TEC Olmos, LLC v. ConocoPhillips Co.
TEC Olmos, LLC v. ConocoPhillips Co.
Opinion of the Court
This dispute arises in the context of the oil and gas industry. The parties entered into a drilling contract that contained a "force majeure" clause. When one of the parties failed to perform its contractual obligations by the contract deadline, it sought to invoke force majeure protections. Litigation followed, and the trial court held that the force majeure clause was inapplicable as a matter of law. This appeal requires us to construe the parties' force majeure provision.
BACKGROUND
TEC Olmos ["Olmos"] entered into a farmout agreement with ConocoPhillips Company ["ConocoPhillips"] to test-drill land leased by ConocoPhillips in search of oil and gas. The contract set a deadline to begin drilling and contained a liquidated damages clause that required Olmos to pay $500,000 if it failed to begin drilling by the specified deadline.
The contract also contained a force majeure clause that listed several events that would suspend the drilling deadline, followed by a "catch-all" provision for events beyond the reasonable control of the party affected. The force majeure clause provides:
FORCE MAJEURE
Should either Party be prevented or hindered from complying with any obligation created under this Agreement, other than the obligation to pay money, by reason of fire, flood, storm, act of God, governmental authority, labor disputes, war or any other cause not enumerated herein but which is beyond the reasonable control of the Party whose performance is affected , then the performance of any such obligation is suspended during the period of, and only to the extent of, such prevention or hindrance, provided the affected Party exercises all reasonable diligence to remove the cause of force majeure. The requirement that any force majeure be remedied with all reasonable diligence does not require the settlement of strikes, lockouts or other labor difficulties by the Party involved.
(Emphasis added.)
The contract provided for $500,000 in liquidated damages to ConocoPhillips if Olmos failed to timely commence drilling operations. Because the parties "acknowledge[d] that actual damages would be difficult to ascertain," they agreed that "the amount of [liquidated damages] is reasonable, and that [liquidated damages] are not intended to be a penalty." Olmos's parent *180company, Terrace Energy Company ["Terrace"], guaranteed Olmos's contractual obligations.
After the contract was executed, changes in the global supply and demand of oil caused the price of oil to drop significantly. The entity that Olmos intended to handle the financing for the ConocoPhillips drilling project backed out. Other sources of financing also became unavailable. Without financing for its project, Olmos informed ConocoPhillips that it was unable to meet the drilling deadline. Olmos attempted to invoke the force majeure clause to extend the drilling deadline.
ConocoPhillips disputed the applicability of the force majeure clause and sued both Olmos and Terrace [herein collectively, "Olmos" unless specified otherwise]. It sought a declaration that Olmos's claim did not constitute a valid force majeure event and that Terrace owed $500,000 in "maximum liquidated damages" under the "default" provision of the parties' agreement. ConocoPhillips also sought attorney's fees.
Olmos responded by asserting the affirmative defenses of force majeure and unenforceable penalty and bringing a counterclaim for repudiation.
ConocoPhillips moved for summary judgment, arguing that it established each element of its breach-of-contract claim as a matter of law and disproved Olmos's claims and affirmative defenses as a matter of law. It moved for attorney's fees under the contract and under Sections 37.009 and 38.001 of the Civil Practice and Remedies Code. See TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE ANN. §§ 37.009 (West 2015) (allowing award of attorney's fees in declaratory-judgment actions); 38.001(8) (West 2015) (allowing award of attorney's fees in breach-of-contract actions). The trial court granted ConocoPhillips summary judgment, and Olmos appeals.
PROPRIETY OF SUMMARY JUDGMENT
In three issues on appeal, Olmos challenges the propriety of the trial court's ruling on ConocoPhillips's motion for summary judgment, contending as follows:
1. Under a correct understanding of the law, fact issues precluded summary judgment on Defendants' invocation of the Farmout Agreement's "Force Majeure" clause.
2. Fact issues also precluded summary judgment regarding whether the "Maximum Liquidated Damages" sought by ConocoPhillips constituted an unenforceable penalty.
3. ConocoPhillips is not entitled to attorneys' fees against [Olmos] as a matter of law.
A. Standard of Review
We review a trial court's ruling on a motion for summary judgment de novo. Travelers Ins. Co. v. Joachim ,
When a plaintiff moves for summary judgment on its cause of action, it must prove each element of that cause of action. MMP, Ltd. v. Jones ,
*181Brownlee v. Brownlee ,
B. Force Majeure
Olmos asserted as an affirmative defense to ConocoPhillips's breach-of-contract claim that the force majeure clause in the parties' farmout agreement was triggered when Olmos was unable to obtain project financing, thereby excusing its nonperformance. ConocoPhillips obtained summary judgment that the force majeure provision was inapplicable by arguing that force majeure protection is not available unless the triggering event is, first, unforeseeable and, second, something other than a mere economic hardship.
1. Rules of contract interpretation
In construing a written contract, the primary concern is to ascertain and give effect to the parties' intentions as expressed in the document. Italian Cowboy Partners, Ltd. v. Prudential Ins. Co. of Am. ,
Sometimes contracts include terms that have common law significance. A term's common-law meaning will not override the definition given to a contractual term by the contracting parties. See Provident Life & Accident Ins. Co. v. Knott ,
Because foreseeability of force majeure events is rooted in the common law of the force majeure doctrine, the question presented is whether the trial court properly considered the foreseeability of changes in the oil and gas market when determining the applicability of the force majeure clause in this case.
2. Is Market Change a Force Majeure Event?
Olmos contends that the trial court erred as a matter of law in accepting ConocoPhillips's invitation to apply a "traditional conception of force majeure, [i.e., a showing of unforeseeability] rather than to apply the plain language of [the force majeure clause]." ConocoPhillips counters that a foreseeable event
*182provision as broadly as suggested by Olmos. Second, application of the ejusdem generis doctrine compels the conclusion that a decline in oil and gas prices is not the sort of event covered by the force majeure clause. We discuss each reason, respectively.
a. Foreseeability Properly Limits "Catch-all" Provisions
There has, indeed, been a debate regarding whether common-law notions of foreseeability have any place in the interpretation of modern-day force majeure clauses. The Third Circuit and the Fifth Circuit have reached differing results regarding whether, and under what circumstances, a showing of unforeseeability is required to show a force majeure event.
In Gulf Oil Corp., v. Fed. Energy Regulatory Comm'n ,
The Fifth Circuit reached the opposite result in Eastern. Air Lines v. McDonnell Douglas Corp. ,
However, this Court is not called upon to determine whether Gulf Oil or Eastern is correctly decided. Both of those cases involved the situation in which the alleged force majeure event was specifically listed in the force majeure clause. In this case, the alleged force majeure event-a downturn in the oil and gas market-is not listed in the force majeure clause. Instead, Olmos argues that it is applicable through the "catch-all" provision that includes "any other cause not enumerated herein but which is beyond the reasonable control of the Party whose performance is affected." Thus, the question we must decide is whether this "catch-all" provision includes events that are foreseeable, such as a fluctuation in the oil and gas market that affects a party's ability to obtain financing.
We believe that it does not, and we have held so in a similar case on at *183least one other occasion. In Valero Transmission Co. v. Mitchell Energy Co. ,
A force majeure clause does not relieve a contracting party of the obligation to perform, unless the disabling event was unforeseeable at the time the parties made the contract. An economic downturn in the market for a product is not such an unforeseeable occurrence that would justify application of the force majeure provision, and a contractual obligation cannot be avoided simply because performance has become more economically burdensome than a party anticipated.
Indeed, the uncertainty of future market prices is often the motivation for entering into a long-term contract. The primary purpose of a price agreement is to fix the price and consequently to avoid the risk of price fluctuation. Thus, a sudden or significant change in price, or the fact that one of the parties may gain or lose during a particular period of the contract, is not sufficient to constitute an extraordinary, unforeseeable event that would excuse performance under the force majeure clause.
Valero ,
Valero is consistent with Kodiak 1981 Drilling Partnership v. Delhi Gas Pipeline, Corp. ,
We agree that when parties specify certain force majeure events, there is no need to show that the occurrence of such an event was unforeseeable. This is consistent with the holdings in Eastern Air Lines and Kodiak . See also Perlman v. Pioneer Ltd. P'ship ,
Such is not the case here, and those cases do not control the outcome of this case. An inability to obtain financing because of a downturn in the oil and gas industry is not listed as a force majeure event in the contract. The question thus, is *184whether it is included in the "catch-all" provision. To require a showing of unforeseeability for a "catch-all" provision, such as the one here, is consistent with the cases Olmos cited.
Indeed, Eastern Air Lines acknowledges that "[e]xculpatory provisions which are phrased merely in general terms have long been construed as excusing only unforeseen events which make performance impracticable."
The rationale for the doctrine of impracticability is that the circumstance causing the breach has made performance so vitally different from what was anticipated that the contract cannot reasonably be thought to govern. However, because the purpose of a contract is to place the reasonable risk of performance on the promisor, he is presumed, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, to have agreed to bear any loss occasioned by an event which was foreseeable at the time of contracting. Underlying this presumption is the view that a promisor can protect himself against foreseeable events by means of an express provision in the agreement.
Therefore, when the promisor has anticipated a particular event by specifically providing for it in a contract, he should be relieved of liability for the occurrence of such event regardless of whether it was foreseeable.
E. Air Lines ,
However, when, as here, the alleged force majeure event is not specifically listed-i.e., the party did not protect itself through an explicit provision-and the alleged force majeure event is alleged to fall within the general terms of the catch-all provision, it is unclear whether a party has contemplated and voluntarily assumed the risk. Thus, we find it appropriate to apply common-law notions of force majeure, including unforeseeability, to "fill the gaps" in the force majeure clause. See Sun Operating ,
To dispense with the unforeseeability requirement in the context of a general "catch-all" provision would, in our opinion, render the clause meaningless because any event outside the control of the nonperforming party could excuse performance, even if it were an event that the parties were aware of and took into consideration in drafting the contract. For example, in this contract, the parties agreed that "[Olmos] will bear one hundred percent (100%) of the risks, costs, and expenses to drill and complete or plug and abandon all Earning Wells drilled in accordance with this agreement...." Reading the force majeure clause as Olmos requests us to would shift the risks associated with completing the well to ConocoPhillips despite the parties' clear intention that Olmos bear that risk. We agree with the commentator who stated that "it is generally not advisable to negate the foreseeability requirement with respect to the *185catch-all definition inasmuch as this may result in an overly broad definition of force majeure." Kelley, supra, at 115.
Because there is no specific provision in the force majeure clause making a downturn in the oil and gas market a force majeure event, and a "catch-all" provision generally requires a showing of unforeseeability, which Olmos did not and cannot make, we hold that the trial court did not err in concluding, as a matter of law, that Olmos's failure to perform was not excused by the force majeure clause of the contract. See Kel Kim Corp. v. Cent. Mkts. ,
In this case, Olmos agreed to bear the risks and costs associated with drilling the wells. It was aware that it would need to obtain financing to be able to successfully perform its contractual duties. However, it took no steps to condition its performance on the availability of such financing, nor did it specifically define its inability to obtain financing as a force majeure event. Olmos could have protected itself from downturns in the oil and gas market by specifically addressing it in the contract, but it failed to do so. We will not read the "catch-all" provision of the force majeure clause so broadly that it relieves Olmos of liability because of a circumstance that it was aware of, but took no steps to specifically address in the contract.
b. The Doctrine of Ejusdem Generis
Our second reason for concluding that a market downturn is not a force majeure event involves application of the doctrine of ejusdem generis. When more specific items in a list are followed by a catch-all "other," the doctrine of ejusdem generis teaches that the latter must be limited to things like the former. Ross v. St. Luke's Episcopal Hosp. ,
In Eastern Air Lines , the force majeure clause excused performance "due to causes beyond Seller's control and not occasioned by its fault or negligence, including but not being limited to" a list of specified events.
In contrast, this case does not include language similar to "including but not being limited to" in the force majeure clause. Thus, the reasons for the Eastern Air Lines court's refusal to apply the doctrine of ejusdem generis are not present here.
Instead, this case is more like Seitz v. Mark-O-Lite Sign Contractors, Inc. ,
We hold, as a matter of law, that an economic downturn in the oil and gas industry is not like the other events specified in the contract as force majeure events. In this case, the specific terms "fire, flood, storm, act of God, governmental authority, labor disputes, war" are followed by the general term "any other cause not enumerated herein but which is beyond the reasonable control of the Party whose performance is affected." Applying the doctrine of ejusdem generis, the general phrase "any other cause not enumerated herein" must be limited to the types of events specified before, i.e., "fire, flood, storm, act of God, governmental authority, labor disputes, [&] war."
The specified events involve natural or man-made disasters (fires, floods, storms, act of God), governmental actions (governmental authority and war), and labor disputes. These events, while perhaps foreseeable, occur with such irregularity that planning for them and allocating the risks associated with such would be difficult absent a force majeure clause. However, changes in commodities markets and the resulting ability of a party to obtain financing occur regularly and could easily be dealt with in a specific contractual allocation of risks. Indeed, here, Olmos was aware that its ability to perform would be contingent on obtaining financing, but it did not condition its performance on such. In fact, the parties agreed to the contrary that Olmos would bear the risks associated with the drilling of the well, including, presumably, its ability to obtain financing.
3. Conclusion Regarding Force Majeure Event
Because events listed in the "catch-all" provision of this contract require a showing of unforeseeability, which Olmos did not do, and because a change in the oil and gas market making it impossible for Olmos to obtain financing is not like the other force majeure events listed in the contract, we conclude that Olmos, as a matter of law, did not raise a fact issue as to its affirmative defense. As such, the trial court properly granted ConocoPhillips' motion for summary judgment on its breach-of-contract claim.
Accordingly, we overrule Olmos's first issue on appeal.
C. Liquidated Damages
The contract provided for liquidated damages as follows:
*187If [Olmos] fails to commence Drilling Operations on the first Earning Well by the expiration of the Primary Term, then [Olmos] will pay to [ConocoPhillips] the sum of $500,000.00 ("Maximum Liquidated Damages") and this Agreement terminates as to all Lease Acreage.
* * *
The Parties acknowledge that the payments set forth in this Article X are [ConocoPhillip]'s sole remedy for [Olmos]'s failure to drill and complete (or to plug and abandon as a dry hole, as the case may be) the first Earning Well as provided for in Article III. The Parties acknowledge that actual damages would be difficult to ascertain, the amount of Maximum Liquidated Damages and Liquidated Damages is reasonable, and that the Maximum Liquidated Damages and Liquidated Damages are not intended to be a penalty.
In its second issue on appeal, Olmos contends that the trial court erred in granting summary judgment because of its affirmative defense that the liquidated damages sought by ConocoPhillips were an unenforceable penalty.
In FPL Energy, LLC v. TXU Portfolio Management Co., the Texas Supreme Court discussed the enforceability of liquidated damages as follows:
The basic principle underlying contract damages is compensation for losses sustained and no more; thus, we will not enforce punitive contractual damages provisions. See Stewart v. Basey ,150 Tex. 666 ,245 S.W.2d 484 , 486 (1952). In Phillips v. Phillips , we acknowledged this principle and restated the two indispensable findings a court must make to enforce contractual damages provisions: (1) "the harm caused by the breach is incapable or difficult of estimation," and (2) "the amount of liquidated damages called for is a reasonable forecast of just compensation."820 S.W.2d 785 , 788 (Tex. 1991) (citing Rio Grande Valley Sugar Growers, Inc. v. Campesi ,592 S.W.2d 340 , 342 n.2 (Tex. 1979) ). We evaluate both prongs of this test from the perspective of the parties at the time of contracting.
Olmos does not challenge the first prong of the two-prong test. Instead, it argues that a fact issue exists on whether, given the market conditions at the time of breach, ConocoPhillips's actual damages from non-drilling bear any relationship to the $500,000 specified in the contract. Specifically, Olmost argues that "the parties' 'estimate' of ConocoPhillips' damages [at the time the parties agreed to the liquidated damage provision] does not tell us the amount of its 'actual damages incurred' today."
However, we must determine whether a liquidated-damage provision is a reasonable forecast of actual damages by considering the time of contracting, not the time of breach. See FPL Energy ,
Accordingly, we overrule issue two.
D. Attorney's Fees
In its third issue on appeal, Olmos contends that the trial court erred by rendering joint and several liability against Olmos and Terrace for attorney's fees. Specifically, Olmos contends that, while Terrace can be liable for attorney's fees, Olmos, a limited liability company, cannot. See TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE § 38.001 ("A person may recover reasonable attorney's fees from an individual or corporation ... if the claim is for ... an oral or written contract").
We agree. Olmos is not an individual or a corporation; it is a limited liability company.
Nevertheless, ConocoPhillips alleges that it was also entitled to recover attorney's fees under section 37.009 of the Texas Civil Practices and Remedies Code
ConocoPhillips sought a declaration that Olmos's "claim of a force majeure *189does not constitute a valid force majeure under the Farmout" and that "the Farmout terminated at the end of the Primary Term on September 28, 2015 due to [Olmos's] failure to drill an Earning Well." Both requested declarations involve a determination of whether Olmos breached the farmout agreement by not drilling a well. "[W]hen a claim for declaratory relief is merely tacked onto a standard suit based on a matured breach of contract, allowing fees under [ § 37.009 ] would frustrate the limits Chapter 38 imposes on such fee recoveries." MBM Fin. Corp. v. Woodlands Operating Co. ,
Because ConocoPhillips's breach-of-contract claim and declaratory-judgment claim are not independent claims, we sustain Olmos's third issue.
CONCLUSION
There being no statutory basis for assessing attorney's fees against Olmos, we modify the judgment inasmuch as it makes Olmos jointly and severally liable with Terrace for the attorney's fees awarded to ConocoPhillips. We affirm the judgment as modified.
Both parties agree that fluctuation in the commodities markets is a foreseeable event.
See Tex. Bus. Orgs. Code § 101.001(3) (West 2012).
See Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code § 37.009 ("In any proceeding under [the Declaratory Judgment Act], the court may award costs and reasonable and necessary attorney's fees as are equitable and just.").
Dissenting Opinion
DISSENTING OPINION
Harvey Brown, Justice
These parties negotiated and executed a contract with a force majeure provision for suspending contractual obligations during a period in which a party's performance is "prevented or hindered." The contract does not say that an event must have been unforeseeable to suspend performance; nonetheless, one of the parties, ConocoPhillips, has argued that such a limitation should be read into the contract because, at common law, the term "force majeure" included the notion of unforeseeability. ConocoPhillips reads our Court's 1987 decision in Valero Transmission Co. v. Mitchell Energy Corp. to support this interpretation.
I dissent because the Texas Supreme Court has repeatedly told us that it is this state's policy to enforce contracts as they are written.
Texas contract-interpretation law requires parties to include in their contracts those terms they desire and courts to interpret their contracts as written. When we start inserting unwritten terms into contracts, inconsistent holdings result. Legal commentators are left to try to reconcile our holdings to understand when terms might be added in similar or distinguishable contexts. In the area of force majeure and foreseeability, this has led some commentators to theorize that case holdings can be reconciled by focusing on the type of contract and whether a particular risk was allocated such that it cannot qualify as a force majeure,
Following this mandate achieves consistency without burden. If parties wish to limit the scope of their negotiated force majeure provisions to require that an event must have been unforeseeable to excuse performance, it is not difficult to insert that single adjective into their written agreements so that their contracts say what the parties intended.
Because the Court takes an approach counter to established contract-interpretation rules and engrafts a term not found in the parties' contract, I respectfully dissent.
The Parties' Force Majeure Provision
The parties' contract is a farmout agreement. "A farmout agreement is an assignment *191by a lease owner of all or a portion of the lease to another operator who desires to drill on the tract."
The parties' farmout agreement contains an excused delay provision, which the parties' termed a "force majeure" clause. Article 31 provides as follows:
FORCE MAJEURE
Should either Party be prevented or hindered from complying with any obligation created under this Agreement, other than the obligation to pay money, by reason of fire, flood, storm, act of God, governmental authority, labor disputes, war or any other cause not enumerated herein but which is beyond the reasonable control of the Party whose performance is affected , then the performance of any such obligation is suspended during the period of, and only to the extent of, such prevention or hindrance, provided the affected Party exercises all reasonable diligence to remove the cause of force majeure. The requirement that any force majeure be remedied with all reasonable diligence does not require the settlement of strikes, lockouts or other labor difficulties by the Party involved.
(Emphasis added.) Thus, the parties included within the force majeure protections of their contract "any" cause that "prevented or hindered" contract compliance that is "beyond the reasonable control of the Party whose performance is affected." They did not include any language requiring that an event be unforeseeable to qualify as a force majeure event.
General Principles of Contract Interpretation
In construing a written contract, the primary concern is to ascertain and give effect to the parties' intentions as expressed in the document.
If under these rules a contract can be given a certain or definite legal meaning or interpretation, then it is unambiguous.
*192Contracts sometimes include terms that have common law significance, and a contract-interpretation issue can arise regarding whether the common law can inform the meaning of the contractual terms. Contract-interpretation rules require that contracting parties' intent be determined based on the language included in their contract, not by reference to "definitions not expressed in the parties' written agreements."
Objective, extrinsic evidence of "facts and circumstances" may provide context to the transaction, though.
Parties cannot rely on extrinsic evidence to "give the contract a meaning different from that which its language imports," "add to, alter, or contradict" the terms contained within the agreement itself, "make the language say what it unambiguously does not say," or "show that the parties probably meant, or could have meant, something other than what their agreement stated."22
In short, "we may neither rewrite the parties' contract nor add to its language."
We also must not read a force majeure section or phrase within it in isolation; the contract must be read as a whole.
*193We simply cannot change a contract "because we or one of the parties comes to dislike its provisions or thinks that something else is needed in it."
Force Majeure as a Theory and a Contract Term
The term "force majeure" dates back more than a century.
Case law reveals that parties generally choose to excuse delayed performance for events that are (1) beyond a party's reasonable control, (2) unforeseeable, or (3) both.
*194Because parties define the scope of their force majeure provisions to excuse performance in light of their transaction's realities and its acceptable and unacceptable risks, reviewing courts cannot myopically scrutinize the contract's single force majeure provision to identify a qualifying event; instead, they view the entire contract to determine whether the parties intended the disruptive event to be within the body of risk assigned to a party or if, instead, it may excuse performance through the force majeure provision.
Valero Is Consistent with This Approach
ConocoPhillips argues that Valero requires that we imply a requirement of unforeseeability into the parties' contract even if it is not expressly included within the force majeure provision. I disagree that Valero requires the engrafting of an unstated term into these parties' contract. That opinion, instead, does what contract-interpretation principles dictate, which is to consider the nature of the parties' contract and its language as a whole to determine whether the claimed force majeure was part of the assigned risk such that it could not qualify as a force majeure event.
In Valero , a natural gas pipeline company, Valero, unsuccessfully sought to be excused from its contractual obligation to purchase gas by arguing that a significant downturn in the natural gas market qualified as an event "beyond its reasonable control" to invoke force majeure protections under its fixed-price supply agreement *195with the natural gas producer.
Valero is consistent with standard contract-interpretation principles, including that contracts be analyzed as a whole and in a way that does not leave some aspects of the agreements meaningless.
The Third Circuit's holding in Gulf Oil , which was cited in Valero , is similar. In Gulf Oil , the court construed a warranty contract that contained a force majeure clause.
Giving consideration to the parties' entire contract, and not limiting itself to the force majeure provision in isolation, the Third Circuit rejected the supplier's argument.
The Third Circuit repeatedly emphasized that its holding was based on the warranty nature of the supply contract and the absence of any contractual limitation on the source of gas to be supplied.
*197These cases discuss foreseeability in the context of the parties' contractual obligations. Under Valero , when a party enters into a supply contract in which it agrees to supply a good at a fixed price, price fluctuation is the anticipated event for which the parties are assigning risk.
In my view, interpretation of the force majeure provisions in Valero and Gulf Oil was tied to the contracts' warranty nature. To the extent the cases discuss foreseeability, it is in the context of analyzing, first, whether the disrupting event that one party sought to qualify as a force majeure was actually the contingency contemplated by the parties when they assigned risk, and, second, whether the nature of the contract was such that broader contractual obligations prevent this type of event from excusing performance. The foreseeability analysis was a practical evaluation of the parties' agreement as a whole to determine whether the identified event was within the contract's assignment of risk such that the risk could not qualify as a force majeure.
The foreseeability analysis was not, as ConocoPhillips contends and the Court holds, a pronouncement that common law doctrinal aspects of force majeure engraft a general unforeseeability requirement into force majeure agreements (or at least the catch-all clause of the force majeure provision) even without contract language to support such a requirement.
ConocoPhillips Failed to Meet Its Summary Judgment Burden to Disprove, As a Matter of Law, TEC's Affirmative Defense of Force Majeure
ConocoPhillips brought a breach-of-contract claim against TEC and sought liquidated damages. ConocoPhillips moved for and prevailed on its summary-judgment motion, arguing that it established all elements of its breach-of-contract claim and, along with it, disproved TEC's affirmative defense of excused-delay protections as a matter of law.
To defeat ConocoPhillips's motion for summary judgment, TEC was required to bring forth evidence sufficient to raise a genuine issue of material fact on its force majeure affirmative defense.
In my view, summary judgment in ConocoPhillips's favor on the inapplicability of the force majeure provision was error for three related reasons. First, as discussed above, the force majeure provision does not explicitly include an unforeseeability requirement to invoke its protections, and the established rules of contract-interpretation do not support adding to the parties' contract such a term they did not include.
Second, the force majeure provision, when read in light of the general understanding of the terms the parties did choose to include, is unambiguous in the scope of its excused-delay protections. It excuses delay when a party has been "prevented or hindered" from performing either "by reason of fire, flood, storm, act of God, governmental authority, labor disputes, [and] war" or "any other cause not enumerated herein but which is beyond the reasonable control of the Party whose performance is affected." The former includes particular events; the latter is broader, but is not without its own limits because the parties restricted other cause to only causes that are "beyond the reasonable control" of the party. These terms contain no ambiguity.
*199Third, the contract as a whole, giving consideration to all its terms, does not contradict this interpretation. Under their agreement, TEC was to commence drilling operations on an earning well within 180 days. A time period of 180 days to perform is not a lengthy time, which might suggest that the parties'-or at least ConocoPhillips's-interest was in timely performance regardless of obstacle or impediment. But ConocoPhillips placed limits on its ability to terminate the contract and collect liquidated damages when it added a provision that would allow TEC to "suspend" the contract during a period of delay if TEC became "hindered."
ConocoPhillips elected to set the standard of "hindered" for the qualifying obstacle. Dictionary definitions of hinder include "to keep back; restrain; get in the way of; prevent; stop" and "to make difficult for; thwart; impede; frustrate."
Moreover, during the period of hindrance, the contract is not terminated; instead, it is "suspended" until the hindrance is lifted. The parties' election to allow the contract to be suspended, which in effect extended their obligations, also suggests a low threshold before the clause applies. Parties may choose to include excused-delay provisions, like this, because of the varying effect of a failure to perform. Typically, when a party fails to act under a contract, the party is in breach, and the other party is excused from further performance.
In conclusion, there is no evidence from the terms of the remainder of the parties' agreement or the nature of the agreement itself to support injecting an otherwise unagreed-to term into their agreement. On the contrary, the combination of both low thresholds counsels against interpreting the parties' agreement to require a higher standard of unforeseeability.
Conclusion
The trial court and this Court accept ConocoPhillips's argument that TEC could not avail itself of the force majeure clause as a matter of law because the clause silently, but by implication, incorporated the common law requirement that a force majeure event be unforeseeable. I disagree for three reasons. First, the court's injection of additional terms is inconsistent with well-established Texas contract-interpretation rules. Second, the use of the word hinder in the force majeure clause and the parties' decision that the excuse applies not only to terminate a party's performance obligation but to suspend it suggests that the parties did not agree to a narrow and restrictive unforeseeability requirement. Third, the general nature of this contract is very different from the warranty contracts on which ConocoPhillips relies. Therefore, I respectfully dissent.
In re Davenport ,
Thedford Crossing, L.P. v. Tyler Rose Nursery, Inc. ,
See Am. Mfrs. Mut. Ins. Co. v. Schaefer ,
See Sonat Expl. Co. v. Cudd Pressure Control, Inc. ,
See Robert N. Barnes & Randall J. Wood, The Allocation of Risk in Gas Purchase Contracts after Golsen v. ONG Western, Inc.,
See Jay D. Kelley, So What's Your Excuse? An Analysis of Force Majeure Claims , 2 Tex. J. Oil Gas & Energy L. 91 (2007) ; Majority Op. pp. 182-85; see also Jocelyn L. Knoll & Shannon L. Bjorklund, Force Majeure and Climate Change What is the New Normal? , 8 J. Am. C. Constr. Law. 2, at Sec. III.C.1. (2014); Anthony A. Zoobkoff, Force Majeure (and Other Useful French Profanities) in Resource Agreements , 59 RMMFL-INST 17-1, at § 17.04(3)(b) (2013).
See Sonat Expl. ,
Tenneco Inc. v. Enter. Prods. Co. ,
One legal writer suggests this phrasing to include an unforeseeability requirement in a force majeure "catch all" clause: "any other cause beyond the unit operator's reasonable ability to foresee or control." See Allison R. Ebands, Comment, Force Majeure: How Lessees Can Save Their Leases While the War on Fracking Pages On ,
ExxonMobil Corp. v. Valence Operating Co. ,
URI, Inc. v. Kleberg Cty. ,
URI ,
Frost Nat'l Bank v. L & F Distribs., Ltd. ,
David J. Sacks, P.C. v. Haden ,
See Provident Life & Acc. Ins. Co. v. Knott ,
Zurich Am. Ins. Co. v. Hunt Petrol. (AEC), Inc. ,
See URI ,
Schaefer ,
See, e.g. , Roland Oil Co. v. R.R. Comm'n of Tex. , No. 03-12-00247,
See Nassar v. Liberty Mut. Fire Ins. Co. ,
See Sun Operating ,
Thedford Crossing ,
Force majeure , Black's Law Dictionary (10th ed. 2014).
Va. Power Energy Mktg., Inc. v. Apache Corp. ,
Sun Operating ,
See, e.g. , Hydrocarbon Mgmt., Inc. v. Tracker Expl., Inc. ,
See Roland ,
See Valero ,
See Valero ,
See, e.g. , Nassar ,
See Valero ,
Valero ,
See
Valero ,
See
See
See
The Third Circuit discusses foreseeability in two parts of its Gulf Oil opinion. It does so, first, while highlighting that the agreement's context-a warranty contract-largely informs its analysis.
Gulf Oil discusses foreseeability a second time when considering whether routine maintenance can qualify as a force majeure event under the warranty contract. Id. at 453-54. It concludes that it would be contrary to the warranty nature of the parties' contract to allow "frequent," "routine" "mechanical breakdowns" that happen with "regularity" to excuse performance. Id. Promising to maintain a supply of product includes a commitment to overcome routine obstacles to meeting demand. See id. The court analyzed whether an event could qualify as a force majeure not in terms of whether it was a foreseeable event in the abstract but, instead, in light of the nature of the parties' agreement and the contract's other terms, to discern whether the parties assigned risk related to such an occurrence. See id. ; see also Valero ,743 S.W.2d at 663 (analyzing force majeure provision in light of price-fix nature of parties' agreement). Given the nature of the parties' agreement, the court concluded that the parties had assigned risk for routine maintenance needs. See Gulf Oil ,706 F.2d at 454 .
The supplier assumes the risk that an increase in market prices will harm him while, at the same time, he accepts the benefit that will inure to him if market prices fall. See Valero ,
See
See
See Gulf Oil ,
Cf. Knott ,
ConocoPhillips cites Roland as support for its proposition that "courts may consider traditional concepts of force majeure, such as unforeseeability and control, when interpreting a catch-all provision in a force majeure clause," even if those requirements are not inherent to specifically listed force majeure events. ConocoPhillips's reliance on Roland is misplaced. But the Roland court expressly rejected the idea that common-law aspects of the force majeure doctrine govern the applicability of the force majeure provision absent supporting contract terms. Roland ,
See Brownlee v. Brownlee ,
See Brownlee ,
The Court agrees that the parties' contract is unambiguous. When a contract is unambiguous, background contract interpretation aids, like the doctrine of ejusdem genris, do not apply. Hussong v. Schwan's Sales Enters., Inc. ,
Hinder , Webster's New World College Dictionary (5th ed. 2014).
ConocoPhillips argues that TEC's inability to obtain financing is a mere "economic hardship" that, historically, would not excuse performance. TEC counters that the event is better described as an actual impediment that prevented, at least temporarily, performance, not something that added cost to performance or made it unprofitable. See Mainline ,
Under the contract's terms, ConocoPhillips agreed that TEC may assign a portion of its rights in the leases to Black-Brush Oil & Gas in the future without requiring TEC to obtain ConocoPhillips's consent. It describes Black-Brush as an "affiliate" of TEC generally, without denoting it as a financing source. This provision does not establish TEC's force majeure defense nor negate it as a matter of law. Its inclusion in the agreement is not inconsistent with the interpretation of the force majeure provision to unambiguously excuse performance for causes outside TEC's reasonable control.
Mustang Pipeline Co. v. Driver Pipeline Co. ,
Farmout Agreement, art. 31.
See Ebands, supra n.10 at 876-77 (referring to force majeure provision as "savings clause" and stating, "By including a force majeure clause, parties to an oil and gas lease can contractually define the force majeure defense and provide for temporary suspension of lease obligations, instead of having the contract terminate as it occurs under the common law defenses. The force majeure clause defines certain contingencies that will constitute a force majeure event and sets forth the obligations of the parties should such an event arise. Accordingly, force majeure has become a 'creature[ ] of contract' with its contours based upon the confines set forth by the parties in their agreement, rather than depending upon the delineations of the common law defenses.") (footnotes omitted).
When incorporating an excused-delay provision to suspend obligations into a short-term contract, the parties may wish to negotiate and specify the length of suspension that would be tolerated, past which a breach occurs; however, these parties did not include such terms in their agreement.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- TEC OLMOS, LLC and Terrace Energy Corporation f/k/a Terrace Resources, Inc. v. CONOCOPHILLIPS COMPANY
- Cited By
- 16 cases
- Status
- Published