Barrow-Shaver Resources Company v. Carrizo Oil & Gas, Inc. ( 2019 )


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  •                 IN THE SUPREME COURT OF TEXAS
    4444444444
    No. 17-0332
    4444444444
    BARROW-SHAVER RESOURCES COMPANY, PETITIONER,
    V.
    CARRIZO OIL & GAS, INC., RESPONDENT
    444444444444444444444444444444444444444444
    ON PETITION FOR REVIEW FROM THE
    COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE TWELFTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS
    444444444444444444444444444444444444444444
    JUSTICE GUZMAN, joined by CHIEF JUSTICE HECHT and JUSTICE BUSBY, concurring and
    dissenting.
    A jury found Carrizo Oil & Gas, Inc. breached a farmout agreement with Barrow-Shaver
    Resources Co. by unreasonably withholding consent to an assignment of the agreement while
    attempting to extract a $5 million consent-procurement fee. Disregarding the jury’s findings, the
    Court holds the farmout agreement’s terms permitted Carrizo to do so. The Court’s construction of
    the farmout agreement as allowing Carrizo to act unreasonably in withholding consent is analytically
    flawed in several respects, but most notably in repudiating trade usage and custom as an aid to
    contract interpretation. And though the Court embraces a construction of the contract that allows
    Carrizo to “refuse consent for any reason, expressed or not, reasonable or not, legitimate or not, or
    no reason at all,”1 it simultaneously shrinks from that holding by repeatedly asserting—contrary to
    the jury’s findings—that Carrizo actually had valid reasons for withholding consent.
    In determining whether the farmout agreement’s consent-to-assign clause is qualified by
    reasonableness, the threshold question is: what does the contract say? Only if the consent provision
    is unqualified would we then consider whether reasonableness is either required by statute or other
    law or implied as a matter of public policy. The Court muddles these analytical steps and,
    consequently, misapplies case law regarding the latter two concepts in construing the farmout
    agreement. The law applicable to each analytical step differs, but the Court consistently ignores the
    distinctions in determining what the farmout agreement’s terms mean.
    I part company with the Court at the first analytical step—what the contract says. The point
    of disagreement is not, as the Court suggests, whether reasonableness should be judicially imposed.
    Here, the jury found reasonableness is baked into the contract language through trade custom and
    usage, and the record bears evidence to support that finding. The Court categorically rejects
    evidence that trade custom and usage informs the consent clause’s meaning on the basis that words
    with ordinary meanings, like “consent”, are not amenable to any industry-specific usage. This is
    wrong. “The normal effect of a usage on a written contract is to vary its meaning from the meaning
    it would otherwise have,” so long as the usage has “such regularity of observance in a place,
    vocation, or trade as to justify an expectation that it will be observed with respect to a particular
    1
    Ante at 37.
    2
    agreement.”2 Consulting trade custom and usage to interpret contract terms is a centuries-old
    practice firmly rooted in our jurisprudence, recognized by learned treatises, and applicable to
    commercial contracts nationwide, including in Texas.
    The Court’s rejection of trade-custom-and-usage evidence leads to an erroneous construction
    of the farmout agreement, abrogates established contract-construction principles, and threatens to
    unsettle industry expectations about what industry-specific contracts mean.3 The Court’s insistence
    on characterizing the record contrary to the jury’s findings is equally alarming but ultimately proves
    the industry expects industry players to act reasonably in multi-million dollar energy transactions.4
    Because the Court’s analysis and construction of the farmout agreement is erroneous and
    disconcerting, I respectfully dissent. I concur in the fraud judgment, however, because I would
    arrive at the same judgment for different reasons.
    I. Background
    The contract-construction issue in this case involves a consent-to-assign clause in a farmout
    agreement between Barrow-Shaver and Carrizo, two oil and gas companies. Carrizo owned
    leasehold interests for depths below 2,500 feet of the 22,000-acre Parkey Ranch, which were
    acquired from Pan American Operating, Inc. (the Parkey lease). PanAmerican, in turn, had acquired
    2
    RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF CONTRACTS § 220 cmt. d (AM. LAW INST. 1981); 
    id. § 222(1);
    see 
    id. § 220
    reporter’s note cmt. d (“The cases supporting the Illustrations below make clear that no matter how plain a meaning may
    be to a laymen, it may turn out to have a different and perhaps even contradictory meaning when a special usage is
    proven.”); TEX. BUS. & COM. CODE § 1.303(c).
    3
    Trade custom and usage exists for a reason—it lowers transaction costs and facilitates industry development.
    David McGowan, Recognizing Usages of Trade: A Case Study from Electronic Commerce, 8 WASH. U.J.L. & POL’Y 167,
    184 (2002).
    4
    See RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF CONTRACTS § 221 cmt. b (“[T]he fact that a usage is reasonable may tend
    to show that the parties contracted with reference to it or that a particular party knew or had reason to know of it.”).
    3
    its leasehold interests for all the depths under the Parkey Ranch from Cleo Oil, Inc., who had a lease
    with the original mineral owner, James R. Parkey. Each mineral owner in the chain of title, from
    Parkey to Carrizo, was entitled to a share of royalty; PanAmerican and Carrizo also retained an
    “overriding royalty,” a cost-free share of production.
    Carrizo acquired the Parkey lease as part of its “Kingdom Prospect,” envisioning
    development of a cumulative 40,000-acre tract using horizontal drilling technology. As the best laid
    plans of mice and men often go awry, the geologic structure underneath the Parkey Ranch was more
    complicated than Carrizo expected, rendering horizontal drilling infeasible. Carrizo had also drilled
    several vertical wells on the lease, but the production was “not commercial.” After spending
    millions of dollars attempting to develop the Parkey lease, Carrizo abandoned its development
    efforts. With the Parkey lease nearing expiration, Carrizo set its sights on a farmout arrangement.
    About a month before the Parkey lease’s expiration date, Carrizo and Barrow-Shaver began
    negotiating a “drill-to-earn” farmout agreement, under which Carrizo would assign to
    Barrow-Shaver certain Parkey-lease acreage for each well Barrow-Shaver drilled that met specified
    standards. Barrow-Shaver sent Carrizo the initial draft of the farmout agreement, which did not
    include a consent-to-assignment clause. Carrizo responded with a revised draft that included the
    following provision:
    The rights provided to [Barrow-Shaver] under this Letter Agreement may not be
    assigned, subleased or otherwise transferred in whole or in part, without the express
    written consent of Carrizo which consent shall not be unreasonably withheld.
    In a subsequently revised draft, Carrizo deleted the “shall not be unreasonably withheld”
    language. Barrow-Shaver initially objected to the deletion but eventually acquiesced after Carrizo
    4
    repeatedly gave verbal assurances that it would give “consent down the road.” The final and
    effective version of the farmout agreement includes an assignment clause that reads:
    The rights provided to [Barrow-Shaver] under this Letter Agreement may not be
    assigned, subleased or otherwise transferred in whole or in part, without the express
    written consent of Carrizo.
    As required by the farmout agreement, Barrow-Shaver drilled a well on the Parkey Ranch
    to hold the mineral lease before it expired. But—mice and men again—after expending $22 million
    to drill the well, Barrow-Shaver’s operations under the farmout agreement failed.
    A year later, Raptor Petroleum II, LLC, a “well-funded start-up” founded by “mostly
    ex-Anadarko engineers,” approached Barrow-Shaver about obtaining several mineral interests,
    including an assignment of the Parkey lease farmout. Barrow-Shaver and Raptor reached a deal by
    entering into a purchase-and-sale agreement, pursuant to which Barrow-Shaver would, for
    $27.69 million, assign to Raptor a series of oil-and-gas agreements, including Barrow-Shaver’s
    interests under the farmout agreement with Carrizo. The deal was set to close on July 3, 2012, but
    to do so, Barrow-Shaver would first have to obtain 32 consents from 14 individual mineral-interest
    holders.
    By the end of May, Barrow-Shaver had obtained all but one of the necessary
    consents—Carrizo was the lone holdout. Eventually, on June 22, Carrizo sent Barrow-Shaver an
    email with a single line—“Carrizo does not consent to the assignment.” With the closing date fast
    approaching, Barrow-Shaver sought Carrizo’s reconsideration. Finally, on July 2, 2012—the day
    before Barrow-Shaver and Raptor’s deal was to close—Carrizo insisted on a buy-out of the Parkey
    lease for $5 million in lieu of consenting to the assignment. Chip Johnson, Carrizo’s CEO, later
    5
    testified that the “sole reason” for Carrizo to continue withholding consent was that Barrow-Shaver
    would not pay the $5 million asking price. Barrow-Shaver did not accept Carrizo’s offer, and
    because Carrizo refused to consent, the deal with Raptor fell through.
    Barrow-Shaver sued Carrizo for breach of contract, fraudulent inducement, fraudulent
    nondisclosure, and tortious interference with a contract. The trial court combined the two fraud
    claims, which, along with the breach-of-contract claim, are now on appeal. The breach-of-contract
    claim alleged Carrizo breached the farmout agreement by unreasonably withholding its consent to
    the assignment. The parties agreed the consent-to-assign clause was unambiguous, but while
    Barrow-Shaver argued industry custom and usage supplied a reasonableness limitation on the right
    to withhold consent, Carrizo urged the provision’s silence about restraints equated to the parties’
    agreement that Carrizo could withhold consent “for any reason,” reasonable or not. The trial court
    agreed with Barrow-Shaver and allowed the parties to present testimony about whether industry
    custom and usage limited Carrizo’s ability to withhold consent.
    After witnesses, including experts on both sides, had testified, the issue was submitted to the
    jury with the following instruction:
    Did Carrizo fail to comply with the Farmout Agreement?
    You are instructed that the Farmout Agreement is silent about the reasons under
    which Carrizo could refuse consent to [Barrow-Shaver]’s assignment of the Farmout
    Agreement to Raptor. Therefore, you may consider evidence of industry custom and
    expectations in deciding whether Carrizo breached its agreement with
    [Barrow-Shaver]. [Barrow-Shaver] contends that there was a custom and usage in
    the oil and gas industry that a consent to assignment not be unreasonably withheld.
    Custom and usage refers to a practice that is so general and universal that the parties
    are charged with knowledge of its existence to such an extent as to raise a
    presumption that they dealt with reference to it.
    6
    Answering “yes,” the jury found that, in accordance with industry custom and usage, the consent
    clause in the farmout agreement required Carrizo to act reasonably and Carrizo had breached the
    contract by unreasonably withholding its consent. As damages, the jury awarded $27.69 million to
    Barrow-Shaver, the exact amount of the consideration for the purchase-and-sale agreement between
    Barrow-Shaver and Raptor.
    With respect to the fraudulent-inducement claim, Barrow-Shaver alleged Carrizo repeatedly
    stated it would consent to an assignment of the farmout agreement even though it never intended to
    do so and these misrepresentations induced Barrow-Shaver to enter the farmout agreement.
    Barrow-Shaver’s fraudulent-nondisclosure claim focused on the time period it was negotiating with
    Raptor and alleged Carrizo made material misrepresentations that created the false impression that
    Carrizo would consent to the Raptor assignment. The trial court combined the two fraud claims and
    gave the jury a general fraud instruction. The jury again sided with Barrow-Shaver, awarding
    $1.7 million in fraud damages.5
    In moving for final judgment, Barrow-Shaver elected the breach-of-contract remedy over
    the fraud remedy. Accordingly, the trial court rendered judgment for Barrow-Shaver, awarding
    $27.69 million in contract damages along with $1 million in attorneys’ fees and $2.9 million in
    prejudgment interest.
    5
    Barrow-Shaver claimed fraud damages of $888,000 for converting the well on the Parkey lease into a saltwater
    well and another $800,000 expended to keep some of the leases alive.
    7
    II. Discussion
    A. Breach of Contract
    1. Trade Custom and Usage May Inform An Unambiguous Contract
    Disregarding the jury’s finding on trade custom and usage, the Court today holds that, as a
    matter of law, the consent provision authorized Carrizo to withhold its consent for any reason, no
    reason, or as a bargaining chip to extract a $5 million pay day at the eleventh hour.6 The Court
    categorically discards trade custom and usage on the grounds that “the term [consent] can easily be
    understood according to its plain, ordinary, and generally accepted meaning.”7                                  This is a
    fundamental analytical mistake that ignores precedent.
    Consulting trade custom and usage to inform the meaning of words and expressions in a
    contract is neither a novel idea nor a modern convention.8 More than a hundred years ago, we
    acknowledged that,
    where there is nothing in the agreement to exclude the inference, the parties are
    always presumed to contract in reference to the usage or custom which prevails in
    the particular trade or business to which the contract relates; and the usage is
    6
    Contrary to the Court’s construction of the contract as authorizing Carrizo to withhold consent for any reason,
    the Court repeatedly denies that Carrizo could ever leverage its consent power to extort a payout from Barrow-Shaver.
    Ante at 40. And contrary to the jury’s findings, the Court repeatedly denies that Carrizo did, in fact, act unreasonably
    and wrongfully in refusing to consent to the assignment while at the same time conditioning consent on a $5 million
    buyout when the deal with Raptor was at a make-or-break deadline. 
    Id. at 39-40.
             7
    
    Id. at 12.
             8
    Schaub v. Dall. Brewing Co., 
    16 S.W. 429
    , 430 (Tex. 1891) (“Custom and usages of trades are admitted in
    evidence for well-defined purposes, [including] . . . to construe contracts in relation thereto, and to ascertain the meaning
    of words and expressions therein, as well as for many other purposes.”); see TEX. BUS. & COM. CODE § 1.303(c) (“A
    ‘usage of trade’ is any practice or method of dealing having such regularity of observance in a place, vocation, or trade
    as to justify an expectation that it will be observed with respect to the transaction in question.”); accord U.C.C.
    § 1-303(c); RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF CONTRACTS §§ 220 (usage relevant to interpretation), 221 (usage supplementing
    an agreement).
    8
    admissible for the purpose of ascertaining with greater certainty what was intended
    by the parties.9
    Notwithstanding the Court’s assertion to the contrary, even when terms “can easily be understood
    according to [their] plain, ordinary, and generally accepted meaning,”10 industry custom and usage
    informs the meaning of terms that might otherwise seem intuitive to industry outsiders.11 Numerous
    states have long held so,12 and Texas is no exception.
    In Schaub v. Dallas Brewing Co., for example, the Court held that beer kegs were
    “accessories, appliances, or appurtenances” based on industry usage.13 We reasoned that the
    9
    Dwyer v. City of Brenham, 
    7 S.W. 598
    , 599 (Tex. 1888).
    10
    Ante at 11.
    11
    
    Dwyer, 7 S.W. at 599
    (“[C]ustom may control and vary the meaning of words, giving, even to such words
    as those of number, a sense entirely different from that which they commonly bear, and which, indeed, by the rules of
    language, and in ordinary cases, would be expressed by another word.”); see RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF CONTRACTS
    §§ 220 cmt. d & reporter’s note cmt. d, 222 cmt. b (noting usage is not required to “be consistent with the meaning the
    agreement would have apart from the usage”); 12 WILLISTON ON CONTRACTS § 34:5 (4th ed.) (“[N]umerous cases have
    been decided in which words with a clear normal meaning were shown by usage to bear a meaning which was not
    suggested by the ordinary language used. This is not only true of technical terms, but of language that, at least on its
    face, has no peculiar or technical meaning or significance. Therefore, evidence of usage may be admissible to give
    meaning to apparently unambiguous terms of a contract when other parol evidence would be inadmissible.”).
    12
    See, e.g., Musser Davis Land Co. v. Union Pacific Res., 
    201 F.3d 561
    , 568 (5th Cir. 2000) (holding under
    Louisiana law, industry usage means “the right to conduct prudent, reasonable seismic operations is implied within the
    exclusive and unqualified right to explore the leased premises for oil and gas”); Hickman v. Groves, 
    71 P.3d 256
    , 261
    (Wyo. 2003) (holding the appellant’s proffered testimony on the oil-and-gas-industry usage raised a fact issue as to
    whether the words “oil rights” as used within the warranty deed included both “oil and gas rights”); Sunbeam Corp. v.
    Liberty Mut. Ins. Co., 
    781 A.2d 1189
    , 1193 (Pa. 2001) (“In the law of contracts, custom in the industry or usage in the
    trade is always relevant and admissible in construing commercial contracts and does not depend on any obvious
    ambiguity in the words of the contract.”); Cleveland v. Mascho, 
    175 P. 927
    , 930 (Okla. 1918) (“[I]f . . . particular words
    and expressions have by usage acquired a meaning different from their plain, ordinary, and popular meaning, the parties
    using those words in such a contract must be taken to have used them in their peculiar sense . . . .”); Rastetter v.
    Reynolds, 
    66 N.E. 612
    , 613 (Ind. 1903) (“Common terms . . . may, in a particular business or trade, acquire a peculiar
    and different signification from that generally given to them.”); Soutier v. Kellerman, 
    18 Mo. 509
    , 510-12 (Mo. 1853)
    (holding the evidence established a trade usage in the lumber industry that “4,000 shingles” as written in the contract
    meant eight packs of shingles without reference to the number of pieces in the pack).
    
    13 16 S.W. at 430
    .
    9
    meaning of the terms “would depend on the use [the terms] were put to, their relation to the
    business, as well as the common understanding or custom in such establishments.”14 We held that
    “[e]vidence directed to such inquiries would be admissible” and, in that particular case, “it was
    proved[] by persons of experience in the brewing business.”15
    Another well-known example is a baker’s “dozen.” In the baking industry, the term means
    thirteen even when the ordinary understanding of “dozen” is twelve.16 Similarly, this Court has
    noted that a “thousand” rabbits may mean 1,200; a “day” may mean 10 hours; and “4,000” shingles
    may mean 4,500.17 Standing alone, none of these terms is industry specific; rather, lay people use
    them on a daily basis. The Court’s holding today that trade custom and usage has no applicability
    to terms that are “not susceptible to more than one meaning[] and [are] not industry or vocation
    specific” is manifestly wrong.18 And if industry custom and usage can inform the meaning of an
    ostensibly certain number, a soft term, like “consent,” could also carry a commercially significant
    context-dependent meaning, so long as the party asserting the custom and usage can meet its burden
    of proving the custom and usage has such regularity of observance as to justify an expectation that
    it will be observed with respect to the transaction in question.19 Contrary to the Court’s assertion,
    14
    
    Id. 15 Id.
             16
    WILLISTON ON CONTRACTS § 30.11.
    17
    Dwyer v. City of Brenham, 
    7 S.W. 598
    , 599 (Tex. 1888).
    18
    Ante at 22.
    19
    See, e.g., Modine Mfg. Co. v. N.E. Indep. Sch. Dist., 
    503 S.W.2d 833
    , 837-41 (Tex. App.—Beaumont 1973,
    writ ref’d n.r.e.) (holding the trial court erred in excluding custom-and-usage testimony that, in the air-conditioning
    industry, reasonable variations in cooling capacity were considered to comply with the specifications, even when the
    10
    consulting trade custom and usage here does not “add, alter, or change the contract’s agreed-to
    terms”;20 rather, the issue presented is what the “agreed-to terms” mean in the first instance, and
    evidence of trade custom and usage is admissible for that purpose.21
    2. Trade Custom and Usage Informs the Meaning of the Consent Clause
    “The existence and scope of a usage of trade are to be determined as questions of fact.”22
    Here, both parties called witnesses to testify about the asserted custom and usage. Jason Perkins,
    Raptor’s representative, testified that people in the oil-and-gas industry “would have the expectation
    that [certain] factors [] would be considered in the decision to grant or withhold consent.” Bruce
    Kramer, a leading scholar in the oil-and-gas industry, confirmed Perkins’s testimony and further
    testified that those “factors” focus on the financial and technical expertise and reputation of the
    potential assignee. This evidence raises a fact issue regarding whether industry custom and usage
    specifications did not authorize any deviations); see also Nat’l Union Fire Ins. Co. v. CBI Indus., Inc., 
    907 S.W.2d 517
    ,
    521 n.6 (Tex. 1995); cf. TEX. BUS. & COM. CODE § 1.303(c) (“The existence and scope of such a usage must be proved
    as facts. If it is established that such a usage is embodied in a trade code or similar record, the interpretation of the record
    is a question of law.”).
    20
    Ante at 21.
    21
    Section 222 of the Restatement (Second) of Contracts provides several illustrative examples:
    A promises to act as B’s agent in a certain business, and B promises to pay a certain commission for
    each “order.” By a local usage in that business, “order” means only an order on which the purchaser
    has paid a certain price. Unless otherwise agreed, the usage is part of the contract.
    A and B enter into a contract of charter party in which A promises to discharge the vessel “in 14
    days.” Usage in the shipping business may show this means 14 working days.
    A and B enter into a contract for the purchase and sale of “No. 1 heavy book paper guaranteed free
    from ground wood.” Usage in the paper trade may show that this means paper not containing over
    3% ground wood.
    Cmt. b, illus. 3, 5, 6.
    22
    
    Id. § 222(2).
    11
    limited the circumstances under which Carrizo could withhold its consent to an assignment of the
    farmout agreement. And because the existence and scope of a particular custom and usage is
    ordinarily a question of fact, the issue was properly submitted to the jury,23 and we cannot disturb
    the jury’s finding that the contracting parties understood the consent-to-assign clause to mean
    consent could not be unreasonably withheld.24
    The Court’s categorical rejection of trade-custom-and-usage evidence leads the Court to the
    erroneous conclusion that the consent clause is “silen[t] as to refusal or withholding of consent.”25
    In so holding, the Court assumes express language is necessary for the consent clause to mean
    consent cannot be unreasonably withheld. But this assumption fails because reasonableness is
    already embedded in the contract through trade custom and usage. The Court’s contrary assertion
    notwithstanding, reading a particular industry custom and usage into the consent provision would
    not rewrite the agreement because the custom and usage preexisted the agreement and “the parties
    are always presumed to contract in reference” to it “where there is nothing in the agreement to
    23
    Sun Oil Co. v. Wortman, 
    486 U.S. 717
    , 731 n.4 (1988); see TEX. BUS. & COM. CODE § 1.303(c) (unless
    established by a trade code or similar document, “[t]he existence and scope of such a usage must be proved as facts”);
    RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF CONTRACTS § 222(2) (“The existence and scope of a usage of trade are to be determined
    as questions of fact.”).
    24
    See Tanner v. Nationwide Mut. Fire Ins. Co., 
    289 S.W.3d 828
    , 830 (Tex. 2009) (“We will uphold the jury’s
    finding if more than a scintilla of competent evidence supports it.”).
    25
    Ante at 12.
    12
    exclude the inference.”26 The absence of an otherwise redundant reasonableness qualifier does not
    deprive the clause of the meaning trade custom and usage confers.
    Indeed, Carrizo’s initial offering of a draft with reasonableness explicitly expressed indicates
    Carrizo’s knowledge that an industry usage, as the jury found, imparts reasonableness into such a
    clause. The revised draft dropping the express qualifier—while not explicitly allowing consent to
    be withheld for any reason—is consistent with the jury’s finding that the usage was already part of
    the parties’ contract. Because reasonableness was embedded in the clause, no additional covenants
    or obligations would be imposed on Carrizo by reading the contract according to industry
    expectations.27 Cases implying terms or imposing a duty of good faith and fair dealing when the
    contract is silent—authority Carrizo and the Court rely on—are irrelevant to the analysis of what
    the contract says in the first place.28
    3. Negotiation History Is Barred as Parol Evidence
    The Court and JUSTICE BOYD are at odds about consulting trade custom and usage to inform
    the consent clause’s meaning, but they both urge that any consideration of such evidence
    26
    Dwyer v. City of Brenham, 
    7 S.W. 598
    , 599 (Tex. 1888); see RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF CONTRACTS § 220;
    cf. Nat’l Union Fire Ins. v. CBI Indus., Inc., 
    907 S.W.2d 517
    , 521-22 (Tex. 1995) (excluding extrinsic evidence that
    would show the parties intended to carve out a certain kind of damages from the insurance polices’ exclusions when the
    policies explicitly used the terms “absolute pollution exclusions”).
    27
    Ante at 11-12, 15, 25. The case the Court tethers its analysis to, Kachina Pipeline Co. v. Lillis, is therefore
    distinguishable. 
    471 S.W.3d 445
    (Tex. 2015). In Kachina Pipeline, the Court refused to consult a trade custom and
    usage that oil producers would typically share all compression costs with buyers because the agreement at issue expressly
    allowed the buyer to deduct compression costs only in a specific circumstance. 
    Id. at 450-51,
    454; cf. Murphy Explor.
    & Prod. Co.–USA v. Adams, 
    560 S.W.3d 105
    , 121 (Tex. 2018) (JOHNSON, J., dissenting) (noting that interpreting the
    term “offset well” in leases based on trade custom and usage would not add language to the leases or alter their terms
    because the trade-usage meaning existed “long before . . . in the context of oil and gas leases”).
    28
    Ante at Part II.A.2.
    13
    necessitates admission of all evidence pertaining to the parties’ negotiation history—not just the
    prior drafts and oral representations that were admitted into evidence, but also evidence of the
    parties’ subjective beliefs.29 This, however, plainly violates the parol evidence rule. When a
    contract is written and unambiguous, like the consent clause here, the parol evidence rule prohibits
    consideration of oral or extrinsic evidence to modify or contradict the contract’s terms.30
    To circumvent this fundamental contract-construction principle, both the Court and
    JUSTICE BOYD contend the parties’ negotiation history must be admitted into evidence—not to
    establish the terms of the parties’ written contract—but to show the parties’ intent to exclude the
    usage.31 But when the only purpose of extrinsic evidence is to show the parties intended the contract
    to say something other than what it says, such evidence is inadmissible.32
    Parties can certainly contract around a trade usage, but the intent to do so must be clear from
    the contract itself:
    Under the common law, a custom or usage may be excluded from the terms of the
    contract either expressly or by implication. It is not necessary that the parties state
    in terms that the usage is not adopted as part of the contract if they otherwise make
    their intention manifest. It is a sufficient ground for rejecting a custom as affecting
    the rights of parties to a contract that it is excluded by necessary implication of the
    contract itself. Evidence of custom or usage is therefore inadmissible when either
    expressly or impliedly excluded by the terms of the contract. . . . The test as to
    29
    Ante at 25-28; post at 2-5 (BOYD, J., dissenting).
    30
    West v. Quintanilla, 
    573 S.W.3d 237
    , 243 n.11 (Tex. 2019); URI, Inc. v. Kleberg County, 
    543 S.W.3d 755
    ,
    758 (Tex. 2018).
    31
    Ante at 25-28; post at 4-5 (BOYD, J., dissenting).
    32
    Anglo-Dutch Petrol. Int’l, Inc. v. Greenberg Peden, P.C., 
    352 S.W.3d 445
    , 451 (Tex. 2011) (circumstances
    surrounding a contract’s execution “cannot be used to show that the parties probably meant, or could have meant,
    something other than what their agreement stated”).
    14
    whether the custom or usage is repugnant to the contract is whether the custom or
    usage, if written into the contract, would make it not sensible or inconsistent.33
    The determination of whether the parties did or did not intend to contract with respect to a trade
    custom or usage depends on “the terms of the particular contract in dispute,” considered “as a whole,
    including both its express words and its necessary implications.”34 Whether the parties intended to
    negate a particular usage is thus determined by consulting the contract language. The authority the
    Court and JUSTICE BOYD cite as requiring consideration of the negotiation history does not support
    the proposition that evidence directed to the parties’ subjective intent is—contrary to the parol
    evidence rule—admissible.35
    33
    12 WILLISTON ON CONTRACTS § 34.11 (emphasis added); see Kachina Pipeline Co. v. Lillis, 
    471 S.W.3d 445
    ,
    450-51, 454 (Tex. 2015) (declining to consult a trade custom and usage because it would conflict with the contract’s
    express terms).
    34
    12 WILLISTON ON CONTRACTS § 34.11.
    35
    See ante at 25-26 and post at 4-5 (BOYD, J., dissenting), relying on the following authority: URI, Inc. v.
    Kleberg County, 
    543 S.W.3d 755
    , 769 (Tex. 2018) (excluding extrinsic evidence of the party’s subjective intent to
    construe the unambiguous contract language); Nat’l Union Fire Ins., Co. v. CBI Indus., Inc., 
    907 S.W.2d 517
    , 521-22
    (Tex. 1995) (excluding extrinsic evidence that would show the parties’ intent to contradict express contract language);
    City of Pinehurst v. Spooner Addition Water Co., 
    432 S.W.2d 515
    , 515-19 (Tex. 1968) (providing no discussion and
    raising no issue about the parties’ intent to contract around industry custom and usage); RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF
    CONTRACTS §§ 212 (commenting on when extrinsic evidence is admissible to interpret an integrated agreement without
    any discussion as to whether this kind of evidence can be used to show the parties’ intent to contract around industry
    custom and usage), 222 (stating only that trade usage becomes part of the contract “unless agreed otherwise” without
    saying a contradictory agreement can be established by parol evidence); 25 C.J.S. Customs & Usages §§ 27, 29 (using
    extrinsic evidence to ascertain the meaning of contract terms rather than to establish parties’ intent to contract around
    industry custom and usage); 12 WILLISTON ON CONTRACTS § 34:11 (indicating intent to disclaim a trade usage must be
    found within the contract’s terms); David H. Moore, The Parol Evidence Rule and the United Nations Convention on
    Contracts for the International Sale of Goods: Justifying Beijing Metals & Minerals Import/Export Corp. v. American
    Business Center, Inc., 1995 B.Y.U. L. REV. 1347, 1354-55 (1995) (discussing separately whether evidence of trade usage
    and prior negotiations should each be admitted to interpret a contract rather than supporting the proposition that prior
    negotiations are admissible to establish the parties’ intent not to incorporate the usage).
    15
    Carrizo could have contracted around trade custom and usage, but it chose not to.36 To limit
    or exclude a trade custom or usage, parties can expressly agree that trade custom and usages will not
    apply to the contract.37 Another method for excluding a trade usage is to define terms in a way that
    differs from the industry understanding.38 Here, Carrizo could haven excluded the trade usage by
    generally disclaiming any intent to contract with regard to a usage or expressly stating that consent
    could be withheld for any or no reason. Carrizo not only failed to contract around the trade custom
    and usage, it repeatedly assured Barrow-Shaver it would give consent—confirming, rather than
    negating, an intent to conform to industry custom.39
    Even if evidence of the parties’ negotiations were admitted, it would yield, at best, equal
    inferences. Perhaps the Court and JUSTICE BOYD are correct that if additional negotiation evidence
    were admitted, the jury could infer the parties agreed to an unqualified consent clause because a
    reasonableness limitation was expressly inserted and then purposefully removed from drafts of the
    farmout agreement. Even so, the same circumstances—especially coupled with Carrizo’s oral
    promises—are equally consistent with the parties’ understanding that the deleted language was
    redundant because the consent clause was already subject to a reasonableness standard. Under the
    36
    See Bruce E. Cryder & R. Clay Larkin, Consent Provisions in Natural Resource Agreements, 30 ENERGY &
    MIN. L. INST. 55, 93 (2009) (“Given the strong trend toward requiring that consent be only ‘reasonably’ withheld,
    drafters should not neglect this aspect of the lease. If the parties intend that consent may be unreasonably or arbitrarily
    withheld, this should be stated explicitly and specifically in the consent provision.”).
    37
    12 WILLISTON ON CONTRACTS § 34.11.
    38
    
    Id. 39 RESTATEMENT
    (SECOND) OF CONTRACTS § 221 cmt. d (a usage is not applicable only “[i]f either party has
    reason to know that the other has an intention inconsistent with a particular usage” (emphasis added)).
    16
    equal inferences rule, the negotiation history has no evidentiary value, and the trial court did not err
    in excluding it on that basis or on parol evidence grounds.40
    4. Trade Custom and Usage Is Not Equivalent to Judicially Imposed Terms
    Based on the false conclusion that the consent clause is “silent” as to withholding consent,
    the Court refuses to read into the clause a reasonableness requirement as the jury found, alleging
    courts should not supplement “terms [that] are immaterial to the farmout agreement.”41 This
    misstates the law.
    First, the scope of trade custom and usage is much broader than the material and essential
    terms the Court contemplates—trade custom and usage actually includes an array of practices not
    just a single term like timing, price, or quantity.42 Second, and more importantly, when giving effect
    to a trade custom and usage, a court is not imposing a definite term that the court itself considers
    reasonable, but rather a usage formed by the industry. These distinctions explain why the
    Restatement (Second) of Contracts treats these two contract-interpretation approaches differently
    and defers to trade custom and usage—under Restatement section 204, courts may impose a
    40
    See City of Keller v. Wilson, 
    168 S.W.3d 802
    , 813 (Tex. 2005) (“When the circumstances are equally
    consistent with either of two facts, neither fact may be inferred.”).
    41
    Ante at 15.
    42
    See, e.g., RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF CONTRACTS § 221 cmt. b, illus. 3 (interpreting a stock order in
    accordance with the usages of the New York Stock Exchange); Dall. Oil & Ref’g Co. v. Wash. Cotton Oil Co., 
    283 S.W. 345
    , 346 (Tex. App.—El Paso 1926, writ dism’d w.o.j.) (noting the witnesses all agreed that the words “first made
    October, as made” in the cotton-oil contract are “trade terms” and mean (1) the oil sold is oil produced in October;
    (2) “first made” means the buyer has the right to demand, and the seller has the right to require the buyer to accept, the
    first made in that month; and (3) “as made” means that as each tank car is produced, the buyer has the right to demand
    its delivery, and the seller has the right to demand its acceptance).
    17
    reasonableness term only when the term is essential to the contract43 and only when there’s no
    applicable trade custom and usage;44 in comparison, section 221 provides that trade custom and
    usage prevails over terms courts might supply under section 204 and is not limited to supplementing
    only material or essential terms.45 In portraying my analysis as “a veiled attempt to use industry
    custom and usage to create a covenant of reasonableness and good faith,” the Court conflates these
    interpretive approaches.46 Indeed, none of the authority the Court cites supports the proposition that
    trade custom and usage is limited to supplying material or essential terms.47
    Mindful of the conceptual distinction between these two approaches, I am not proposing to
    impose reasonableness on the parties as a matter of law; rather, reasonableness is woven into this
    particular clause because in this particular context, industry custom and usage, as found by the jury,
    demands so. Consulting trade custom and usage for contract interpretation is far from being a
    43
    RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF CONTRACTS § 204.
    44
    
    Id. § 221
    cmt. a (“[When a contract fails to avert to the problem with which the usage deals,] in the absence
    of usage, the court would supply a reasonable term [according to section 204]. But if there is a reasonable usage . . . ,
    it is a surer guide than the court’s own judgment of what is reasonable. Thus a usage may make it unnecessary to inquire
    into or prove what the actual intentions of the parties were with respect to an unstated term.” (emphasis added)).
    45
    
    Id. 46 Ante
    at 25.
    47
    See ante at 13-15, 22-24; Fischer v. CTMI, L.L.C., 
    479 S.W.3d 231
    , 239-40 (Tex. 2016) (considering trade
    usage as one source for construing contract language without confining it to supplementing only essential terms);
    McCalla v. Baker’s Campground, Inc., 
    416 S.W.3d 416
    , 418 (Tex. 2013) (considering whether a contract had all the
    material terms essential to enforceability, but not involving any question of trade custom and usage); Centex Homes v.
    Buecher, 
    95 S.W.3d 266
    , 274 (Tex. 2002) (noting courts may supplement implied terms based on Restatement section
    204, which as discussed above, is distinguished from consulting trade usage); Nat’l Union Fire Ins. Co. v. CBI Indus.
    Inc., 
    907 S.W.2d 517
    , 521 (Tex. 1995) (holding extrinsic evidence is inadmissible to contradict or vary the meaning of
    explicit contract language without addressing whether the contract terms were material or essential); T.O. Stanley Boot
    Co. v. Bank of El Paso, 
    847 S.W.2d 218
    , 221 (Tex. 1992) (the issue being whether sufficient evidence established a
    material contract term necessary to make the contract enforceable and having nothing to do with trade usage).
    18
    newfangled idea. Courts act as gatekeepers in requiring proof to raise an issue about trade custom
    and usage, and when parties have duly satisfied their burden of proof, we must trust our juries to
    evaluate evidence of the existence and meaning of a proffered custom and usage.48 The Court’s
    concern that introducing trade custom and usage would subject “every term, word, or phrase in every
    agreement” to “litigation and ultimately a jury determination” is no more than groundless hysteria.49
    The notion that trade custom and usage can inform the meaning of a contract’s terms is centuries old
    and has yet to create the cataclysm the Court fears.50
    5. The Court’s Holding Thwarts Oil and Gas Development and Distorts the Jury’s Findings
    Context matters when interpreting a contract,51 especially when industry custom and usage
    is at issue.52 When the contractual context is considered here, the Court’s holding is even more
    troubling. A farmout agreement is “[a] very common form of agreement between operators,
    48
    At bottom, the Court’s true quarrel is with the nature of the evidence the trial court relied on in finding a fact
    issue about trade custom and usage. See RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF CONTRACTS § 220(1) & cmt. b (usage is relevant
    to interpretation if each party knew or had reason to know of the usage, so “a party who asserts a meaning based on usage
    must show either that the other party knew of the usage or that the other party had reason to know of it”). The Court
    avoids tackling the evidentiary issue head on by taking a back-door approach that effectively precludes any term with
    an “ordinary” meaning from having a trade custom and usage. As trade custom and usage often informs the meaning
    of words that are unambiguous in their ordinary or legal meaning, this approach abrogates trade custom and usage as
    a viable contract-construction principle. See supra part II, A.1. Indeed, Carrizo challenged before the court of appeals
    the sufficiency of the trade-custom-and-usage evidence Barrow-Shaver proffered, but Carrizo did not fully brief the
    argument here. In any event, Carrizo’s challenge goes to the weight of evidence, and I would conclude the trial court
    properly exercised its discretion in allowing evidence on trade custom and usage.
    49
    Ante at 22.
    50
    See Hubert Hall, Select Cases concerning the Law Merchant, A.D. 1239-1633, at 15 (46 Selden Society,
    Bernard Quaritch 1930).
    51
    TGS-NOPEC Geophysical Co. v. Combs, 
    340 S.W.3d 432
    , 441 (Tex. 2011).
    52
    Tekelec, Inc. v. Verint Sys., Inc., 
    708 F.3d 658
    , 665 (5th Cir. 2013) (“Under Texas law, the words of a contract
    must be read in context . . . .”); see David E. Pierce, Defining the Role of Industry Custom and Usage in Oil & Gas
    Litigation, 57 SMU L. REV. 387, 451 (2004) (“There is no ‘precedent’ that establishes a usage in one case that will
    necessarily be applicable to another case. . . . [T]he function of usage evidence is to provide context to interpret a
    particular agreement, between specific parties.”).
    19
    whereby a lease owner not desirous of drilling at the time agrees to assign the lease, or some portion
    of it . . . to another operator who is desirous of drilling the tract.”53 As the facts of this case
    illustrate, farmout agreements allow new parties with innovative ideas, more financial resources, or
    more advanced technologies to undertake more efficient operations under the mineral lease while
    allowing the farmor to preserve its leasehold interest.54 The testimony at trial underscores the point.
    Brad Fisher, Carrizo’s representative, testified that Carrizo’s reason for arranging a farmout with
    Barrow-Shaver was to embrace “new ideas” that Barrow-Shaver could bring to drilling horizontal
    wells; and Scott Shaver, Barrow-Shaver’s founder, likewise considered Raptor a “Godsend” with
    “a better idea” who “could do better.”
    By endorsing Carrizo’s behavior—which the jury found to be unreasonable and
    fraudulent—the Court nullifies the fundamental goal of farmout agreements and frustrates public
    policy. Because Carrizo did not consent, Raptor lost the chance to replace Barrow-Shaver as the
    farmee to operate a lease that was no longer lucrative to Barrow-Shaver but still desirable to Raptor,
    and all the mineral-interest holders in the chain of title lost the opportunity to receive their share of
    royalty from Raptor’s drilling operations.            In fact, after the Raptor deal fell through and
    Barrow-Shaver’s farmout expired, Carrizo did not drill any well on the tract and allowed the Parkey
    lease to expire. The shenanigans the Court says two sophisticated parties explicitly agreed to allow
    caused the minerals on the 22,000-acre Parkey tract to remain undeveloped, which is repugnant to
    53
    Patrick H. Martin & Bruce M. Kramer, Manual of Oil & Gas Terms, in WILLIAMS & MEYERS, OIL AND GAS
    LAW, (LexisNexis Matthew Bender 2018) (emphasis added).
    54
    See John S. Lowe, Analyzing Oil and Gas Farmout Agreements, 41 Sw. L.J. 759, 778-82 (1987) (discussing
    reasons why mineral lessees choose farmout arrangements).
    20
    our statewide policy to promote oil-and-gas exploration and development.55 No one—including the
    holdout party—benefits from the Court’s categorical holding.
    To blunt what will surely be a holding detrimental to the oil-and-gas industry, the Court
    contrives to justify Carrizo’s assumed motivations by directly and indirectly implying that Raptor
    was not a proper assignee,56 despite (1) the jury’s finding to the contrary and (2) the Court’s asserted
    holding that reasonableness is entirely irrelevant. Ironically, the Court’s continued validation of
    Carrizo’s purported motives exposes the weakness in its analysis: the Court holds that Carrizo could
    withhold consent unreasonably under the terms of the contract without running afoul of public
    policy but defends that conclusion only by assuming Carrizo had a valid reason for withholding
    consent. Whether Raptor was a viable candidate and whether Carrizo behaved unreasonably under
    the circumstances are questions of fact for the jury to resolve, not the Court. Here, without giving
    a reason and as the sole hold-out, Carrizo pressed for a $5 million pay day knowing the clock was
    running out on Barrow-Shaver’s deal with Raptor. The jury, as it was entitled to do, found Carrizo
    acted unreasonably. Second-guessing the jury findings is merely a diversion from the unsettling and
    expansive implications of today’s opinion.
    On that score, what is most disconcerting about the Court’s opinion is the absence of any
    limiting principle. The Court’s reasoning is rooted in general contract principles and is highly
    55
    See, e.g., Getty Oil Co. v. Jones, 
    470 S.W.2d 618
    , 622-23 (Tex. 1971) (noting an alternative method of
    producing wells “would serve the public policy of developing our mineral resources”); Brown v. Humble Oil & Ref. Co.,
    
    87 S.W.2d 1069
    , 1070 (Tex. 1935) (noting “the Legislature enacted certain laws which declare the public policy of the
    state with respect to the development and conservation of oil and gas”).
    56
    Ante at 39-40.
    21
    amenable to extrapolation beyond the narrow context of this case, thus inviting and even
    encouraging industry-wide holdout problems.
    B. Fraud
    Because I would hold that Barrow-Shaver prevails on its contract claim and Barrow-Shaver
    elected that remedy, I would not reach the fraud claim. But if I were to reach the fraud claim, I
    would conclude Barrow-Shaver has a viable fraudulent-inducement claim.
    Barrow-Shaver alleges, and the jury found, that Carrizo entered into the farmout agreement
    with no intent to consent to an assignment despite its oral representations that it would do so and
    contrary to contract terms that require it to reasonably do so. We have held that “a fraud claim can
    be based on a promise made with no intention of performing, irrespective of whether the promise
    is later subsumed within a contract” because “the legal duty not to fraudulently procure a contract
    is separate and independent from the duties established by the contract itself.”57 We have recognized
    that “[b]reach alone is no evidence that breach was intended when the contract was originally
    made,” but “breach combined with ‘slight circumstantial evidence’ of fraud is enough to support a
    verdict for fraudulent inducement.”58 And while fraudulent intent “is determined at the time the
    party made the representation, it may be inferred from the party’s subsequent acts after the
    representation is made.”59 The record here bears at least slight circumstantial evidence of intent not
    to perform, and Carrizo does not challenge the fraud verdict for the lack of fraudulent intent.
    57
    Formosa Plastics Corp. USA v. Presidio Eng’rs & Contractors, Inc., 
    960 S.W.2d 41
    , 46 (Tex. 1998).
    58
    Tony Gullo Motors I, L.P. v. Chapa, 
    212 S.W.3d 299
    , 305 (Tex. 2006) (quoting Formosa 
    Plastics, 960 S.W.2d at 48
    ).
    59
    Spoljaric v. Percival Tours, Inc., 
    708 S.W.2d 432
    , 434 (Tex. 1986).
    22
    The only fraud element contested here is justifiable reliance—that is, whether
    Barrow-Shaver’s reliance on Carrizo’s verbal promises was justified. The analysis of this question
    turns, in part, on what the contract says, and under a consent clause informed by trade custom and
    usage, Carrizo’s verbal promises are entirely consistent with what the consent clause says.
    Accordingly, I would hold Barrow-Shaver established justifiable reliance as a matter of law.
    Nevertheless, because Barrow-Shaver elected to recover on its contract claim and could do so under
    my disposition, it ultimately would not recover on its fraud claim.
    Unfortunately, my disposition of the contract claim has not carried the day. A majority of
    the Court concludes the consent clause is unqualified, and under that interpretation of the contract,
    the Court correctly concludes Barrow-Shaver would not be justified in relying on an oral
    representation that consent would be granted when the contract imposes no obligation on Carrizo
    to do so. I therefore concur with the Court’s judgment on the fraud claim pursuant to which
    Barrow-Shaver takes nothing.
    III. Conclusion
    I would reverse and render judgment in Barrow-Shaver’s favor based on the jury’s finding
    that Carrizo breached the farmout agreement by failing to act in accordance with the consent
    provision as understood in the industry. Though I disagree with the Court’s contract analysis, the
    disposition of Barrow-Shaver’s fraud claim turns on the contract’s interpretation, and under either
    my disposition of the contract claim or the Court’s, Barrow-Shaver would not recover on its fraud
    claim, albeit for distinctly different reasons. I therefore respectfully concur in part and dissent in
    part to the Court’s opinion and judgment.
    23
    ___________________________________
    Eva M. Guzman
    Justice
    OPINION DELIVERED: June 28, 2019
    24