operation of the well decreased the pressure in the AM
    reservoir, which purportedly damaged the adjacent salt dome wall, " encouraged"
    the leakage of brine from the OG3 cavern, and ultimately contributed to the
    collapse of the cavern and formation of the sinkhole.               Asserting tort and contract
    claims, Texas Brine cited the following provision in the Colorado Crude lease:
    Lessee shall diligently endeavor not to damage any salt formations which may
    exist upon the leased premises and shall pay for any actual damages which may
    occur from operations upon said premises."
    The litigation proceeded to a " Phase             1:    Liability"   trial limited to the
    following issues: ( 1) the duties owed by the non -insurer parties, ( 2) whether any
    non -insurer parties breached the duty or duties owed, and ( 3) if one or more non -
    insurer parties breached a duty or duties, whether the actions or inactions of that
    party caused any legally cognizable damages to any claimant!                   After Texas Brine
    rested its case, Adams Resources' insurers moved for an involuntary dismissal of
    Texas Brine' s claims.        The trial court deferred ruling on the motion until the
    completion of the trial, at which time the motion was re -urged and granted by the
    trial court.   In a judgment signed on November 11, 2017, the trial court dismissed
    Texas Brine' s claims against Adams Resources' insurers with prejudice.                     Texas
    Brine appeals.
    DISCUSSION
    In an action tried by the court without a jury, any party may move for
    involuntary dismissal at the close of the plaintiff' s case on the ground that upon the
    facts and law, the plaintiff has shown no right to relief. See La. Code Civ. Pro. art.
    1
    Adams Resources filed bankruptcy in 2017 and did not participate in the trial.   See In re
    Adams Resources Exploration        Corporation,    17- 10866,   2017WL5479425 ( Bankr.    D.   Del.
    5124117).The bankruptcy stay was lifted to allow the claims against Adams Resources' insurers,
    which were not released by the bankruptcy, to proceed. See La. R.S. 22: 1269A and B.
    91
    1672B.2 The trial court may then determine the facts and render judgment against
    the plaintiff and in favor of the moving party or may decline to render any
    judgment until the close of all the evidence.           Id.     Unlike a motion for directed
    verdict in a jury trial, a motion for involuntary dismissal requires a judge to weigh
    and evaluate the evidence up to that point, without any special inferences in favor
    of the opponent to the motion, and ascertain whether the plaintiff has presented
    sufficient evidence to establish his claim by a preponderance of the evidence.                   See
    Taylor v. Tommie' s Gaming, 04- 2254 ( La. 5/ 24/ 05), 
    902 So. 2d 380
    , 384; Kennedy
    v. Louisiana Maintenance Specialties, Inc., 07- 0506, 2007WL4555444, p. 3 ( La.
    App. I Cir. 12/ 28/ 07); Ross v. Premier Imports, 96- 2577 ( La. App. I Cir. 11/ 7/ 97),
    
    704 So. 2d 17
    , 20, writ denied, 97- 3035 ( La. 2/ 13/ 98), 
    709 So. 2d 750
    . However,
    absent circumstances in the record casting suspicion on the reliability of the
    testimony and sound reasons for its rejection, uncontroverted evidence should be
    taken as true to establish a fact for which it is offered.        Kennedy, 2007WL4555444
    at p. 3; Ross, 704 So. 2d at 20.
    The trial court' s grant of an involuntary dismissal is subject to the manifest
    error   standard   of review.     Pontchartrain Natural Gas System v. Texas Brine
    Company, LLC, 18- 0631 ( La. App. 1 Cir. 7/ 3/ 19),                      So. 3d —        1
    2019VY'L2865136, p.     3);   Broussard v.      Voorhies,    06- 2306 ( La.   App.       I   Cir.
    9/ 19/ 07), 
    970 So. 2d 1038
    , 1041, writ denied, 07- 2052 ( La. 12/ 14/ 07), 
    970 So. 2d 535
    .    To reverse, the reviewing court must find the trial court' s finding has no
    reasonable factual basis and is clearly wrong.             See Pontchartrain Natural Gas,
    So. 3d at (       2019WL2965136, p. 3); Broussard, 970 So. 2d at 1042; see
    also Haves Fundfor First United Methodist Church of Welsh, LLC v. Kerr-McGee
    Rocky Mountain, LLC, 14- 2592 ( La. 12/ 8/ 15), 
    193 So. 3d 1110
    , 1116. The issue to
    2
    The word " plaintiff' in Louisiana Code of Civil Procedure article 1672B includes a
    plaintiff in an incidental demand. See La. Code Civ. Pro. art. 1040.
    E
    be resolved on review is not whether the factfinder was right or wrong, but whether
    the factfinder' s conclusion was a reasonable one.          Hayes, 
    193 So. 3d at 1116
    ;
    Greene v. Succession ofAlvarado, 15- 1960 ( La. App. 1 Cir. 12/ 27/ 16), 
    210 So. 3d 321
    , 333.
    Texas Brine contends the record does not reasonably support the trial court' s
    conclusion that Adams Resources is not liable to Texas Brine.        According to Texas
    Brine, the evidence established Adams Resources was partly responsible for the
    depressurization of the AHI          reservoir, which weakened the salt dome wall,
    encouraged"      the   leakage    of brine   from   the   OG3   cavern,   and   ultimately
    contributed to the collapse of the OG3 cavern and the appearance of the sinkhole.
    Texas Brine does not dispute that Adams Resources never operated the AHI well
    when it was actually producing from the AH1 reservoir.              Nevertheless, Texas
    Brine contends Adams Resources' "        erroneous assumption"     that the reservoir was
    water driven, rather than depletion driven,          was a contributing factor to the
    sinkhole.    In a water driven reservoir, the internal pressure in the reservoir is
    maintained by water expanding in the aquifer as hydrocarbons are removed from
    the reservoir.    In a depletion driven reservoir, the reservoir' s pressure will decline
    as hydrocarbons are removed.
    The insurers counter that Adams Resources had no obligation, contractual or
    otherwise, to determine whether the AHI reservoir was water driven or depletion
    driven.     The Colorado Crude lease makes no mention of the reservoir' s drive
    mechanism and does not expressly require any monitoring of bottom -hole
    pressures.
    Adams Resources also relies on testimony of Michael Veazey, Texas
    Brine' s petroleum engineering expert, who testified that Adams Resources' belief,
    when the well was drilled, that the reservoir was water driven " was a reasonable
    assumption"      at the time.     The drive mechanism of the reservoir, according to
    Veazey, was determinable only by additional measurements and calculations " in
    5
    the early `` 90' s," which was years after Adams Resources ended its operation of the
    well.    Veazey confirmed that no industry standard requires well operators to
    conduct bottom -hole pressure measurements at any specific intervals.                 As to the
    depletion of the AHI reservoir, the insurers point out Adams Resources was not
    the operator of the well during production from the reservoir.               The insurers also
    rely on the trial court' s involuntary dismissal of the claims against Browning Oil
    Company, Inc., a long-term operator of the well, as a rejection of any assertion the
    well should have been re -pressurized.
    In its reply brief, Texas    Brine       emphasizes   its    claim    against   Adams
    Resources under the Colorado Crude lease,            arguing Adams Resources had an
    obligation therein " not to damage any salt formation" and "[ to]           pay for any actual
    damages     which   may   occur   from     operations    upon       said   leased    premises."
    Establishing a breach of those contractual obligations, Texas Brine argues, does
    not require evidence of conduct falling below a reasonable standard of care or a
    violation of an industry standard.         Rather,   according to Texas Brine,          Adams
    Resources is contractually liable because it " fail[ ed] to take any steps to detect or
    correct its erroneous assumption regarding the reservoir,"                 which "   led to the
    depressurization of the AHI reservoir [ and] created a pressure differential that
    damaged the salt formations." ( Emphasis omitted.)
    Regardless of whether its claims are based in tort or contract, Texas Brine' s
    evidentiary burden at trial required proof by a preponderance of the evidence that
    Adams Resources' actions or inactions caused damage to Texas Brine.                     See La.
    Civ. Code. art. 1994; Hayes, 
    193 So. 3d at 1115
    .        Causation is an essential element
    of both contract and tort claims.    
    Id.
         Whether a defendant' s actions caused the
    plaintiff' s damages is a question of fact, which should not be reversed on appeal
    absent manifest error. Hayes, 
    193 So. 3d at 1115
    .
    X
    For      causation,    Texas     Brine    maintains    Adams   Resources' "   erroneous
    assumption"     the reservoir was water driven " initiated a chain of events that lead to
    the depressurization of the AHI reservoir." Texas Brine elaborates:
    But for Adams'          erroneous assumption that the AM reservoir was
    water driven and its failure to detect and correct this error,                the
    depressurization of the AM reservoir could have been prevented and
    the sinkhole would not have occurred.
    Texas Brine relies on testimony from two of its experts, Robert Thorns, an
    expert in the behavior of salt, the stability of salt caverns, and the formation of
    sinkholes;     and Dr. Neal Nagel, an expert in geomechanics.                However, their
    testimony did       not     address    what    effect,   if any,   Adams   Resources'     initial
    determination of the reservoir' s drive mechanism had on operational decisions for
    the AHI well and reservoir.           Rather, their testimony focused on the theory that the
    sinkhole formed when brine leaked from the OG3 cavern and migrated into the
    lower -pressured AHI reservoir. Neither witness suggested the depressurization of
    the AHI reservoir was caused by Adams Resources' initial belief the reservoir was
    water driven.     In other words, neither witness opined that subsequent operators, if
    informed the AM reservoir was depletion driven rather that water driven, would or
    should have re -pressurized the reservoir or otherwise attempted to maintain its
    pressure during production. The evidence indicates the opposite conclusion.
    The depressurization of an oil and gas reservoir near a salt dome is not
    uncommon.        No state regulation requires pressure maintenance in a depleted
    reservoir.   In his 50 -year career, Veazey had never recommended or performed a
    pressure maintenance operation of a reservoir for the purpose of protecting a brine
    salt cavern.    Further, while Adams Resources initially believed the AHI well was
    water driven, tests of the bottom hole pressure in 1986, 1999, and 2000 indicated
    the reservoir was depletion driven. At that point, the drive mechanism was known,
    but that information did not prompt any change in the well operation to re -
    7
    pressurize the reservoir.      The record offers no support for Texas Brine' s assertion
    that the depressurization of the AHI reservoir would not have occurred " but for"
    Adams Resources' initial characterization of the reservoir as water driven.                That
    determination, even when later revealed to be incorrect, had no apparent effect on
    operational decisions regarding pressure maintenance in the reservoir.
    We further note that another panel of this court recently affirmed the trial
    court' s involuntary dismissal of Texas Brine' s claims against Browning Oil.              See
    Pontchartrain Natural Gas System,                  So. 3d at (       2019WL2865136, p. 6).
    There, Texas Brine similarly argued the depressurization of the AHI reservoir by
    production from the AHI well contributed to the collapse of the OG3 cavern and
    the formation of the sinkhole. Pontchartrain Natural Gas System,                      So. 3d at
    2019WL2865136, p. 5).            Finding no manifest error in the trial court' s
    dismissal of the claims against Browning Oil, the Pontchartrain court concluded,
    Our review of the totality of the evidence presented at trial reveals that
    Browning' s operations played absolutely no role in any of the causative factors for
    the development of the sinkhole and the damage that resulted." 
    Id.
    For similar reasons, we likewise find the present record reasonably supports
    the conclusion Adams Resources' operations were not a causative factor for the
    development of the sinkhole and the resulting damages.              See Hayes, 
    193 So. 3d at
    1149- 50;     Pontchartrain       Natural        Gas   System,             So.   3d   at
    2019WL2865136, pp. 5- 6).          The trial court' s involuntary dismissal of Texas
    Brine' s claims against the insurers of Adams Resources is not manifestly
    erroneous.    This assignment of error is without merit.'
    CONCLUSION
    3
    Texas Brine also assigns as error the trial court' s dismissal of Texas Brine' s claims
    against the insurers of Adams Resources based on Louisiana law in effect before 1996. For the
    reasons provided in Pontchartrain Natural Gas System, _      So. 3d at (     2019WL2865136, p.
    5), this assignment of error is without merit.
    The judgment signed on November 11,                2017,   dismissing Texas Brine' s
    claims against the insurers of Adams Resources is affirmed.                All costs of this
    appeal are assessed to Texas Brine.
    AFFIRMED.4
    4
    Texas Brine filed a motion to cite the appellate record in 2018 CA 0842, which we grant.
    Occidental filed a motion to consolidate this appeal with eight other appeals arising out of the
    liability trial. As to this appeal, that motion is denied.
    6
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2018CA0907

Filed Date: 8/29/2019

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/22/2024