Crosstex Energy Services, LP, Crosstex LIG, LLC and Crosstex Processing Services, LLC v. Texas Brine Company, LLC ( 2019 )


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  •                                   STATE OF LOUISIANA
    COURT OF APPEAL
    FIRST CIRCUIT
    2018 CA 1323
    CROSSTEX ENERGY SERVICES, LP, CROSSTEX LIG, LLC
    AND CROSSTEX PROCESSING SERVICES, LLC
    VERSUS
    TEXAS BRINE COMPANY, LLC, ET AL.
    Judgment Rendered:   AM 0- 8 2019'
    APPEALED FROM THE 23RD JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT
    ASSUMPTION PARISH, LOUISIANA
    DOCKET NUMBER 34, 202
    HONORABLE THOMAS J. KLIEBERT JR., JUDGE
    Mary S. Johnson                           Attorneys for Third Party
    Mandeville, Louisiana                     Defendants/ Appel lees
    and                                       AIG Specialty Insurance Company,
    Chad J. Mollere                           New Hampshire Insurance Company,
    Nichole M. Gray                           and National Union Fire Insurance Company
    New Orleans, Louisiana                    of Pittsburgh, Pa. ( alleged insurers of
    Occidental Chemical Corporation,
    Occidental Petroleum Corporation,
    and/ or Oxy USA, Inc.)
    Leopold Z. Sher                           Attorneys for Third Party Plaintiff/Appellant
    James M. Garner                           Texas Brine Company, LLC
    Peter L. Hilbert Jr.
    Jeffrey D. Kessler
    New Orleans, Louisiana
    and
    Robert Ryland Percy III
    Gonzales, Louisiana
    and
    Travis J. Turner
    Gonzales, Louisiana
    BEFORE:   McDONALD, WELCH, and CRAIN, 33.
    McDONALD, J.
    Texas Brine Company,          LLC,   appeals a January 31, 2018 judgment granting
    declinatory exceptions of lis pendens filed by AIG Specialty Insurance Company,'
    National      Union Fire Insurance Company of Pittsburgh,                     PA,   and   New   Hampshire
    Insurance Company ( collectively, Oxy Insurers),                 as alleged         insurers of Occidental
    Chemical       Corporation,     Occidental     Petroleum     Corporation,       and/ or Oxy      USA,   Inc.
    collectively,   Oxy).    The judgment dismissed " any and all claims, demands,                   and/ or
    allegations asserted by Texas Brine against the [ Oxy Insurers] ...                       in their entirety,
    WITHOUT PREJUDICE, in favor of the first -filed set of claims and demands pending
    in ...   Gustave J. LaBarre, Jr., et al. versus Occidental Chemical Company, et al., Docket
    No. 33, 796, 23rd Judicial District Court, Parish of Assumption, State of Louisiana."                   For
    the following reasons, we affirm the judgment.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    This appeal relates to one of multiple lawsuits against Texas Brine filed after the
    development of a sinkhole in August 2012 near Bayou Come in Assumption Parish,
    Louisiana.      In this suit, Crosstex sued Texas Brine claiming Texas Brine' s negligent brine
    mining operation of a salt cavern caused the sinkhole and the sinkhole damaged
    Crosstex' s pipeline. z      In response, in this suit and in other sinkhole suits, Texas Brine
    filed duplicative third -party demands against multiple defendants, including Oxy and the
    Oxy Insurers, seeking indemnification, contribution, and reimbursement for response
    costs and expenses.
    As each of the sinkhole suits progressed, some of the third -party defendants,
    including the Oxy Insurers, filed lis pendens exceptions seeking dismissal of Texas
    Brine' s duplicative third -party demands in all but the LaBarre suit, which the Oxy
    1
    According to AIG's lis pendens exception, AIG is formerly known as Chartis Specialty Insurance
    Company, and previously known as American International Specialty Lines Insurance Company and
    American International Surplus Lines Insurance Company, both previously known as "" AISLIC."
    2
    In its original petition, the plaintiffs in this case, multiple Crosstex entities, named Texas Brine
    Company, LLC, as the defendant. In later pleadings, the Crosstex entities additionally named other
    parties allegedly related to Texas Brine Company, LLC, as defendants. Here, we refer to the plaintiffs
    collectively as Crosstex and to the defendants collectively as Texas Brine.
    2
    insurers argued was the suit where Texas Brine first filed its third -party demands
    against them.          After a hearing, the trial court signed the January 31, 2018 judgment
    granting the Oxy Insurers' exceptions, and dismissing Texas Brine' s third -party claims
    against them, without prejudice, in favor of the " first -filed" set of claims in LaBarre.
    After the Oxy Insurers filed their lis pendens exceptions, but before the
    exceptions were decided, the trial court held a trial in three of the sinkhole cases,
    namely,        this   Crosstex suit,   Florida   Gas,   and   Pontchartrain ( Pipeline cases) 3,    to
    determine liability for the sinkhole ( Phase I liability trial).       On December 21, 2017 and
    April 18, 2018 ( after granting        motions for new trial in part), the trial court signed a
    judgment allocating fault for the sinkhole to multiple parties, including 50% of the fault
    to Oxy ( Liability Judgment).
    Texas     Brine appeals from the January 31,            2018    lis    pendens   judgment,
    contending the trial court erred in granting the lis pendens exceptions because: ( 1)               lis
    pendens does not apply in the sinkhole suits where the parties in each suit are
    different; ( 2)       if lis pendens does apply, then its third -party claims against the Oxy
    Insurers should proceed in the Pipeline cases, the " most actively litigated [ sinkhole]
    cases";      and (    3)   the Oxy Insurers waived the right to assert lis pendens by their
    counsel' s participation and Oxy' s participation in the Phase I liability trial.
    LIS PENDENS
    Louisiana Code of Civil Procedure 531 codifies the doctrine of lis pendens and
    provides:
    When two or more suits are pending in a Louisiana court or courts on the
    same transaction or occurrence, between the same parties in the same
    capacities,the defendant may have all but the first suit dismissed by
    excepting thereto as provided in Article 925. When the defendant does
    not so except, the plaintiff may continue the prosecution of any of the
    suits, but the first final judgment rendered shall be conclusive of all.
    A defendant in an incidental action may plead any of the exceptions available to
    a defendant in a principal action.        La. C. C. P. art. 1034.   The party pleading lis pendens
    has the burden of proving the facts necessary for the exception to be granted.
    3 The Pipeline cases are Crosstex Energy Services, LP, et al. v. Texas Brine Company, LLC, et al., No.
    34, 202 (   23rd JDQ Florida Gas Transmission Co. v. Texas Brine Co., No. 34, 316 ( 23rd JDQ and,
    Pontchartrain Natural Gas System v. Texas Brine Co, LLC, No. 34, 265 ( 23rd JDQ.
    3
    Lockhart Ins Agency, LLC v. Ryano & Beezer, LLC, 15- 1911 ( La. App. 1 Cir. 9/ 6/ 16),
    
    2016 WL 4680091
     * 2.          A trial court should grant the exception if a final judgment in the
    first suit would be res judicata in the subsequently filed suit. 
    Id.
     The crucial inquiry is
    not whether the second suit is based on the same cause of action as the first suit, but
    whether the second suit asserts a cause of action that arises out of the same
    transaction or occurrence that is the subject matter of the first suit.                
    Id.
         For lis
    pendens to apply, La. C. C. P. art. 531 requires that: ( 1) two or more suits are pending in
    a     Louisiana     court or courts; ( 2)   on the same transaction       or occurrence, and ( 3)
    between the same parties in the same capacities.                 
    Id.
       If a defendant carries his
    burden, he is entitled to have all but the first -filed suit dismissed.         See La. C. C. P. arts.
    531 and 9238; Harris v. Breaud, 17- 0421 ( La.           App. 1 Cir. 2/ 27/ 18), 
    243 So. 3d 572
    ,
    577. 4
    Here, it is undisputed that two or more sinkhole suits are pending in Louisiana
    courts.        And, in this appeal, Texas Brine does not dispute that its Crosstex third -party
    demand against the Oxy Insurers arises out of the same transaction or occurrence as
    its LaBarre third -party demand.         Rather, Texas Brine argues, in its first assignment of
    error, that the third lis pendens requirement is not met, because the parties in each of
    the sinkhole suits are different.
    In analyzing an exception of lis pendens asserted as to incidental demands, the
    proper analysis is to compare only the third -party demands in the pending suits.
    Capital One, N.A. v. Service Door & Millwork, LLC, 11- 0691 ( La.            App. 1 Cir. 11/ 9/ 11),
    
    2011 WL 5420374
     * 3.          Thus, although the first -party plaintiffs in this Crosstex suit are
    different from those in LaBarre, it is clear that the relevant third parties are the same.
    4 The standard of review applicable to a trial court's ruling on an exception of lis pendens under La.
    C. C. P. art. 531 is unclear. Because our affirmance would be the same under any standard or review, we
    need not decide the appropriate standard in this case. Lockhart Ins. Agency, LLC, 
    2016 WL 4680091
     at
    3 n. 1.
    rd
    That is, in both suits, Texas Brine is the third -party plaintiff asserting the same third -
    party   demands against the Oxy Insurers, the same third -party defendants.                               This
    assignment of error is meritless.
    In its second assignment of error, Texas Brine contends that, if lis pendens
    applies, then its third -party demand should proceed in the Pipeline cases. According to
    Texas Brine,      because the Pipeline cases proceeded to and concluded the Phase I
    liability trial before all other sinkhole cases, they constitute the " first suit" for lis
    pendens purposes under La. C. C. P. art. 531 and " shall be conclusive of all."                         Texas
    Brine bases its argument on the last sentence of La. C. C. P. art. 531,                       which    states,
    When the defendant does not so except [ based on lis pendens], the plaintiff may
    continue the prosecution of any of the suits, but the first final judgment rendered shall
    be conclusive of all."       This provision only applies when the defendant does not file an
    exception of lis pendens.         Here, the Oxy Insurers each filed exceptions of lis pendens
    on August 24, 2017,          before the trial court rendered the Liability Judgment.                    Thus,
    neither the Pipeline cases themselves nor the Liability Judgment are " conclusive of all"
    within the meaning of La. C. C. P. art. 531.          This assignment of error is meritless.
    In its third assignment of error, Texas Brine contends the Oxy Insurers waived
    their right to assert lis pendens in this case, because their counsel and their insured,
    Oxy, participated in the Phase I liability trial.            In support of its contention as to Oxy,
    Texas Brine points to a September 13, 2018 judgment, wherein the trial court found
    that Oxy had ' waived the exception of /is pendens in the Pipeline Cases on the basis of
    Oxy's] participation in the Phase I Liability Trial."              However, even if we assume that
    Oxy did so waive its lis pendens exception, a waiver by Oxy of its lis pendens exception
    does not constitute a waiver by its insurers as to their separately -filed lis pendens
    5 Texas Brine' s December 1, 2015 amended third -party demand against the Oxy Insurers pertinently
    states: " The Oxy Insurers are ... liable to Texas Brine for [ Oxy's] full liability to Texas Brine, pursuant to
    Louisiana' s Direct Action Statute, [ La. R. S.] 22: 1269"; and " Texas Brine was required to spend in excess
    of $100 million in unreimbursed expenses in responding to the emergence of the sinkhole, which amount
    Texas Brine seeks from the Oxy Insurers in addition to any additional costs that will be incurred." The
    record sufficiently establishes that the trial court took judicial notice of Texas Brine' s LaBarre third -party
    demand, which was also pending before it in the 23rd JDC. The parties do not dispute its existence, its
    substance, or that it was filed on September 1, 2015. See Pullin v. Chauvin, 17- 1292 ( La. App. 1 Cir.
    3/ 15/ 18), 
    244 So. 3d 472
    , 474 n. 1, writ denied, 18- 0572 ( La. 6/ 1/ 18), 
    243 So. 3d 1061
    ; Harris v. Breaud,
    17- 0421 ( La. App. 1 Cir. 2/ 27/ 18), 
    243 So. 3d 572
    , 577 n. 3; AmSouth Bank v. Unemployment
    Compensation Control Systems, LLC, 05- 0253 ( La. App. 1 Cir. 5/ 8/ 09), 
    2009 WL 1270295
     * 3.
    5
    exceptions to Texas Brine' s third -party claims against them, which were not tried at the
    Phase I liability trial. The Liability Judgment and the trial court's December 21, 2017
    Reasons for Judgment show that Texas Brine's third -party claims against the Oxy
    Insurers were not tried at the Phase I liability trial.     Thus, although Texas Brine points
    to cases wherein a party was found to have waived his right to pursue a declinatory
    exception by participating at trial, e.g., Labadot v. Labadot, 
    328 So. 2d 747
     ( La. App. 4
    Cir. 1976),   none of the cited cases hold that a party's insurer is bound by its insured' s
    waiver of an exception of lis pendens, when the insured' s participation at a trial did not
    include adjudication of third party -claims against the insurer.6
    As to the Oxy Insurers' counsel' s participation at trial, Texas Brine points to: ( 1)
    a November 11, 2017 judgment, granting a motion for involuntary dismissal made by
    two of the Oxy Insurers, and dismissing Texas Brine's third -party claims against them;
    and ( 2)   two excerpts from the Phase I liability trial showing that counsel for the Oxy
    Insurers was present and addressed the court.                Our review of these documents
    indicates that the attorneys who were present on these three instances were there to
    represent Oxy insurers, including AIG and National Union, solely in their capacities as
    alleged insurers of Adams Resources            Exploration Corporation,       another third -party
    defendant, and not in their capacities as insurers of Oxy. In fact, at the December 21,
    2017 lis pendens hearing, Texas Brine's counsel admitted that counsel for National
    Union,     one of the Oxy Insurers, participated at the Phase I liability trial, but that
    National Union was not at the trial in its capacity as Oxy's insurer.        Further, Texas Brine
    concedes in its brief that the November 11,            2017 judgment referenced above was
    rendered in favor of the Oxy Insurers " in their capacity as insurers of Oil and Gas
    Defendants," which is " albeit in a different capacity" than as insurers of Oxy. Thus, the
    presence or participation of counsel for AIG and National Union, in their capacity as
    Adams Resources" insurers, at the Phase I liability trial does not waive the Oxy Insurers'
    right to assert lis pendens, even though counsel was the same.                Accord Diamond v.
    6 AIG filed an answer to Texas Brine's third -party demand before it filed its lis pendens exception.
    Although such may have constituted a waiver of AIGs right to assert lis pendens, Texas Brine did not
    assign such as error on appeal.
    6
    Progressive Sec. Ins, Co., 05- 0820 ( La. App. 1 Cir. 3/ 24/ 06), 
    934 So. 2d 739
    , 744- 45
    Appearance by insurer was not an appearance by insurance guaranty association after
    insurer became insolvent, even if the same attorney represented the parties;           thus,
    insurer's motion to compel discovery did not result in a waiver of the insurance
    guaranty association' s objection to personal jurisdiction.).   This assignment of error is
    without merit.
    CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, the January 31,          2018 judgment: ( 1)      granting
    declinatory exceptions of lis pendens filed by AIG Specialty Insurance Company,
    National Union Fire Insurance Company of Pittsburgh,             PA,   and   New   Hampshire
    Insurance Company, as alleged insurers of Occidental Chemical Corporation, Occidental
    Petroleum Corporation, and/ or Oxy USA, Inc., and ( 2) dismissing ""any and all claims,
    demands, and/ or allegations asserted by Texas Brine against the [ Oxy Insurers] ... in
    their entirety, WITHOUT PREJUDICE, in favor of the first -filed set of claims and
    demands pending in ...     Gustave J. LaBarre, Jr.,    et al.   versus Occidental Chemical
    Company, et al., Docket No. 33, 796, 231d Judicial District Court, Parish of Assumption,
    State of Louisiana" is affirmed. We assess appeal costs to Texas Brine.
    AFFIRMED.
    7
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2018CA1323

Filed Date: 8/8/2019

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/22/2024