Hondo Oil and Gas Co. v. Texas Crude Operator, Inc. , 970 F.2d 1433 ( 1992 )


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  •                                      United States Court of Appeals,
    Fifth Circuit.
    No. 91–8176.
    HONDO OIL AND GAS COMPANY, Plaintiff–Appellant–Cross Appellee,
    v.
    TEXAS CRUDE OPERATOR, INC., Defendant–Third Party
    Plaintiff–Appellee–Cross–Appellant,
    v.
    ATLANTIC RICHFIELD COMPANY, Third Party Defendant–Appellant–Cross–Appellee.
    Sept. 3, 1992.
    Appeals from the United States District Court for the Western District of Texas.
    Before POLITZ, Chief Judge, and WILLIAMS, Circuit Judge, and FELDMAN,** District Judge.
    JERRE S. WILLIAMS, Circuitudge:
    Texas Crude Operator, Inc. and Atlantic Richfield Company entered into three operating
    agreements for oil properties in Texas. Many years later, the companies began disputing whether they
    had modified the accounting procedure of the contract . At lantic Richfield withheld money that it
    considered it was overcharged. Atlantic Richfield subsequently sold its interest to Hondo Oil and Gas
    Company. Hondo Oil and Gas brought suit when it realized Texas Crude was withholding money
    from it to offset the money Atlantic Richfield withheld. Texas Crude then filed a third party
    complaint against Atlantic Richfield. The district court held that the operating agreements had been
    modified. The court further held that Atlantic Richfield breached the agreements by withholding
    money from Texas Crude and Texas Crude breached the agreements by withholding money from
    Hondo Oil and Gas. We affirm the finding that both Texas Crude and Atlantic Richfield breached
    the operating agreements, but we reverse the amount of damages Atlantic Richfield is ordered to pay
    Texas Crude and render a different amount.
    *
    District Judge of the Eastern District of Louisiana, sitting by designation.
    I. FACTS
    In 1962 and 1965, Texas Crude Operator, Inc. ("Texas Crude") and Atlantic Richfield
    Company ("ARCO") entered into three operating agreements for oil properties in Gaines County,
    Texas. Texas Crude was the operator, and ARCO was one of several non-operators. Amoco
    Production Company ("Amoco") was also a non-operator.1
    Each operating agreement contains a standard form PASO–T–1955–2 Accounting Procedure
    ("PASO"). PASO is one method for allotting overhead expenses to the non-operators. The method
    provides for a fixed rate per well plus a portion of camp and district expenses allocated on a per well
    basis among the wells in the district.
    In 1969, ARCO sent a letter announcing that it was switching to the Counsel of Petroleum
    Accounting Societies ("COPAS") method of accounting on all properties in which ARCO was the
    operator, and ARCO stated its willingness for other operators to switch to the COPAS method on
    properties in which ARCO was a non-operator. The COPAS accounting method establishes for
    overhead a fixed sum per well, known as the combined fixed rate ("CFR"), and adjusts the CFR
    annually on April 1 of each year based upon a referenced cost index. Texas Crude declined to change
    its accounting method in 1969.
    By 1978, Texas Crude realized that it was failing to recover all of its overhead expenses. In
    1977, for example, it had an aggregate overhead of approximately $500,000 but recovered only
    $89,000 from the non-operators. PASO calculated expenses from the field districts, but Texas Crude
    had transferred many of its costs to regional centers. PASO did not allocate expenses from the
    regional centers. Texas Crude, therefore, converted to the COPAS accounting method for the Gaines
    County fields on April 1, 1978. The conversion produced a change in the non-operators' monthly
    1
    For simplicity's sake, we refer to all the parties by their current names, Texas Crude, ARCO,
    and Amoco, although in some circumstances, they are successors in interest to other companies.
    overhead charges from approximately $175 per well to over $530 per well.
    When Texas Crude converted to COPAS, it did not send notice to the non-operators nor did
    it seek their consent. An expert at trial, however, testified that ARCO knew about the switch. Texas
    Crude began using COPAS on April 1, 1978. April 1 is also the date on which COPAS CFRs are
    annually escalated. Operators and non-operators, therefore, observe April statements with some care.
    An ARCO accountant further testified that ARCO codes its bills when it receives them, and it uses
    a different code for COPAS and PASO. ARCO routinely computerizes these codes and tracks them
    in reports to management. Moreover, in October 1978, a member of ARCO's management
    complained to Texas Crude about the new rate on other properties. Texas Crude replied that the rate
    was less than the rate ARCO charged Texas Crude on properties in which ARCO was the operator
    and Texas Crude was the non-operator. After this initial inquiry, ARCO did not raise the issue again,
    and it paid the bills without incident for the next six years.
    Amoco also noticed the change in its monthly charges, and it complained to Texas Crude.
    Amoco refused to pay the higher rate. Texas Crude had no other operations with Amoco, and it
    considered Amoco a "thorn in the side." Rather than fight with Amoco, Texas Crude decided to take
    the loss on Amoco just to have the problem go away. Texas Crude thus agreed to bill Amoco at a
    lower rate.
    In 1984, after an Amoco audit, ARCO learned that Amoco's overhead rate was approximately
    half its overhead rate. ARCO attempted to negotiate a more favorable overhead rate, but when these
    negotiations were unsuccessful, it began to withhold amounts from its overhead payments as a means
    of recovering what it believed to be Texas Crude's overcharges. Texas Crude retaliated by
    withholding payments to ARCO on other properties in which ARCO was the operator and Texas
    Crude was the non-operator.
    The parties stipulated that Texas Crude's alleged overcharges totaled $170,755.03—i.e. the
    difference between the rate Texas Crude charged ARCO and the rate it charged Amoco. ARCO
    retained this amount from its overhead payments.
    Effective January 1, 1987, ARCO sold 2700 properties, including the properties involved in
    this suit, to Hondo Oil and Gas Company ("Hondo"). Hondo conducted a due diligence inquiry
    regarding the properties before closing, but it found no evidence of the audit dispute, and ARCO did
    not advise Hondo of the dispute.
    Texas Crude began selling the production from these properties to Tesoro Crude Oil
    Company, and Texas Crude retained Hondo's share of the proceeds pursuant to an operators lien
    granted by the operating agreements. By August 1987, Texas Crude had suspended a sufficient sum
    to offset the money ARCO had retained.
    When Hondo learned it was not receiving any revenues from the properties in question, it
    confronted Texas Crude. Attempted resolution of the dispute was unsuccessful, and Hondo filed suit
    against Texas Crude on September 13, 1989. Texas Crude filed a third party complaint against
    ARCO on January 2, 1990. After a bench trial, the district court held that ARCO breached the
    modified operating agreements by withholding payments but limited damages because of the statute
    of limitations. The district court limited Texas Crude's damages to $117,539.92 because of the
    statute of limitations. The court further held that Texas Crude also breached the operating
    agreements with Hondo by withholding Hondo's revenues and awarded Hondo $170,755.03 in
    damages. The court, however, held that Texas Crude did not breach the Texas Natural Resources
    Code. The court also ordered Texas Crude to pay Hondo $69,072.25 in attorney's fees. All parties
    appeal some portion of the district court's ruling.
    II. MODIFICATION
    The central issue is whether Texas Crude and ARCO modified their original operating
    agreements. The district court held that ARCO's acceptance of Texas Crude's change to the COPAS
    accounting method modified the operating agreements. ARCO challenges the ruling claiming Texas
    Crude acted unilaterally and without ARCO's consent.
    Parties are free to modify a contract by any manner in which they can make a contract. Mid
    Plains Reeves, Inc. v. Farmland Industries, Inc., 
    768 S.W.2d 318
    , 321 (Tex.App.—El Paso 1989,
    writ denied). Texas law recognizes an implied contract in which the parties form a contract based
    upon their acts and conduct. Bank of El Paso v. T.O. Stanley Boot Co., Inc., 
    809 S.W.2d 279
    , 284
    (Tex.App.—El Paso 1991, writ granted) ("In an implied contract, mutual agreement must be inferred
    from the circumstances of the transaction"); Emmer v. Phillips Petroleum Co., 
    668 S.W.2d 487
    , 490
    (Tex.App.—Amarillo 1984, no writ) ("The absence of an express contract does not, however,
    foreclose the possibility of a contractual relationship, because t he parties may, by their acts and
    conduct, create an implied contract.... In contracts implied in fact, the law finds a mutual intent to
    contract from the facts and circumstances of the case"). Texas Crude and ARCO, therefore, could
    modify the operating agreements with their conduct.
    Whether the parties modified the operating agreement depends on the parties' intentions and
    is a question of fact. Hathaway v. General Mills, Inc., 
    711 S.W.2d 227
    , 228–29 (Tex.1986). With
    respect to trials to the court without a jury, we review findings of fact under the clearly erroneous
    standard. Fed.R.Civ.P. 52(a); Chandler v. City of Dallas, 
    958 F.2d 85
    , 89 (5th Cir.1992).
    The evidence at trial supports the court's finding that the parties modified the operating
    agreements. Although Texas Crude changed to COPAS unilaterally, ARCO knew of the change and
    apparently consented to it. ARCO's accounts coding indicated the change, and ARCO used the codes
    in its management reports. Texas Crude changed to COPAS on April 1, the date on which COPAS
    CFRs were annually escalated. At trial, an expert testified that non-operators routinely scrutinize
    April statements with some care. Moreover, ARCO challenged the change to COPAS on a Louisiana
    well. Although the Louisiana well is not a well included in this dispute, it is relevant because Texas
    Crude sent all of the invoices under a single summary sheet. If ARCO noticed the change on the
    Louisiana well, it must have noticed the change on the Gaines County wells.
    During the dispute Texas Crude informed ARCO that the rate Texas Crude was charging
    ARCO was less than the rate ARCO charged Texas Crude on other wells. After this fact was pointed
    out to ARCO, it paid the COPAS rate without objection for six years until it realized it was paying
    more than Amoco. With the foregoing evidence supporting its holding, the district court's ruling that
    the parties modified the operating agreement is not clearly erroneous.
    ARCO and Hondo raise several issues related to the operating agreement's modification.
    ARCO first maintains any alleged modification violates the Statute of Frauds. Tex.Bus. & Com.C.
    § 26.01.2 Modification does not violate the Statute of Frauds "[i]f neither the portion of the written
    2
    "(a) A promise or agreement described in Subsection (b) of this section is not enforceable
    unless the promise or agreement, or a memorandum of it, is
    (1) in writing; and
    (2) signed by the person to be charged with the promise or agreement or by
    someone lawfully authorized to sign for him.
    (b) Subsection (a) of this section applies to:
    (1) a promise by an executor or administrator to answer out of his own estate for
    any debt or damage due from his testator or intestate;
    (2) a promise by one person to answer for the debt, default, or miscarriage of
    another person;
    (3) an agreement made on consideration of marriage or on consideration of
    nonmarital conjugal cohabitation;
    (4) a contract for the sale of real estate;
    (5) a lease of real estate for a term longer than one year;
    (6) an agreement which is not to be performed within one year from the date of
    making the agreement;
    contract affected by the subsequent modification, nor the matter encompassed by the modification
    itself is required by the Statute of Frauds to be in writing ..." Joiner v. Elrod, 
    716 S.W.2d 606
    , 610
    (Tex.App.—Corpus Christi 1986, no writ), quoting Garcia v. Karam, 
    154 Tex. 240
    , 
    276 S.W.2d 255
    , 257 (1955).
    Under Section 26.01, an operating agreement need not be in writing if it can be performed
    within one year. The operating agreements here involved can conceivably be performed within one
    year in acco rdance with the terms of the agreements. When oil production ceases, the operating
    agreements terminate. Because the agreements could conceivably be performed within one year, they
    do not need to be written.             Hardin Assoc., Inc. v. Brummett, 
    613 S.W.2d 4
    , 7
    (Tex.Civ.App.—Texarkana 1980, no writ) ("[W]here the time for performance is indefinite in that
    the agreement merely provides for the performance of a particular act or acts which can conceivably
    be performed within one year, the Statute of Frauds is inapplicable, however improbable performance
    within one year might be").
    ARCO further asserts that an operator cannot charge different overhead rates to
    non-operators who have signed the same operating agreement. ARCO therefore believes it must be
    charged the same rate as Amoco. ARCO's argument is based upon contractual provisions stating
    (7) a promise or agreement to pay a commission for the sale or purchase of:
    (A) an oil or gas mining lease;
    (B) an oil or gas royalty;
    (C) minerals;
    (D) a mineral interest;
    (8) an agreement, promise, contract or warranty of cure relating to medical care or
    results thereof made by a physician or health care provider as defined in Section 1.03,
    Medical Liability and Insurance Improvement Act of Texas. This section shall not apply
    to pharmacists."
    Tex.Bus. & Com.C. § 26.01.
    parties will be charged their proportionate share of costs and expenses.
    Although the non-operators signed the same operating agreements, they have no special
    relationship between them establishing any fiduciary duty. Testimony at trial established that it was
    not uncommon to charge different rates to different non-operators on the same well and that
    variations in rates are the product of negotiations. ARCO might have a legitimate claim of breach
    of contract if Texas Crude charged it a rate higher than its proportionate share, but no evidence was
    presented to support such a claim. The evidence only established that Amoco was charged a rate at
    less than its proportionate share. Essentially, Texas Crude decided it would take the loss from
    Amoco rather than fight with Amoco. Texas Crude's decision to take the loss on Amoco does not
    require it to take a similar loss on ARCO's overhead payments. Amoco and ARCO are different
    parties, and Texas Crude may consider different factors in determining whether to take a loss on
    either party.
    The parties also dispute whether the modification of the operating agreements governs
    Hondo. Since Hondo took all of ARCO's rights under the operating agreements and ARCO modified
    the agreements, Hondo is subject to the COPAS procedure. See McCormick v. Krueger, 
    593 S.W.2d 729
    , 730–31 (Tex.Civ.App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 1979, writ ref'd n.r.e.) ("It is generally true ... that
    grantees and assignees become bound by the contractual obligations of their predecessors in title");
    Schultz v. Weaver, 
    780 S.W.2d 323
    , 325 (Tex.App.—Austin 1989, no writ) ("Generally, the
    assuming party is liable to the same extent as the party from whom it assumed the contract").
    III. NATURAL RESOURCES CODE
    Hondo alleges that Texas Crude's withholding of Hondo's payments violated
    Tex.Nat.Res.Code § 91.401 et seq.3 The district court, however, expressly held that Texas Crude
    3
    These sections were amended in 1991, but the parties are subject to the pre-amendment
    sections.
    did not violate the Texas Natural Resources Code. Section 91.403(a) requires interest to be paid for
    late payments, but 91.403(b)(2) provides that interest does not have to be paid if "there is a
    reasonable doubt that the payee does not have clear title to the interest in the proceeds of payments."
    Essentially, Hondo asks us to hold that Texas Crude violated the Natural Resources Code so that
    Hondo can collect prejudgment interest.
    The district court held that Texas Crude did not violate the Texas Natural Resources Code,
    but the court did not elaborate on its holding. We assume the court concluded that Texas Crude had
    a reasonable doubt whether Hondo was entitled to the proceeds. We agree with the conclusion.
    ARCO was withholding its payments from Texas Crude, and Texas Crude had an operator's lien on
    the proceeds. That we ultimately award damages to Hondo is inconsequential because Texas Crude
    acted reasonably at the time in questioning Hondo's right to the proceeds.
    "[W]e have interpreted Texas law as allowing a prevailing party in either a contract or tort
    suit to recover prejudgment interest as a matter of equity in all but the most exceptional
    circumstances." Campbell, Athey & Zukowski v. Thomasson, 
    863 F.2d 398
    , 402 (5th Cir.1989)
    (emphasis in original). The present case illustrates one of the exceptional circumstances in which we
    do not require payment of prejudgment interest. The general must yield to the specific. It would be
    contradictory to rule t hat Texas Crude did not violate a statute allowing it to withhold payments
    without paying interest, and then require Texas Crude to pay prejudgment interest. We affirm the
    district court's ruling that Texas Crude did not violate the Texas Natural Resources Code and that
    Texas Crude need not pay prejudgment interest.
    IV. TEXAS CRUDE'S BREACH
    The district court held that Texas Crude breached its operating agreements as to Hondo by
    withholding payments because ARCO was primarily liable for the pre-assignment liabilities. The
    evidence supports this conclusion. ARCO and Texas Crude continued negotiating the disputed
    charges subsequent to ARCO's assignment to Hondo. Also, the bills originally sent to ARCO and
    then passed on to Hondo for review and payment do not show any past due amount for operating
    expenses. Moreover, in October 1987, Texas Crude informed Hondo that so long as Hondo
    continued to pay its operating expenses, Texas Crude would pay Hondo its revenues from the sale
    of the crude oil. Texas Crude failed to advise Hondo that Texas Crude intended to satisfy the
    $170,755.03 owed by ARCO out of Hondo's funds. Hondo relied upon this declaration and paid its
    share of operating expenses.
    Based upon ARCO's primary liability on the debt and Texas Crude's assurances to Hondo,
    the quasi estoppel doctrine prohibits Texas Crude from withholding money from Hondo's revenues
    from the sale of the crude o il. "Quasi estoppel precludes a party from asserting, to another's
    disadvantage, a right inconsistent with a position previously taken by him. The doctrine applies when
    it would be unconscionable to allow a person to maintain a position inconsistent with one in which
    he acquiesced, or of which he accepted a benefit." Vessels v. Anschutz Corp., 
    823 S.W.2d 762
    ,
    765–66 (Tex.App.—Texarkana 1992, writ denied).
    Texas Crude's continual negotiations with ARCO combined with its promise of revenue
    payments to Hondo preclude Texas Crude from withholding Hondo's revenues. The district court's
    decision that ARCO breached the modified operating agreements augments the efficacy of this
    holding. Although we affirm the district court's order to Texas Crude to remit the $170,755.03 it
    withheld from Hondo, Texas Crude also receives judgment for the money ARCO improperly withheld
    from it.
    V. STATUTE OF LIMITATIONS
    The district court required ARCO to pay Texas Crude $117,539.92 in damages. This figure
    represents the $170,755.03 the parties stipulated was at issue less a deduction of $53,215.11, which
    the court held the statute of limitations barred. Texas Crude does not contest the applicability of a
    four-year statute of limitations,4 but it does claim that even with a four-year statute of limitations, it
    should be able to recover the entire amount.
    It is beyond dispute that Texas Crude filed its third party action against ARCO on January 2,
    1990. The parties also do not dispute that ARCO withheld $53,215.11 prior to January 1, 1986, and
    it withheld $175,206.83 after January 1, 1986—i.e. the beginning of the four-year statute of
    limitations. The dist rict court deducted the amount withheld prior to 1986 from Texas Crude's
    damages, but Texas Crude contends that since the amount withheld during the statutory period,
    $175,206.83, was greater than the amount of stipulated damages, $170,755.03, it should receive the
    entire damages amount.5
    "Where a contract provides for monthly payments and not a present sale of gas or oil, a cause
    of action accrues when any given monthly payment is due. Only those payments due more than four
    years before the suit was filed are barred." Western Oil Fields, Inc. v. Pennzoil United, Inc., 
    421 F.2d 387
    , 390 (5th Cir.1970);           see also, Gabriel v. Alhabbal, 
    618 S.W.2d 894
    , 897
    (Tex.Civ.App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 1981, writ ref'd n.r.e.) ("When recovery is sought on a note or
    other obligation payable in installments the Statute of Limitations runs against each installment from
    the time it becomes due, that is from the time when action might be brought to recover it"). Texas
    Crude thus was entitled to sue for payment of all amounts withheld after January 1, 1986. The
    amounts withheld after January 1, 1986 is greater than the stipulated damages amount. We,
    therefore, reverse the district court and render judgment against ARCO in Texas Crude's favor in the
    amount of $170,755.03, the full amount of stipulated damages.
    VI. ATTORNEYS' FEES
    4
    Texas has established a four-year statute of limitations for all actions related to a debt.
    Tex.Civ.Prac. & Rem.Ann. § 16.004(a)(3).
    5
    The parties do not explain why ARCO withheld $175,206.83 but the stipulated damages are
    only $170,755.03.
    Texas Crude appeals the district court's award of $69,072.25 in attorneys' fees to Hondo.
    We review an award of attorneys' fees under an abuse of discretion standard. Cates v. Sears,
    Roebuck & Co., 
    928 F.2d 679
    , 689 (5th Cir.1991). Texas Crude maintains that ARCO's breach of
    the operating agreements caused any breach by Texas Crude of the agreements with Hondo. Texas
    Crude concludes, therefore, that it should recover the amount of Hondo's attorneys' fees from ARCO.
    Texas Crude essentially petitions us to require ARCO to indemnify it. The right to indemnity
    generally arises from either an express or implied contract. UMC Inc. v. Coonrod Electric Co., Inc.,
    
    667 S.W.2d 549
    , 554 (Tex.App.—Corpus Christi 1983, writ ref'd n.r.e.). The present case does not
    involve an express co ntract of indemnity, and, therefore, Texas Crude must establish an implied
    contract of indemnity. An implied contract arises in favor of a person who acted without fault but
    who must pay damages caused by another party. 
    Id. In contractual
    relationships, courts recognize
    an implied right of indemnification when an agency or surety relationship exists. American Alloy
    Steel, Inc. v. Armco, Inc., 
    777 S.W.2d 173
    , 175 (Tex.App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 1989, no writ).
    Because Texas Crude breached the operating agreement with Hondo, the district court did
    not abuse its discretion in granting attorneys' fees to Hondo. Moreover, the court did not abuse its
    discretion in refusing to compel ARCO to indemnify Texas Crude. Texas Crude and ARCO had
    neither an agency nor a surety relationship, and Texas Crude cannot claim ARCO was wholly at fault
    in causing Hondo's damages. Thus, no implied contract of indemnification existed between ARCO
    and Texas Crude.
    VII. CONCLUSION
    The district court correctly held that: (1) ARCO breached the modified operating agreements;
    (2) Texas Crude did not breach the Texas Natural Resources Code; and (3) Texas Crude did breach
    the operating agreements with Hondo. The court also did not abuse its discretion in awarding
    attorneys' fees. The district court, however, erred when it limited the award from ARCO to Texas
    Crude based upon the statute of limitations. We, therefore, reverse Texas Crude's damages and
    render an award of $170,755.03 against ARCO.
    AFFIRMED IN PART; REVERSED AND RENDERED IN PART.