Denbury Green Pipeline-Texas, Llc v. Texas Rice Land Partners, Ltd. ( 2017 )


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  •                 IN THE SUPREME COURT OF TEXAS
    444444444444
    NO . 15-0225
    444444444444
    DENBURY GREEN PIPELINE-TEXAS, LLC, PETITIONER,
    v.
    TEXAS RICE LAND PARTNERS, LTD., ET AL., RESPONDENTS
    4444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444
    ON PETITION FOR REVIEW FROM THE
    COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS
    4444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444
    Argued September 15, 2016
    JUSTICE GREEN delivered the opinion of the Court in which CHIEF JUSTICE HECHT , JUSTICE
    WILLETT , JUSTICE GUZMAN , JUSTICE LEHRMANN , JUSTICE BOYD , JUSTICE DEVINE , and JUSTICE
    BROWN joined.
    JUSTICE JOHNSON joined in the judgment only.
    We must decide whether Denbury Green Pipeline-Texas, LLC (Denbury Green) is a common
    carrier pursuant to the Texas Natural Resources Code and the test we set out in Texas Rice Land
    Partners, Ltd. v. Denbury Green Pipeline-Texas, LLC (Texas Rice I). 
    363 S.W.3d 192
    , 202 (Tex.
    2012); TEX . NAT . RES. CODE § 111.019(a). Because Denbury Green’s summary judgment evidence
    conclusively established a reasonable probability that, at some point after construction, the carbon
    dioxide pipeline known as “the Green Line” would serve the public, as it does currently, we hold that
    Denbury Green is a common carrier as a matter of law. Accordingly, we reverse the judgment of the
    court of appeals and reinstate the trial court’s judgment.
    I. Background and Procedural History
    Denbury Green is an affiliate of Denbury Onshore, LLC, and both are wholly owned, indirect
    subsidiaries of Denbury Resources, a publicly traded holding company. James E. Holland, David
    C. Holland, and Texas Rice Land Partners, Ltd.1 (collectively “Texas Rice”) own approximately
    3,800 acres of land in Jefferson County, Texas. The land is leased and used for rice farming.
    According to the affidavit testimony of Dan Cole, Denbury Green’s Vice President of
    Marketing and Business Development, Denbury Green was formed to build, own, and operate a
    carbon dioxide pipeline known as “the Green Line” as a common carrier in Texas. The Green Line
    became part of a pipeline network formed, at least in part, to transport carbon dioxide from Jackson,
    Mississippi (known as the “Jackson Dome” area), along with anthropogenic carbon dioxide
    (manmade CO2) from naturally occurring sources and producers located along the Green Line’s
    route. Cole stated that the Green Line’s route through Texas was designed to be close to refineries,
    plants, and other facilities that could use the line as a means to transport CO2.2 In fact, the Green
    Line is the only pipeline currently available to those CO2 refineries, plants, and other industrial
    facilities. According to Cole, Denbury Green chose the pipeline’s specific location for its proximity
    to those industrial facilities, which could transport anthropogenic CO2 to oil fields, underground
    1
    Texas Rice Land Partners, Ltd. is a family limited partnership with David C. Holland as general partner and
    his three children as limited partners.
    2
    The Green Line runs west along the Gulf Coast from the Texas/Louisiana border to the Oyster Bayou Field
    in Chambers County, Texas, and continues to the W est Hastings Field in Brazoria and Galveston Counties, Texas.
    2
    storage reservoirs, or other locations where CO2 could be used or stored. As a result, Cole testified,
    the Green Line has served a public use since its completion in 2010, and it is currently used to
    transport CO2 owned by Denbury Green and its affiliates as well as CO2 owned by unaffiliated
    entities.
    Before the Green Line’s construction began, Denbury Onshore sought permission from
    landowners across the proposed Gulf Coast route, including Texas Rice, to survey their property.
    In late 2007, Denbury Onshore attempted to survey two tracts of Texas Rice’s land in Jefferson
    County but was denied access. Not long after, in early 2008, Denbury Green filed a T-4 permit
    application with the Texas Railroad Commission to obtain common-carrier status, which would give
    it eminent domain authority pursuant to the Natural Resources Code. See TEX . NAT . RES. CODE
    § 111.019(a) (“Common carriers have the right and power of eminent domain.”). Shortly thereafter,
    the Railroad Commission granted Denbury Green a T-4 permit. Armed with the permit, Denbury
    Green filed suit against Texas Rice for an injunction allowing access to the Jefferson County tracts
    so that it could complete the pipeline survey. While the suit was pending, Denbury Green took
    possession of Texas Rice’s property pursuant to section 21.021(a) of the Texas Property Code, which
    allows a condemnor to take possession even while the property owner challenges the condemnor’s
    eminent domain authority. TEX . PROP . CODE § 21.021(a). Denbury Green then surveyed for and
    constructed the Green Line.
    On cross-motions for summary judgment, the trial court found that Denbury Green was a
    common carrier with eminent domain authority pursuant to the Natural Resources Code. The court
    of appeals affirmed the trial court’s judgment. Tex. Rice Land Partners, Ltd. v. Denbury Green
    3
    Pipeline-Tex., LLC, 
    296 S.W.3d 877
    , 881 (Tex. App.—Beaumont 2009), rev’d, 
    363 S.W.3d 192
    (Tex. 2012). Texas Rice then appealed to this Court. Texas Rice I, 
    363 S.W.3d 192
    . We reversed
    and remanded the case to the trial court for proceedings consistent with the common-carrier test we
    established, affording Denbury Green the opportunity to produce “reasonable proof of a future
    customer, thus demonstrating that [the Green Line] will indeed transport to or for the public for hire
    and is not limited in [its] use to the wells, stations, plants, and refineries of the owner.” 
    Id. at 204.
    On remand, Denbury Green adduced evidence not before this Court in Texas Rice I to support
    its assertion of common-carrier status. Denbury Green produced transportation agreements with
    unaffiliated entities Airgas Carbonic, Inc. and Air Products and Chemicals, Inc (Air Products).
    Additional evidence included a transportation agreement between Denbury Green and Denbury
    Onshore, acting on behalf of itself and other working-interest owners that are unaffiliated with
    Denbury Green or any of its affiliates.3
    Airgas Carbonic, a wholly owned subsidiary of Airgas, Inc., manufactures and distributes
    liquid CO2, commonly selling its CO2 to customers in the industrial, medical, and food-processing
    industries. In 2012, Airgas Carbonic began looking for a method to ship its out-of-state CO2 to the
    Houston area. Aware of the recently constructed Green Line, Airgas Carbonic approached Denbury
    Green and in January 2013 finalized a transportation agreement allowing Denbury Green to ship
    3
    Because we hold that the summary judgment evidence, including evidence related to unaffiliated shipping
    agreements, establishes Denbury Green’s common carrier status, infra at ___, we express no opinion on whether
    contracts between affiliated entities that may benefit unaffiliated working interest owners satisfy the Texas Rice I test.
    4
    CO2, owned by Airgas Carbonic,4 from the Texas/Louisiana border through the Green Line to
    Brazoria County, Texas, where it is received and processed in a new Airgas Carbonic manufacturing
    plant.5 The CO2 is ultimately sold to Airgas Carbonic customers in the Houston area. The new
    Airgas Carbonic plant began receiving and processing Airgas Carbonic’s CO2 delivered over the
    Green Line in October 2013.
    Air Products specializes in the manufacture and supply of industrial gases. Air Products
    began negotiating with Denbury Green in 2008, in anticipation of the Green Line’s construction. In
    2010, the United States Department of Energy, through its Industrial Carbon Capture and
    Sequestration Program, selected Air Products to receive $285 million in funding for the development
    and operation of a system to capture and sequester CO2 from Air Products’s steam methane
    reformers located within the Valero Refinery in Port Arthur, Texas. By doing so, Air Products
    reduces the amount of CO2 released into the atmosphere by the reformers. In order to remain
    economically viable, however, Air Products requires a CO2 pipeline to transport the captured CO2.
    After finalizing its agreement with the Department of Energy, Air Products entered into a
    transportation agreement with Denbury Onshore. Under the agreement, Air Products first ships
    captured CO2 over a lateral pipeline connecting the Valero Refinery and the Green Line. The CO2
    is then transported over the Green Line to the West Hastings Field in Brazoria County, Texas, where
    title and ownership of the CO2 transfers to Denbury Onshore. Once there, Denbury Onshore first
    uses the CO2 in its tertiary recovery operations, but the gas is ultimately sequestered underground
    4
    According to the transportation agreement, Airgas Carbonic retains title to the CO 2 shipped over the Green
    Line.
    5
    The new plant liquefies and purifies CO 2 originating from an Airgas Carbonic plant in Star, Mississippi.
    5
    once oil and gas operations are abandoned. According to Air Products, approximately 51.5 million
    cubic feet of CO2 per day will be shipped over the Green Line and ultimately sequestered during the
    fifteen-year contract term.
    Upon reviewing the evidence adduced on remand, the court of appeals concluded that
    “reasonable minds could differ regarding whether, at the time Denbury Green intended to build the
    Green Line, a reasonable probability existed that the Green Line would serve the public” and
    reversed the trial court’s order granting Denbury Green summary judgment. 
    457 S.W.3d 115
    ,
    121–22 (Tex. App.—Beaumont 2015, pet. granted).
    II. Texas Rice I
    To comport with the Texas Constitution, we held in Texas Rice I that “[t]o qualify as a
    common carrier with the power of eminent domain, the pipeline must serve the public; it cannot be
    built only for the builder’s exclusive 
    use.” 363 S.W.3d at 200
    . Specifically,
    for a person intending to build a CO2 pipeline to qualify as a common carrier
    under Section 111.002(6) [of the Natural Resources Code], a reasonable probability
    must exist that the pipeline will at some point after construction serve the public by
    transporting gas for one or more customers who will either retain ownership of their
    gas or sell it to parties other than the carrier.
    
    Id. at 202
    (footnotes omitted). For purposes of this test, “a reasonable probability is one that
    is more likely than not.” 
    Id. at 202
    n.29. Additionally, once a landowner challenges common-carrier
    status, “the burden falls upon the pipeline company to establish its common-carrier bona fides if it
    wishes to exercise the power of eminent domain.” 
    Id. at 202
    .
    Under this constitutional framework, we held that Denbury Green was “not entitled to
    common-carrier status simply because it obtained a common-carrier permit, filed a tariff, and agreed
    6
    to make the pipeline available to any third party wishing to transport its gas in the pipeline and
    willing to pay the tariff.” 
    Id. Affidavit testimony
    in Texas Rice I supported that Denbury Green was
    negotiating with parties to transport CO2 over the Green Line, but the testimony did not indicate
    whether the gas would be used solely by Denbury Green or for the benefit of other parties. 
    Id. at 203.
    Additionally, record evidence supported only the possibility of future customers using the
    Green Line, but the record was devoid of any identified potential customers. 
    Id. Moreover, the
    record included objective evidence of Denbury Green’s intent to use the pipeline solely for its own
    purposes. 
    Id. Several statements
    on Denbury Green’s website suggested that Denbury Green’s
    intended use for the pipeline actually related to the eventual purchase and acquisition of all naturally
    occurring CO2 in the region in an effort to fully harness the Green Line for Denbury Green’s own
    tertiary recovery operations. 
    Id. at 203–04.
    Thus, the evidence before the Court in Texas Rice I established only a possibility, and not
    a reasonable probability, that the pipeline “at some point after construction” would serve the public.
    Cf. State v. K.E.W., 
    315 S.W.3d 16
    , 23 (Tex. 2010) (recognizing that “probability” is synonymous
    with “likelihood”). Because “[a] sine qua non of lawful taking . . . for or on account of public use
    . . . is that the professed use be a public one in truth,” we held that Denbury Green’s mere assertions
    of the possibility of public use were insufficient to conclude that Denbury Green was a common
    carrier. Texas Rice 
    I, 363 S.W.3d at 202
    (quoting Hous. Auth. of City of Dallas v. Higginbotham,
    
    143 S.W.2d 79
    , 84 (Tex. 1940)). We remanded the case to the trial court for further proceedings,
    concluding that once a pipeline’s common-carrier status has been challenged, “the company must
    present reasonable proof of a future customer, thus demonstrating that the pipeline will indeed
    7
    transport ‘to or for the public for hire’ and is not ‘limited in [its] use to the wells, stations, plants,
    and refineries of the owner.’” 
    Id. at 204
    (quoting TEX . NAT . RES. CODE §§ 111.002(6), .003(a)
    (alteration in original)). In this appeal, the parties dispute whether Denbury Green’s new evidence
    adduced on remand entitles it to summary judgment on the issue of whether it is a common carrier.
    Because “the right to condemn property is constitutionally limited and turns in part on whether the
    use of the property is public or private,” we recognize that “the ultimate question of whether a
    particular use is a public use is a judicial question to be decided by the courts.” 
    Id. at 198
    (quoting
    Maher v. Lasater, 
    354 S.W.2d 923
    , 925 (Tex. 1962)). We are again called upon to apply the test we
    announced in Texas Rice I to the facts of this case, considering whether Denbury Green established
    as a matter of law a reasonable probability that, at some point after construction, the Green Line
    would serve the public by transporting gas for one or more customers who will either retain
    ownership of their gas or sell it to parties other than the carrier. We hold that Denbury Green
    satisfied the test established in Texas Rice I and is a common carrier pursuant to Chapter 111 of the
    Natural Resources Code.6
    III. Application of Texas Rice I Test
    We review a grant of summary judgment de novo. SeaBright Ins. Co. v. Lopez, 
    465 S.W.3d 637
    , 641 (Tex. 2015). The movant must prove that there is no genuine issue of material fact and that
    it is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. TEX . R. CIV . P. 166a(c); Mann Frankfort Stein & Lipp
    Advisors, Inc. v. Fielding, 
    289 S.W.3d 844
    , 848 (Tex. 2009). We review summary judgment
    6
    In its briefing, Denbury Green asks that we determine whether section 2.105 of the Business Organizations
    Code provides an independent grant of eminent domain authority for a common carrier. See T EX . B U S . O RGS . C O DE
    § 2.105. Because we hold that Denbury Green is a common carrier under Chapter 111 of the Natural Resources Code,
    we need not decide this question.
    8
    evidence “in the light most favorable to the party against whom the summary judgment was
    rendered, crediting evidence favorable to that party if reasonable jurors could, and disregarding
    contrary evidence unless reasonable jurors could not.” Mann 
    Frankfort, 289 S.W.3d at 848
    (citing
    City of Keller v. Wilson, 
    168 S.W.3d 802
    , 827 (Tex. 2005)).
    A. The Court of Appeals’ Interpretation of Intent as Central to the Texas Rice I Test
    The court of appeals incorrectly interpreted the prefatory phrase “for a person intending to
    build” that introduced the Texas Rice I test when it held that “central to our inquiry is Denbury
    Green’s intent at the time of its plan to construct the Green 
    Line.” 457 S.W.3d at 120
    . Reliance on
    this phrase to focus on intent is improper because “person intending to build” does not describe the
    requisite intent of a party at the time the pipeline was contemplated. Rather, the prefatory phrase
    demonstrates who must prove common-carrier status—the pipeline company. Focusing on intent,
    the court of appeals disregarded relevant evidence submitted by Denbury Green that Airgas Carbonic
    had entered into a contract to transport its CO2 over the Green Line, noting that the contract was
    entered into after the pipeline’s construction. 
    Id. Additionally, the
    court of appeals rejected relevant
    evidence that the Green Line’s future public use could be supported by its proximity to other CO2
    shippers once construction was completed. 
    Id. As a
    result, by shifting the analysis to one focused
    on intent, the court of appeals ultimately ignored relevant evidence supporting Denbury Green’s
    common-carrier status.
    In Texas Rice I, our review of the evidence was necessarily limited to Denbury Green’s
    assertions that it intended the Green Line to be used by the public, but our determination that
    Denbury Green was not entitled to summary judgment rested on the absence of evidence establishing
    9
    a reasonable probability of the Green Line’s future public use. Texas Rice 
    I, 363 S.W.3d at 204
    .
    Standing alone, evidence of Denbury Green’s intent did not meet Texas Rice I’s reasonable
    probability standard—at most, it suggested only a mere possibility of future public use. See 
    id. at 203–04.
    In reviewing affidavit testimony supporting Denbury Green’s assertion that it was
    negotiating with other parties to transport CO2 over the Green Line, we determined that the evidence
    failed to establish public use because, absent contrary evidence, the testimony suggested that
    Denbury Green would transport gas only for its own tertiary recovery operations. 
    Id. at 203.
    The
    testimony “did not identify any possible customers and [Denbury Green] was unaware of any other
    entity unaffiliated with Denbury Green that owned CO2 near the pipeline route in Louisiana and
    Mississippi.” 
    Id. Addressing Denbury
    Green’s claims on its website, we concluded:
    Denbury Green’s representations suggesting that it (1) owns most or all of the
    naturally occurring CO2 in the region, (2) intends to purchase all the man-made CO2
    that might be produced under current and future agreements, (3) see its access to CO2
    as giving it a significant advantage over its competitors, and (4) intends to fully
    utilize the pipeline for its own purposes, are all inconsistent with public use of the
    pipeline.
    
    Id. at 204
    (emphasis added). We therefore held that Denbury Green failed to establish a reasonable
    probability that, “at some point after construction,” the Green Line would serve the public. 
    Id. The objective
    Texas Rice I test balances the property rights of Texas landowners with our
    state’s robust public policy interest in pipeline development, while also respecting the constitutional
    limitations placed on the oil and gas industry. See 
    id. at 197,
    204. Prior to Texas Rice I, a pipeline
    owner needed to do little more than “check[] a certain box on a one-page government form” to
    obtain common-carrier status. 
    Id. at 199.
    Essentially, a pipeline owner only needed to assert that
    10
    it was a common carrier, and it became one. However, “[o]ur Constitution demands far more.” 
    Id. To protect
    the rights of property owners, the Texas Constitution requires at least some objective
    evidence that a pipeline will probably serve the public for its owner to gain the power to condemn
    private property under the authority of eminent domain. 
    Id. at 202
    . Contracts with unaffiliated
    entities that show non-pipeline-owned gas being transported for the benefit of the unaffiliated entity
    can be relevant to showing reasonable probability of future public use.
    Texas Rice would have this Court hold that because the Airgas Carbonic contract was entered
    into after the Green Line was contemplated—and even after this Court’s holding in Texas Rice I—it
    is irrelevant and, at most, raises a fact issue as to whether Denbury Green intended to make the
    pipeline available to the public. Simply put, this reading misunderstands the Texas Rice I test and
    the reasoning behind it.
    At oral argument, both parties expressed their belief that evidence of post-construction
    contracts is relevant to the common-carrier analysis. We agree. While post-construction contracts
    considered without any other relevant evidence would normally establish only a pre-construction
    possibility of future public use, such contracts can be relevant to showing a reasonable probability
    that, “at some point after construction,” a pipeline will serve the public. For example, such contracts
    can speak directly to whether specific, identified potential customers own CO2 near a pipeline’s
    route, as in this case. Moreover, when combined with other evidence, post-construction contracts
    could allow a reasonable observer to determine that, given the regulatory atmosphere and proximity
    of the pipeline to potential customers, at the time common-carrier status was challenged it was “more
    likely than not” that a pipeline would someday serve the public.
    11
    When considered in the light most favorable to Texas Rice, indulging every reasonable
    inference in its favor, Denbury Green conclusively established that there was a reasonable probability
    that, at some point after construction, the Green Line would serve the public. With evidence that
    Denbury Green entered into a contract in 2013 to transport CO2 for Airgas Carbonic, along with the
    proximity of the Green Line to potential customers such as Airgas Carbonic and Air Products, no
    longer could a reasonable fact-finder determine that a genuine fact issue exists as to whether the
    Green Line would, at some point after construction, do what it now most certainly does: transport
    CO2 owned by a customer who retains ownership of the gas. The Airgas Carbonic contract does
    more than show that it is “more likely than not” that the Green Line will someday be used for public
    use; it shows that the Green Line is used for public use today. Most importantly, the Air Products
    transportation agreement supports Denbury Green’s contention that the pipeline route was designed
    in part to facilitate the transfer of gas owned by third parties. According to Air Products, “[w]ithout
    the Denbury Green Pipeline, the Air Products CO2 capture program would not have been economical
    and would not have been undertaken.” The proposed Green Line was not only within geographic
    proximity to Air Products’s reformers in the Valero Refinery, but it was the only pipeline close
    enough to transport Air Products’s CO2. The close proximity, and lack of competing pipelines,
    caused Air Products to begin negotiating with Denbury Green in 2008, before the pipeline was
    constructed. It is true that the Air Products contract, standing alone, would not satisfy the Texas
    Rice I test because title to the CO2 transfers to Denbury Green at the end of its transport. 
    Id. (“If Denbury
    consumes all the pipeline product for itself, it is not transporting gas ‘to . . . the public for
    hire.’”). However, when considered together with the Green Line’s proximity to identified potential
    12
    customers, including Air Products, and the Airgas Carbonic transportation contract, under which
    Airgas Carbonic retains title to the CO2, the summary judgment evidence conclusively establishes
    that it was “more likely than not” that, “at some point after construction,” the Green Line would
    serve the public.
    B. The Court of Appeals’ Requirement of a Substantial Public Interest
    The court of appeals erroneously required that the reasonably probable future use of the
    pipeline serve a “substantial public 
    interest.” 457 S.W.3d at 121
    . The court of appeals discounted
    Denbury Green’s claim that small interest owners in the West Hastings and Jackson Dome fields
    benefitted from CO2 transferred from those units over the Green Line even though Denbury Onshore
    owned the controlling interests in both units, concluding that it raised a fact issue of whether such
    use was substantial. 
    Id. Additionally, the
    court of appeals determined that the Air Products
    agreement, under which Air Products would transfer ownership of its CO2 to Denbury Onshore even
    though Denbury Onshore was required to sequester the gas in a method that complied with Air
    Products’s agreement with the federal government, was not sufficiently “substantial” to survive
    summary judgment. 
    Id. In imposing
    this additional requirement, the court of appeals erroneously
    relied on this Court’s 1958 decision in Coastal States Gas Producing Co. v. Pate. 
    Id. (citing 309
    S.W.2d 828, 833 (Tex. 1958)).
    In Pate, Coastal States Gas Producing Co. attempted to condemn a 1.84-acre tract to further
    develop an oil and gas lease. 
    Pate, 309 S.W.2d at 830
    . In deciding that Coastal States had eminent
    domain authority to drill a directional well, we determined that the state’s benefit—one-fourth of the
    gross production revenue dedicated to the Permanent School Fund—was a “direct, tangible and
    13
    substantial interest” in the taking. 
    Id. at 833.
    We did not hold that the interest need be direct,
    tangible, or substantial, but rather that the facts before us in Pate supported that the public’s interest
    would be served. 
    Id. To the
    extent that the degree of service to the public was woven into our test
    in Texas Rice I, we held that for the pipeline to serve the public it must “transport[] gas for one or
    more customers who will either retain ownership of their gas or sell it to parties other than the
    
    carrier.” 363 S.W.3d at 202
    (emphasis added) (footnote omitted). Existential arguments related to
    the power and importance of the individual notwithstanding, we hold that evidence establishing a
    reasonable probability that the pipeline will, at some point after construction, serve even one
    customer unaffiliated with the pipeline owner is substantial enough to satisfy public use under the
    Texas Rice I test.
    IV. Conclusion
    After remand, the evidence in the summary judgment record before the trial court below was
    no longer limited to naked assertions or Denbury Green’s subjective beliefs, as it was when we
    considered Texas Rice I. We hold that the evidence adduced by Denbury Green on remand
    established as a matter of law that there was a reasonable probability that, at some point after
    construction, the Green Line would serve the public by transporting CO2 for one or more customers
    who will either retain ownership of their gas or sell it to parties other than the carrier. Accordingly,
    we reverse the court of appeals’ judgment and reinstate the trial court’s judgment.7
    7
    Texas Rice alleges that the trial court erred by entering final judgment on its remaining declaratory judgment
    counterclaims and Denbury Green’s declaratory judgment claims added after the trial court granted summary judgment
    on common-carrier status, without a trial or hearing additional evidence. In its April 4, 2014, hearing on the matter, the
    trial court denied Texas Rice’s motion to sever its counterclaims, granted leave for Denbury Green to amend its petition,
    and entered final judgment. Because Denbury Green’s amended claims raised no additional issues and could not result
    in any injury to Texas Rice, we hold that the trial court did not abuse its discretion when allowing Denbury Green to add
    14
    ____________________________________
    Paul W. Green
    Justice
    OPINION DELIVERED: January 6, 2017
    declaratory judgment claims prior to entry of final judgment. See Victory v. State, 158 S.W .2d 760, 763 (Tex. 1942).
    Finally, because Texas Rice’s claims for relief relied upon the trial court finding Denbury Green was not a common
    carrier, we hold that the trial court properly entered final judgment. See Lehmann v. Har-Con Corp., 39 S.W .3d 191,
    200 (Tex. 2001) (“A judgment that actually disposes of every remaining issue in a case is not interlocutory merely
    because it recites that it is partial or refers to only some of the parties or claims.”).
    15