Seismic Wells, L.L.C. v. Sinclair Companies ( 2018 )


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  •      Case: 17-10373      Document: 00514625389         Page: 1    Date Filed: 08/31/2018
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT
    United States Court of Appeals
    Fifth Circuit
    No. 17-10373                            FILED
    August 31, 2018
    Lyle W. Cayce
    SEISMIC WELLS, L.L.C.; BARRY TRANCKINO,                                       Clerk
    Plaintiffs-Appellants,
    v.
    THE SINCLAIR COMPANIES; SINCLAIR OIL CORPORATION;
    SINCLAIR OIL AND GAS COMPANY; ROSS B. MATTHEWS,
    Defendants-Appellees.
    Appeals from the United States District Court
    for the Northern District of Texas
    USDC No. 5:15-CV-148
    Before JOLLY, JONES, and HAYNES, Circuit Judges.
    PER CURIAM: *
    Seismic Wells, L.L.C. and Barry Tranckino appeal the district court’s
    order granting the Sinclair Companies’ motion for judgment as a matter of law
    (“JMOL”) on its fraud-based claims and its breach of contract claims related to
    two contracts between Appellants and the Sinclair Companies. Appellants also
    appeal the district court’s denial of its motion to supplement the record on
    appeal with video deposition testimony that it argues was presented to the jury
    * Pursuant to 5TH CIR. R. 47.5, the court has determined that this opinion should not
    be published and is not precedent except under the limited circumstances set forth in 5TH
    CIR. R. 47.5.4.
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    No. 17-10373
    as testimonial evidence but was not transcribed into the record. The court has
    carefully considered this appeal in light of the briefs, oral arguments of
    counsel, and pertinent portions of the record. We find no reversible error in any
    of the trial court rulings for the following reasons.
    I.
    Seismic Wells, L.L.C., a company that leases land to collect seismic data
    and determine areas that will profitably produce oil and gas, had a lease on
    property known as the Miller Ranch, which covers about 20,000 acres of land
    in Borden and Garza counties, Texas. In May 2005, Seismic Wells entered a
    participation agreement (“Initial Participation Agreement”) with a company
    then called Sinclair Oil Corporation (“Sinclair 1”).         The parties’ dispute
    concerning the Initial Participation Agreement centers on the implications of
    a series of corporate reorganizations that Sinclair 1 completed following the
    agreement.
    Through the Initial Participation Agreement, Sinclair 1 purchased a
    37.5% interest in Seismic Wells’s lease on the Miller Ranch. As part of the
    agreement, Seismic Wells agreed to provide Sinclair 1 a copy of its three-
    dimensional seismic data which covered the lease, subject to the caveat that
    Sinclair 1 had no ownership of the data and could not “sell, trade or license the
    [d]ata to any third party.” Though Seismic Wells was the operator of the
    leases, Sinclair 1 had the option to assume operations with “no obligation to do
    so.” If Sinclair 1 assumed operations and decided to “sell, transfer or otherwise
    dispose of its interest in the [l]eases,” then Seismic Wells had “the first and
    exclusive right to assume operations of the [l]eases.” Barry Tranckino, Seismic
    Wells’s sole member and corporate representative, signed the Initial
    Participation Agreement, and Ross Matthews, Senior Vice President of
    Sinclair 1, signed on its behalf.
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    In late 2005, Sinclair began a corporate reorganization, creating
    subsidiaries to take over existing business lines. 1               Sinclair Petroleum
    Company, later renamed Sinclair Oil Corporation (“Sinclair 2”), was formed in
    December 2005 and became a parent company for subsidiaries holding
    Sinclair’s oil and gas assets. Sinclair 1 also created a new legal entity called
    Sinclair Oil and Gas Company (“Sinclair 3”), which was the same assumed
    name that Sinclair 1 had previously owned.                Sinclair 3 was one of the
    subsidiaries placed under Sinclair 2. The Miller Ranch lease was transferred
    from Sinclair 1 to Sinclair 2, and then from Sinclair 2 to Sinclair 3, by means
    of asset transfers to the newly created subsidiaries.
    Sinclair 2 and Sinclair 3 both registered to conduct business in Texas in
    February 2006 by filing the necessary paperwork with the Texas Secretary of
    State. In March 2006, Sinclair 3 also submitted a P-5 Organization Report to
    the Texas Railroad Commission to take over Sinclair 1’s operator bond. The
    form indicated Sinclair 3 had a different operator number than Sinclair 1.
    Months after the corporate reorganization, Sinclair 3 reached out to
    Seismic Wells regarding the rights of Sinclair 3 under the Initial Participation
    Agreement. A new employee of Sinclair 3 called Seismic Wells to inform it that
    Sinclair was electing to exercise its option to assume operations and was
    interested in acquiring additional rights. Following this conversation, Seismic
    Wells and Sinclair 3 began negotiations to determine their new interests and
    obligations. At trial, Tranckino testified he believed the parties would amend
    the Initial Participation Agreement, but instead, he received a Replacement
    Participation Agreement. Notably, the Replacement Participation Agreement
    was entered into by Seismic Wells and “Sinclair Oil and Gas Company, a
    1  The three Sinclair entities sued by Seismic Wells are referred to collectively as
    “Sinclair.”
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    Wyoming corporation with offices located at 550 East South Temple, Salt Lake
    City, Utah 84102.” This Sinclair Oil and Gas Company was Sinclair 3, a
    different legal entity from that named in the Initial Participation Agreement,
    but to repeat, it bore the assumed name of Sinclair 1. 2
    The Replacement Participation Agreement redefined certain rights and
    obligations of Seismic Wells and Sinclair 3 contained in the Initial
    Participation Agreement. First, Sinclair 3 acquired an additional 15.625%
    working interest in the Miller Ranch lease from Seismic Wells for $937,500.
    Tranckino admitted this was “certainly” a fair market value for the additional
    interest purchased by Sinclair 3. Second, Sinclair 3 became the operator of the
    wells. Third, the contract stated that “should SOG sell, transfer or otherwise
    dispose of its interest in the [l]eases, Seismic Wells shall have the first and
    exclusive right to assume operations of the [l]eases.” 3
    The parties also signed an Assignment and Bill of Sale the same day as
    the Replacement Participation Agreement. The Assignment and Bill of Sale
    contained a provision indicating an assignment by Sinclair 1, stating:
    “For purposes of clarification and acknowledgement, reference is
    made to that certain Assignment and Bill of Sale by and between
    Assignor and Sinclair Oil Corporation effective the 1st day of June
    2005, . . . wherein Assignee was conveyed 3/8ths of 8/8ths
    undivided interest in and to the same Assignee’s Assigned Interests
    being assigned herein . . . ; Sinclair Oil Corporation, on or before
    March 1, 2006, assigned to Sinclair Oil and Gas Company,
    therefore, the interest conveyed in the [June 2005] [a]ssignment of
    interest coupled with the conveyance in this Assignment and Bill
    of Sale increases Assignee’s interest to 17/32nds of 8/8ths in
    Assignee’s Assigned Interest.”
    2  The parties agree the Replacement Participation Agreement included inaccurate
    statements. Specifically, each inaccuracy reflected Sinclair 3 was a party to the Initial
    Participation Agreement, when in reality, Sinclair 1 was the proper party.
    3   The Replacement Participation Agreement referred to Sinclair 3 as “SOG”.
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    Finally, the parties executed a Joint Operating Agreement, which
    required Sinclair 3 to provide a tax identification number. In doing so, Ross
    Matthews, President of Sinclair 3, erroneously wrote in Sinclair 1’s tax
    identification number.
    To formalize the change to Sinclair 3 as the operator of the wells, Seismic
    Wells was required to send Sinclair 3 completed Form P-4s to file with the
    Texas Railroad Commission. Form P-4s must have two pieces of information
    from the Form P-5: the new operator name exactly as shown on the P-5 and
    the new operator’s operator number.        Sinclair 3 received Form P-4s from
    Seismic Wells that correctly recited Sinclair 3’s operator information: the name
    Sinclair Oil and Gas Company and the operator number, 784548, which was
    different from Sinclair 1’s operator number, 784546. Tranckino denies ever
    seeing the Form P-5, which he states was unavailable publicly, and asserts
    that because he outsourced the forms’ completion to another company, he did
    not look at the Form P-4s.
    In 2011, five years after the parties signed the Replacement
    Participation Agreement, Seismic Wells sold its working interest in all but
    about 200 acres of the Miller Ranch Lease to Bold Energy. Subsequently, in
    2014, Bold Energy and Sinclair 3 decided to jointly market the interests they
    each owned in the lease. When Bold Energy informed Seismic Wells of the
    plan, Seismic Wells replied that Sinclair had no right to transfer operations to
    a third party or sell and distribute [its] seismic data. Seismic Wells eventually
    notified Sinclair 3 that it intended to exercise its contractual right to become
    the successor operator of the Miller Ranch wells should Sinclair 3 attempt to
    sell out.   Through counsel, Sinclair advised Seismic Wells in writing on
    June 20, 2014 that Seismic owned no leasehold interest nor residual rights in
    the Lease, consequently, Sinclair, as the exclusive operator, could assign its
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    interest without Seismic’s consent. Only after Seismic Wells received this
    letter did it begin investigating and ascertained that Sinclair 1 and Sinclair 3
    were different entities.
    Though the Sinclair entities’ corporate reorganization had no effect on
    the sale of Seismic Wells’s interest to Bold Energy, Seismic Wells saw the
    reorganization as providing grounds to sue the Sinclair companies and
    Matthews for various forms of fraud, breaches of the two Participation
    Agreements, and misinterpretation of the assignment to Bold Energy. The
    case proceeded to jury trial, but the district court granted Sinclair’s motion for
    JMOL after Seismic Wells rested and without hearing any defense evidence.
    On appeal, Seismic Wells challenges the JMOL on several claims of
    fraud, breach of the Initial Participation Agreement, and breach of the
    Replacement Participation Agreement. Seismic Wells also contests the district
    court’s denial of its motion to supplement the record with video depositions
    that were introduced as testimonial evidence at trial.
    II.
    This court reviews the grant of JMOL by a district court de novo. See
    Broussard v. State Farm Fire & Cas. Co., 
    523 F.3d 618
    , 624 (5th Cir. 2008).
    JMOL should be granted “only if the facts and inferences point so strongly and
    overwhelmingly in favor of one party that the Court believes that reasonable
    men could not arrive at a contrary verdict.” Brown v. Bryan Cty., 
    219 F.3d 450
    ,
    456 (5th Cir. 2000) (quoting Boeing v. Shipman, 
    411 F.2d 365
    , 374 (5th Cir.
    1969) (en banc), overruled on other grounds, Gautreaux v. Scurlock Marine,
    Inc., 
    107 F.3d 331
    (5th Cir. 1997) (en banc)). However, JMOL should be denied
    if reasonable people could view the evidence and arrive at different conclusions.
    See 
    id. The court
    “consider[s] all of the evidence, drawing all reasonable
    inferences and resolving all credibility determinations in the light most
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    favorable to the non-moving party.” 
    Id. (internal quotation
    marks omitted)
    (quoting 
    Brown, 219 F.3d at 456
    ).
    This court reviews the denial of a motion to supplement the record on
    appeal for abuse of discretion. See Ghali v. United States, 455 F. App’x 472,
    475 (5th Cir. 2011) (per curiam).
    III.
    A. Motion to Supplement the Record
    During the course of the trial, Seismic Wells put on ten witnesses,
    including five via videotaped depositions. The videotaped depositions were
    entered as the testimony of the witnesses in the videos, but for reasons never
    explained, the depositions were not entered into the record. The district court
    denied Seismic Wells’s motion to supplement the record on appeal because the
    parties could not agree on which segments of the depositions the jury heard at
    trial.
    There is no doubt that portions of the deposition testimony were offered
    in evidence, and they should have been transcribed by the court reporter. See
    28 U.S.C. § 753(b) (“Each session of the court and every other proceeding
    designated by rule or order of the court or by one of the judges shall be recorded
    verbatim . . . .”); FED. R. CIV. P. 32. That the court reporter failed to record the
    testimony at all is a significant breach of duty.
    Nevertheless, the unavailability of the oral deposition testimony is not
    material for purposes of this appeal. Only one contention made by Seismic
    Wells involves the deposition testimony – a geophysicist employee’s statement
    about seismic data in support of Seismic Wells’s damages claim.                 This
    particular testimony, however, merely supports the other ample information
    in the record speaking to the alleged monetary value of the seismic data.
    Although the trial transcript is inaccurate through no fault of the parties, the
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    trial court did not commit a miscarriage of justice that would justify granting
    a new trial, see Baisden v. I’m Ready Prods., Inc., 
    693 F.3d 491
    , 509 n.17 (5th
    Cir. 2012); and in any event, Sinclair indicated it would not oppose
    consideration of the video evidence, should it be necessary.                       Under these
    circumstances, the district court’s denial of Seismic Wells’s motion to
    supplement the record on appeal is harmless error. See United States v.
    Asprilla, 
    42 F.3d 640
    , 641 (5th Cir. 1994) (holding the error is harmless where,
    assuming a district court incorrectly grants a party’s motion to supplement the
    record, this court does not consider the documents).
    B. Judgment as a Matter of Law
    1. Fraud Claims
    Seismic Wells’s fraud claims center on the contention that Sinclair, along
    with its corporate representative Ross Matthews, committed and conspired to
    commit various frauds against it by misrepresenting that Sinclair 1 and
    Sinclair 3 were the same entity. Specifically, Seismic Wells claims that a
    reasonable jury could have found liability on four theories. First, Sinclair 1 is
    secondarily liable for statutory fraud under Texas Business and Commerce
    Code § 27.01(a), 4 because Matthews and Scott Mayeda, corporate counsel for
    Sinclair 1, signed the Initial Participation Agreement on behalf of Sinclair 1,
    Matthews signed and Mayeda initialed the Replacement Participation
    Agreement, and Sinclair 1 benefitted from the fraud by avoiding liability for
    4   Texas Business and Commerce Code § 27.01(a) states,
    Fraud in a transaction involving real estate or stock in a corporation or
    joint stock company consists of a
    (1) false representation of a past or existing material fact, when the
    false representation is
    (A) made to a person for the purpose of inducing that person to
    enter into a contract; and
    (B) relied on by that person in entering into that contract . . . .
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    breach of the Initial Participation Agreement. Second, Sinclair 2 is secondarily
    liable for statutory fraud under Texas Business and Commerce Code § 27.01(a)
    because Mayeda worked with Sinclair 2 and was aware of all of the
    assignments from Sinclair 1 to Sinclair 2 and then from Sinclair 2 to Sinclair 3.
    Third, Sinclair 3 is liable for common law fraud, statutory fraud, fraud by non-
    disclosure, and false promises. Fourth, Matthews is liable for common law
    fraud, statutory fraud, fraud by non-disclosure, and false promises, because he
    signed the Replacement Participation Agreement and the Initial Participation
    Agreement.    All of these theories depend on the impact of the corporate
    reorganization within the Sinclair entities upon the parties’ participation
    agreements, and more specifically, on the extent to which Sinclair’s lack of
    transparency about the reorganization was fraudulent.
    Whether any of these theories ultimately has merit is dubious. We do
    not discuss them, however, because we are persuaded that as a matter of law,
    Seismic Wells sat on its rights too long before filing suit on June 5, 2015, nine
    years after every alleged fraudulent representation or nondisclosure occurred.
    Sinclair, in other words, bore its burden to prove that the statute of limitations
    ran on these causes of action. In re Hensley, 
    201 F.3d 638
    , 644 (5th Cir. 2000)
    (party asserting limitations defense bears burden of proof).
    Under Texas law, a four-year statute of limitations applies for all
    varieties of fraud. See TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE § 16.004(a)(4). Fraud-
    based claims in Texas generally accrue on the date the fraud is committed. See
    Hooks v. Samson Lone Star, Ltd. P’ship, 
    457 S.W.3d 52
    , 57 (Tex. 2015).
    Limitations may be tolled, however, if the fraud could not have been discovered
    by the plaintiff in the exercise of reasonable diligence.         Shell Oil 
    Co., 356 S.W.3d at 929
    . Whether the party used reasonable diligence is generally
    a fact question for the jury, but the court can determine it as a matter of law if
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    the party had actual or constructive notice of its claim, “or when information
    is ‘readily accessible and publicly available.’” 
    Id. (quoting Shell
    Oil Co. v. Ross,
    
    356 S.W.3d 924
    , 929 (Tex. 2011)).
    Seismic Wells contends it did not have a reasonable opportunity to
    discover the fraud until it filed this lawsuit. Fraudulent concealment on the
    part of the defendant “prevents the running of the statute of limitations until
    it is discovered, or by the exercise of reasonable diligence might have been
    discovered.”     
    Hooks, 457 S.W.3d at 57
    (internal quotation marks omitted)
    (quoting Ruebeck v. Hunt, 
    176 S.W.2d 738
    , 739 (1943)). But Sinclair gave
    Seismic Wells both actual and constructive notice of the different entities’
    existence by means of the parties’ agreements and public filings. Therefore,
    Sinclair neither fraudulently concealed the corporate reorganization nor
    deprived Seismic Wells of a reasonable opportunity to learn of the
    restructuring.
    To begin, the language of the Replacement Participation Agreement’s
    Assignment and Bill of Sale, drafted by Sinclair, provided Seismic Wells with
    actual knowledge of the existence of Sinclair 3 as a separate entity from
    Sinclair 1. As quoted above, a provision in the Assignment and Bill of Sale
    states, “Sinclair Oil Corporation, on or about March 1, 2006, assigned to
    Sinclair Oil and Gas Company . . . the interest conveyed in the [June 2005]
    [a]ssignment of interest.” That Tranckino believed that the language meant
    Sinclair had simply assigned the lease to itself is not reasonable.           As a
    sophisticated businessman, Tranckino should have known there was no
    justification for Sinclair’s assigning the lease to itself, or at the very least
    should have inquired as to the reason for this language. Tranckino’s confusion
    is not sufficient to overcome the statements in this document, which actually,
    if inartfully, conveyed actual information about the Sinclair corporate entities.
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    Other evidence of record supports that Seismic Wells had actual notice
    of the corporate reorganization, including the fact that Sinclair provided
    Seismic Wells with a Form P-4 that restated Sinclair 3’s Operator Number
    from its Form P-5, rather than Sinclair 1’s Operator Number. Sinclair 3’s Form
    P-5 contained its operator number, 784548, and also accurately stated that
    Sinclair 1 was the previous organization operating in Texas, with an operator
    number of 784546. Again, Tranckino’s testimony that Seismic Wells delegated
    completion of the Form P-4s and never looked at the Form P-5s does not obviate
    the fact that the Form P-5s were on file with the Railroad Commission and
    thus publicly available, or that Sinclair 3 complied with its obligation to
    provide Seismic Wells with Form P-4s containing its correct operator number.
    At most, Seismic Wells’s outsourcing the completion of the Form P 4s means
    that it received constructive, as opposed to actual, notice – but either is
    sufficient to defeat Seismic Wells’s claim that it was unable to discover the
    alleged fraud until after the statute of limitations had run.
    Seismic Wells was also placed on constructive knowledge of the existence
    of Sinclair 3 as a separate entity from Sinclair 1 because of the state-required
    Applications for Registration of a For-Profit Corporation filed by Sinclair 2 and
    Sinclair 3. Sinclair assigned the trade name “Sinclair Oil and Gas Company”
    in 2006 and filed the Certificate of Withdrawal as to the trade name in 2007;
    any of these publicly filed documents gave Seismic Wells constructive notice
    that its continuing agreement with Sinclair 1 was actually with Sinclair 3,
    thereby triggering the statute of limitations on its fraud claims.
    Unsurprisingly, Seismic Wells disputes that these documents put it on
    notice, blaming confusion caused by the erroneous use of Sinclair 1’s tax
    identification number on the Joint Operating Agreement, the identical trade
    names, and the terminology in the Assignment and Bill of Sale.                 A
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    sophisticated business entity’s confusion about common and significant
    documentary terminology and the nomenclature of the party with whom it
    deals is, however, unavailing. The evidence presented here shows beyond
    question that the fraud “could have been discovered through reasonable
    diligence” within a short time after Seismic Wells executed the Replacement
    Participation Agreement, making the four-year statute of limitations
    applicable. See 
    Hooks, 457 S.W.3d at 57
    (quoting Shell Oil 
    Co., 356 S.W.3d at 929
    ). JMOL was appropriate on this basis.
    2. Breach of Initial Participation Agreement
    Seismic Wells claims Sinclair 1 breached the Initial Participation
    Agreement by assigning its rights under the Initial Participation Agreement
    to Sinclair 2, which then assigned to Sinclair 3. To support this argument, it
    relies on provisions of the Initial Participation Agreement that stipulate:
    (1) Sinclair 1 could not “sell, trade or license the [seismic] [d]ata to any third
    party;” (2) Sinclair 1 had the option to assume operation of the wells; and
    (3) once Sinclair 1 assumed operations, if Sinclair 1 chose to “sell, transfer or
    otherwise dispose of its interest . . . Seismic Wells [would] have the first and
    exclusive right to assume operations.”
    For the same reasons that plaintiff’s fraud claims are defeated by the
    statute of limitations, these contract claims are barred by Texas’s four-year
    statute of limitations governing civil suits. TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE
    § 16.051. Seismic Wells was on actual and constructive notice of the corporate
    reorganization by the end of 2006, and the statute ran four years later, yet this
    lawsuit was not filed until June 2015.
    In addition, if more were needed, Sinclair 1 never assumed the operator
    duties that are a prerequisite, under the Initial Participation Agreement, to
    Seismic Wells’s right of first refusal. Further, the quoted contract language is
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    insufficient to overcome the recognized principle, never acknowledged in
    Seismic Wells’s briefing, that oil and gas operating rights are freely assignable
    or the fact that the Initial Participation Agreement was entered into by two
    sophisticated business parties and did not contain an explicit anti-assignment
    clause. See Santa Fe Energy Operating Partners, L.P. v. Universal Res. Corp.,
    No. 07-95-0342-CV, 
    1996 WL 457251
    , at *3 (Tex. App. Aug. 14, 1996)
    (recognizing operating agreements are “not so unique in the oil and gas
    industry as to involve a degree of trust and confidence singularly personal to
    the contracting parties . . . so as to render them unassignable as a matter of
    law.” (internal quotation marks and citation omitted)). Finally, insofar as this
    claim rests on Sinclair’s alleged “licensing” of seismic data, contrary to the
    Initial Participation Agreement, it lacks merit.        The Initial Participation
    Agreement assigned no independent value to the seismic data; Tranckino’s
    mere speculation that Sinclair 2 or 3 would have been willing to enter licensing
    agreements apart from the working interests to which they acceded is
    insufficient to support a jury issue.
    On any of these grounds, granting JMOL as to the breach of the Initial
    Participation Agreement claim was proper.
    3. Anticipatory Breach of Replacement Participation Agreement
    Seismic Wells argues Sinclair 3 breached and repudiated the
    Replacement Participation Agreement when it (1) sent a letter to Seismic
    Wells stating it did not need Seismic Wells’s permission to assign the lease to
    a third party, and (2) refused to transfer title to a well to Seismic Wells after it
    decided to plug a well that was leaking.         The Replacement Participation
    Agreement states, “should [Sinclair 3] sell, transfer, or otherwise dispose of its
    interest in the [Miller Ranch lease], Seismic Wells shall have the first and
    exclusive right to assume operations of the [Miller Ranch lease.]” Seismic
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    Wells contends that, because Sinclair 3 tried to market its interest in the lease
    without the permission of Seismic Wells, and continued to do so after Seismic
    Wells stated it intended to exercise its right to assume operations, Sinclair 3
    anticipatorily repudiated the Replacement Participation Agreement.
    “In Texas, in order to prevail on a claim for anticipatory breach, a
    plaintiff must establish each of the following elements: (1) an absolute
    repudiation of the obligation; (2) a lack of a just excuse for the repudiation; and
    (3) damage to the non-repudiating party.” Gonzalez v. Denning, 
    394 F.3d 388
    ,
    394 (5th Cir. 2004) (citation omitted). Here, although Seismic Wells negotiated
    a right to assume operations should Sinclair 3 sell its interest in the
    Replacement Participation Agreement, it assigned that right to Bold Energy
    in a subsequent deal. 5 Seismic Wells cannot legitimately dispute that 2011
    assignment and its consequences: the record contains a communication in
    which Tranckino trumpeted to Bold Energy, as a prospective assignee, this
    provision that would enable it to assume operations. As of 2014, there was no
    contractual arrangement between Sinclair 3 and Seismic Wells and no
    provision with Seismic Wells that Sinclair could breach.
    Sinclair 3 did not repudiate Seismic Wells’s right to assume operations
    from the Replacement Participation Agreement because it cannot repudiate a
    right that Seismic Wells no longer possessed. The contractual language in
    5 Sinclair concedes that Seismic Wells still has the right to assume operations of the
    Miller Spraberry Unit, which it did not assign to Bold Energy. The letter at issue specifically
    noted that Seismic Wells had “assigned all of [its] leasehold interest to Sinclair and others
    [including Bold Energy], save and except a 21.8750% working interest in 200 acres from the
    surface to 5700 feet as described in the Miller Spraberry Unit . . . , Sinclair is substituted as
    the Lessee under the Lease with all the rights previously held by the assignor.” This
    statement contemplates that Seismic Wells still had rights in the Miller Spraberry Unit,
    unique from the rest of the lease, and does not indicate repudiation of Seismic Wells’s claimed
    rights. Therefore, Seismic Wells cannot claim any breach or damages related to the Miller
    Spraberry Unit.
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    Seismic Wells’s assignment of the Miller Ranch interests to Bold Energy does
    not reserve to it the right to assume operations under the Replacement
    Participation Agreement.    Not only did the assignment incorporate the
    Replacement Participation Agreement, but it also specifically noted that
    Tranckino, a direct assignee of Seismic Wells, was the present owner of the
    interests from the Replacement Participation Agreement.           Due to this
    assignment, Seismic Wells’s arguments that it still had an option to assume
    operations on any land other than that reserved from the assignment, and its
    claim for anticipatory breach of the Replacement Participation Agreement,
    necessarily fail. JMOL on this claim was correct.
    IV.
    For the aforementioned reasons, the judgment of the district court is
    AFFIRMED.
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