Travelers
couldn’t escape the coverage suit without a trial because the cleanup costs
were covered under its policy with Eagle Oil. The insurer had argued that Eagle Oil needed
to demonstrate the cleanup costs were necessary for bringing the well under
control.
12-133 - Eagle Oil&Gas
Company et al v. Travelers Property Casualty Company of America et al
In July 2014 the Northern District of Texas, Wichita Falls
Division granted in part Plaintiff Eagle Oil’s partial motion for summary
judgment and Defendant Travelers Property Casualty. Company of America’s motion
for summary judgment as to Plaintiff’s extra-contractual claims. In Eagle Oil &
Gas Co. v. Travelers Prop. Cas. Co. of Am., 7:12-CV-00133-O, 2014
WL 3406686 (N.D. Tex. July 14, 2014)(J. O’Connor) a coverage dispute between
the policyholder and insurer under a well drilling policy after the September
22, 2011 well blowout in Reeves County, Texas. The Policy provided
protection against oil well blowouts, and reimbursement for expenses incurred
in bringing the well under control.
The blowout occurred when Eagle Oil was attempting to open a
stuck frac port sleeve by applying various levels of pressure. During the
process, a 7-inch piece of casing ruptured in the well which caused the top
casing joints of the wellhead to be ejected into the air, and allowed a flow of
gas and well fluids to surface in an uncontrollable manner. While the
well was undisputedly out of control as defined by the policy, the parties
disputed whether the 7-inch casing broke because Eagle Oil exceeded the maximum
allowable casing pressure for the drilling operation.
Travelers assigned an internal adjuster, independent energy
loss adjusters, and a petroleum engineer to review information regarding the
cause of the well control incident. Ultimately, the adjusters and
engineer determined that the blowout was caused by Eagle Oil’s use of excessive
pressure on the 7-inch casing that caused the blowout to occur. Based on
these findings, Travelers denied coverage to Eagle Oil on the grounds Eagle
Oil’s engineering decision to exceed maximum safe fracturing pressure violated
the “due care and diligence” clause in the policy. Travelers denied
coverage on the additional basis that the policy did not cover these claims
because the well was lost due to the pressure operation and not from any
unintended and uncontrolled flow that followed the breaking of the casing.
Eagle Oil filed suit alleging, among other things, that
Travelers breached the policy by denying coverage. Both Eagle Oil and
Travelers moved for summary judgment on different issues.
The court first considered Eagle Oil’s partial motion for
summary judgment, and the court agreed with Plaintiff that the “due care and
diligence” clause in the policy was a covenant and not a condition precedent.
As such, the court determined that Travelers had the burden of proof to
establish that Eagle Oil did not comply with the due care and diligence clause
at trial.
Next, Judge O’Connor considered Travelers’ motion for summary
judgment regarding Eagle Oil’s extra-contractual causes of action. The
court held that the fact that Plaintiff’s experts disagreed with Travelers
regarding whether Eagle Oil exercised due diligence and what were considered
proper operating standards is insufficient to establish a bad faith claim.
The Court further noted that conflicting expert opinions, by themselves,
do not establish that the insurer acted unreasonably in relying on its own
expert. The conflict may support an inference that one expert is
incorrect in his or her conclusions, but this is not sufficient to support a
bad faith claim.
Alternatively, the court found that even if the denial of
coverage was found to be unreasonable, the Court granted summary judgment in
Travelers’ favor because Eagle Oil failed to raise a fact issue that Travelers’
actions caused it injuries independent from the unpaid insurance policy
proceeds.
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE NORTHERN
DISTRICT OF TEXAS, WICHITA FALLS DIVISION
EAGLE OIL & GAS CO. et al., Plaintiffs, v. TRAVELERS
PROPERTY CASUALTY COMPANY OF AMERICA et al.,
Defendants.
MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER FILED JULY 29, 2014
Before the Court is Travelers’
Motion for Reconsideration of Partial Summary Judgment
Rulings on Redrill and P&A,
filed July 18, 2014 (ECF No. 241).
Having considered the motion, response,
reply, summary judgment
record, prior rulings, and
applicable law, Travelers’ motion is denied.
I. Relevant
Background
The Court assumes
the parties’ familiarity with the memorandum opinion and order dated July 14, 2014 (ECF No. 211), and only sets forth facts and procedural history pertinent to Travelers’ motion.
This is an insurance
coverage dispute between policyholder plaintiffs
and their insurer under a well-control policy
following a September
22, 2011 well blowout in Reeves County,
Texas. The lawsuit
arises out of a claim under Control
of Well Policy Number VI04200283 (the “policy”) issued
by Travelers Property
Casualty Company of America (“Travelers”) to Plaintiff Eagle
Oil and Gas Company
(“Eagle Oil”), the operator and a working-interest owner in the Monroe 39 #2H Well (the “Well”). Plaintiffs Eagle
Wolfbone Energy Partners, LP and Eagle Oil and Gas Partners, LLC were non-operating working-interest owners in the Well and were additional insureds under the policy. Among other things, the policy provided
protection to the insured
against oil well blowouts,
and reimbursement for costs and
expenses reasonably incurred
by the insured in bringing the well under control.
The policy also contained a due care and diligence
clause requiring the insured to exercise due care and diligence in the conduct
of all operations with respect
to any insured well and to
use all safety practices
and equipment generally
considered prudent for such operations.
On September 22, 2011, while Eagle Oil was attempting to open a stuck frac port sleeve by applying
various levels of pressure,
a 7-inch piece of casing
ruptured downhole in the Well,
causing the top casing joints and wellhead to be ejected into the air, and allowing
a flow of gas and well fluids to the surface that could not be controlled. The parties dispute whether the 7-inch casing broke apart because Eagle Oil exceeded
the maximum allowable
casing pressure for this operation. Wild Well Control
was dispatched to the location
and, following clean-up and snubbing, Plaintiffs later plugged
and abandoned the Well,
and ultimately re-drilled the Monroe 39 #2R replacement well.
Plaintiffs incurred
costs and expenses:
(1) in attempting to regain control
of the Well, including plugging
and abandonment (“P&A”) costs; (2)
in redrilling a replacement
well; (3) in cleaning up pollution resulting from the blowout;
and
(4) in regard to oil field equipment owned by others that was damaged. Plaintiffs gave proper notice and submitted their losses to Travelers
for reimbursement under the policy.
On July 5, 2012, Travelers denied coverage
stating, among other things, that Eagle Oil’s engineering decision
to exceed maximum
safe fracturing pressure violated the due care and diligence
clause in the policy. Following coverage denial,
Plaintiffs sued Travelers for: (1) breach of contract for denial of claim coverage
under the policy, (2) breach
of the common law duty of good faith
and fair dealing,
(3) violations of sections 541 and 542 of the Texas Insurance Code,
and (4) violations of section 17.46(b) of the Texas Deceptive
Trade Practices Act (“DTPA”) and resultant penalties. See
Pl. Third Am. Compl. ¶¶ 29(a)
- 31(b), ECF No. 68.
On April 14, 2014, Plaintiffs and Travelers
each filed a motion
for partial summary
judgment. Among other things, Plaintiffs sought summary judgment on their breach of contract
claims arising from Travelers’ denial of coverage for P&A costs and costs
to redrill the Monroe
39 #2R replacement well.[1]
Travelers sought partial
summary judgment
as to
Plaintiffs’ extra-contractual claims, and also filed a cross-motion
for summary judgment on the redrill claims. On July 14, 2014, the Court granted Plaintiffs’ motion for partial summary judgment on the breach of contract
claims based on Travelers’ denial of coverage for costs of P&A and redrill,
denied Travelers’ cross-motion for summary
judgment on the redrill claim,
and granted Travelers’ motion for partial
summaryjudgment on Plaintiffs’ extra-contractual claims.[2] See Mem.
Op., ECF No.
211.[3]
Travelers has filed a motion for reconsideration arguing that the policy does not cover
Plaintiffs’ P&A and redrill
claims. The motion
has been fully briefed
and is ripe for determination.
II. Legal
Standard
A request that
the Court reconsider an interlocutory order is
governed by Rule 54(b) of the Federal
Rules of Civil Procedure. Fed. R. Civ. P. 54(b). “Although the precise
standard for evaluating a motion to reconsider under Rule 54(b) is unclear, whether
to grant such a motion rests within the discretion of the court.” Dos Santos v. Bell Helicopter
Textron, Inc. District, 651 F. Supp. 2d 550, 553 (N.D.
Tex. 2009 ) (Means, J.). Such a
motion requires the Court to determine
“whether reconsideration is necessary
under the circumstances.” Rotella
v. Mid-Continent Casualty
Co., 2010 WL 1330449, at *5 (N.D.
Tex. Apr. 5, 2010) (Fish, J.) (quoting Judicial Watch v. Department of the Army, 466 F.
Supp. 2d 112, 123 (D.D.C. 2006)
(citation and internal quotation marks omitted)). “Even though the standard
for evaluating a motion
to reconsider under Rule 54(b) ‘would
appear to be less exacting than that imposed
by Rules 59 and 60 . . ., considerations similar
to those under
Rules 59 and 60 inform the Court’s
analysis.’” Id. (quoting Dos
Santos, 651 F. Supp. 2d at 553). It is clear under Rules 59 and 60 that “[m]otions for reconsideration have a narrow purpose and are only appropriate to allow a party to correct a manifest
error of law or fact or to present newly discovered evidence.” Arrista v. Yellow Transportation, Inc.,
2009 WL 129731, at *1 (N.D. Tex. Jan. 20, 2009) (Fitzwater,
C.J.) (citation and internal
quotation marks omitted); see also Templet v. HydroChem
Inc., 367 F.3d 473, 478-79 (5th Cir. 2004) (citation
omitted) (under Rule 59(e),
relief may be granted
“to correct manifest errors of law or fact or to present
newly discovered evidence[]” and Rule 59(e) “is not the proper vehicle for rehashing
evidence, legal
theories, or arguments that could have been offered
or raised before the entry of judgment.”).
III. Discussion
Travelers has filed a motion for reconsideration arguing that the policy does not cover
Plaintiffs’ P&A and redrill
claims. Plaintiffs oppose the motion.
The Court first addresses
the P&A claims.
A. P&A Claims
Travelers moves
the Court to reconsider its decision granting
Plaintiffs’ motion for partial summary judgment on their
breach of contract
claim based on Travelers’ denial of coverage for P&A
costs. The relevant portion of the policy
provides as follows:
SECTION IA – CONTROL
OF WELL INSURANCE
1. COVERAGE
The Company agrees, subject to the Combined Single Limit of Insurance shown
in Item 7.A. of the DECLARATIONS, and other terms
and conditions of this Policy, to reimburse the Insured
for actual costs and expenses
reasonably incurred by the Insured:
a. To regain or attempt to regain control of any “well insured” which becomes
a
Well
Out
Of
Control as defined
in Paragraph
2.a.
below,
including
any
other
“well” that
becomes a Well Out Of Control as a direct result of a “well insured” becoming
a Well Out Of Control,
but only such
costs or expenses that are incurred until the “well” becomes a Well Brought Under Control as defined
in Paragraph 2.b. below[].
2. DEFINITIONS
Well Out Of
Control
For purposes
of this Policy, a “well” will be deemed to be a Well Out Of Control only when there is an unintended flow of drilling
fluid, oil, gas or water above the surface
of the ground, or water bottom in case of a “well” located in water, which cannot
be controlled by the blowout preventer, storm
choke, “wellhead equipment” or other equipment [required in the policy],
or when declared by the appropriate
United States, Canada or other governmental regulatory authority.
* * *
Well Brought Under Control
For the purposes of this Policy, a “well” deemed to be a Well Out Of Control in accordance with Paragraph
2.a. above will be deemed to be a Well Brought Under Control at the time that the flow giving rise to a claim under this SECTION
IA stops, or is stopped and:
The drilling,
deepening or “workover”, or other similar
operation taking
place in the “well” immediately prior to the “occurrence” giving
rise to such claim is resumed, or can be resumed;
The “well” is or can be returned to the same producing, shut-in or other
similar status that existed immediately prior to the “occurrence” giving rise to such claim; or
When the “well” is permanently plugged and abandoned
in accordance with procedures approved by the appropriate United
States, Canada or other governmental regulatory authority;
whichever comes first[.]
c. Costs
or Expenses
Costs or expenses covered under this Policy includes costs of materials
and supplies required, the services of individuals or firms specializing in controlling “wells” and directional drilling
and similar operations necessary to bring the Well Out Of Control under control including costs and expenses
incurred at the direction of regulatory authorities to bring
the Well Out Of Control
under control, and other expenses
included within Paragraph
1, of this Section 1A.
Policy Section
IA.1(a) & IA.2(a)-2(c) (emphasis added).
Much of the parties’ dispute
centers on this
final subsection, Costs or Expenses.
In opposing
Plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment on the P&A
claim, Travelers
initially argued:
To recover
well-control costs
under Section IA of the policy, Plaintiffs must establish
(1) that the well
went out of control, per policy definition, requiring “unintended flow []
above the surface of the ground, [] which cannot be controlled by the blowout
preventer [] or other equipment,” (2) that they incurred
actual costs and expenses
to control the well before the well was
“brought under
control” as defined by the policy, and (3) that the costs and expenses
were both “reasonably incurred” and “necessary to bring the well [] under control.”
ECF No. 132, at 19-20. Applying Texas law regarding insurance
policy construction, the Court rejected Travelers’ argument that coverage of P&A costs and expenses was only triggered if the insured
could prove costs
and expenses were “necessary to bring the well under control.” Mem. Op. at 25, ECF No. 11. The Court agreed, however, that fact issues rendered summary
judgment inappropriate on the question
of whether Plaintiffs had demonstrated that costs and expenses for P&A were “reasonably incurred.” See id. at 27. The Court arrived at its ruling based on a plain reading of the policy language:
Unlike Section IA, subsection 1, Coverage,
where “reasonably incurred,” directly modifies
reimbursable “costs
and expenses,” the clause “necessary to bring the Well Out of Control
under control” is in a separate
subsection of the policy,
which provides a non-exclusive list of costs allowable. See
Policy, Section
IA, subsection 2.c, Definitions. Further, the clause “necessary to bring the Well
Out of Control under control”
modifies the word “operations,” and not costs and expenses. In short, based on a reading of the plain language
of the policy, the Court concludes that nothing in Section IA expressly states or implies
that costs shall
only be reimbursed if the insured
can prove the costs were “necessary to bring the well under control[.]”
In its motion to reconsider, Travelers argues that the definition of costs and expenses should be
interpreted as requiring that for a cost to be covered, “it must be for an operation
necessary to bring
the well under control.” Brief in Supp. of Mot. to Reconsider at 12, ECF No. 242.
Specifically, Travelers states:
Paragraph 2.c under the
“Definitions” section describes the covered costs and expenses for controlling a well as “costs of materials and supplies required,[] and [] operations necessary to bring the Well Out of Control under control.
Id. (Travelers’ emphasis). In response,
Plaintiffs first note that Travelers “presents no new evidence that would cause the Court to
rethink its plain reading of the policy.” Pl. Response Brief at 12-13, ECF No. 252. Plaintiffs further
argue that:
This Policy covers the cost of a firm’s
services, such as Wild Well Control, in controlling
wells; those services include directional drilling and similar
operations necessary to bring
the well under control. These costs are only limited by the “actual costs and expenses
reasonably incurred” language of Section IA, 1, Coverage. Any contrary reading
ignores the plain language of the Policy.
Id. at 13. The Court agrees.
It is a basic rule of grammar
that ”modifiers should come, if possible,
next to the words they modify.”
William Strunk, Jr., & E.B. White, The Elements of Style 30 (4th ed. 2000). Here, as the Court previously noted, the correct
grammatical reading is that “necessary” modifies
the phrase immediately preceding it. Travelers omits a
crucial portion of the phrase
immediately preceding “necessary,” namely, “the services of individuals or firms specializing in controlling ‘wells’ and directional drilling and similar
operations necessary
to bring the Well Out Of Control
under control[.]” “Necessary,” when read in relation to what it modifies, is a descriptor of the type of services
that firms specializing in well control provide, not a requirement for P&A coverage.
Further, that subsection 2.c, Definitions, is a non-exhaustive list describing the type of costs and
expenses covered
under the policy, and not a coverage
grant or limitation on coverage,
is supported by the definition of “include” in Black’s Law Dictionary: “To contain as part of something. The participle including typically indicates a partial list[.]”
See Black’s Law Dictionary 880 (10th ed. 2014); see
also Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary
629-30 (11th ed. 2014) (“‘Include’ suggests the containment of something as a constituent, component, or subordinate part of a larger
whole[.]”). Travelers’ interpretation is also inconsistent
with the catch-all provision at the end of subsection 2.c, which provides
that “costs or expenses include”
“other expenses included within Paragraph 1 of this
Section 1A.”
In sum, based on a plain
reading of the policy
language, and applying
general rules of grammar, the Court denies Travelers’ motion to reconsider the Court’s prior ruling granting summary
judgment in Plaintiffs’ favor on its breach
of contract claim based
on Travelers’ denial of coverage
on P&A costs.[4]
B. Redrill Claims
Travelers also moves the Court to reconsider
its ruling on the parties’
cross-motions for summary judgment on redrill
coverage, where the Court granted Plaintiffs’ motion and denied Travelers’ motion.
Plaintiffs oppose the motion
for reconsideration on redrill coverage. The relevant
portion of the policy provides as follows:
SECTION IB – REDRILL/EXTRA EXPENSE
1. COVERAGE
The Company agrees, subject
to the Combined Single Limit of Insurance shown
in Item 7.A. of the DECLARATIONS, and other terms
and conditions of this Policy, to reimburse the Insured
for actual costs and expenses
reasonably incurred by the
Insured to restore or redrill a “well”, or any part of such “well”,
which has been lost or otherwise
damaged as a result of a “crater”
or other “occurrence” that gives rise to a claim which would be recoverable
under SECTION IA of this Policy….
Policy Section IB.1(emphasis added). Much
of the parties’ dispute concerns the meaning of “occurrence,” which the policy defines as follows:
“Occurrence” means one accident, loss, disaster or casualty
or series of accidents, losses, disasters or casualties arising out of one event.
With respect
to windstorms, all tornadoes, cyclones, hurricanes, similar
storms and systems
of winds of a violent
or destructive nature arising out of the same atmospheric disturbance occurring
within any period
of 72 consecutive hours will be deemed to be one event.
With respect
to earthquake shocks or volcanic eruptions, all earthquake shocks or
volcanic eruptions occurring within any period
of 72 consecutive hours
will be deemed to be one event.
Policy, Section I, Definitions.
In support of its motion for reconsideration, Travelers once again argues that the “occurrence”
under the policy is the
well out of control, not the casing failure, that the policy is a named-perils policy, and that the Court’s interpretation of the policy
contravenes “industry” interpretation of well control
policy coverage.
See Brief
in Supp. of Mot. to Reconsider at 1-11, ECF No. 242. In opposition, Plaintiffs argue that “Travelers’ motion does not add any new evidence and simply rehashes
arguments it made or could have
made in its three previous filings on this issue.” Pl. Resp. Brief at 5, ECF No.
252. The Court agrees.
In initial
summary judgment
briefing, Plaintiffs argued that Section IB covers costs
of redrilling a well lost or damaged
as a result of an “occurrence” leading up to the uncontrolled flow.
Plaintiffs further argued
that the “occurrence” in this case is
the failure of the 7-inch casing in the Well,
which ultimately caused the loss of the Well. In support of its cross-motion for summary
judgment on redrill
coverage, Travelers argued it was entitled
to summary judgment because redrill coverage does not apply unless the well was lost or damaged
as a result of unintended and uncontrolled flow. In denying Travelers’ cross-motion for summary judgment on redrill
coverage, the Court concluded:
Based on a plain reading of the policy
language, the Court rejects Travelers’ argument that the policy only pays to redrill
a well lost or damaged as a result of uncontrolled flow, rather than lost due to pressure
operations. The policy clearly
covers costs or expenses to redrill
a well which has been lost as a result
of an “occurrence” (defined
as an accident, loss, disaster or casualty,
or series of such arising
out of one event, including
but not limited to windstorms, tornados, and earthquakes)
that gives rise to a claim
that would be recoverable under Section IA. In this case, the “occurrence” is the casing failure.
Travelers’ interpretation skips over the word “occurrence,” or interprets “well out of control”
as synonymous with “occurrence,” even though each is already
a defined term. Additionally, the case law upon which Travelers
relies is not persuasive, as the cases contain
different redrill coverages than Section IB of Travelers’ policy and do not include
a broad definition of “occurrence.”
Mem. Op. at 29, ECF No.211.
Having carefully
considered Travelers’
motion to reconsider and the cases and authorities upon which it relies,
the Court concludes that reconsideration of its ruling
on redrill coverage
is not warranted. Travelers has not shown a manifest
error or presented
newly discovered evidence
supporting its interpretation of the policy’s relevant terms.
Travelers’ brief supporting reconsideration is replete
with arguments previously made in its earlier opposition to Plaintiffs’ motion
for partial summary
judgment, and in support
of its own cross-motion for summary judgment. The Court already decided this issue in its July 14, 2014 memorandum opinion
and order where
it carefully considered the parties’
respective arguments and the extensive
record presented on summary judgment, as well as applicable law.
The Court set forth its reasoning
in its memorandum opinion
and order, and the Court is satisfied that it correctly denied Travelers’ cross-motion for summary
judgment on Plaintiffs’ redrill claims.
No argument advanced by Travelers
in its motion to reconsider persuades the Court that its prior decision is incorrect. In addition, a review
of the Court’s reasoning in its memorandum
opinion and order shows the Court did not commit a manifest error of law in rejecting
Travelers’ position, but applied well-established rules governing
construction of insurance contracts.
Accordingly, the Court
denies Travelers’ motion to reconsider the Court’s ruling
on redrill coverage.
IV. Conclusion
Based on the forgoing, the Court denies Travelers’ Motion for Reconsideration of Partial
Summary Judgment Rulings on Redrill and P&A.
SO ORDERED this 29th day
of July, 2014.
http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/granule/USCOURTS-txnd-7_12-cv-00133/USCOURTS-txnd-7_12-cv-00133-3/content-detail.html
[1]
Plaintiffs also sought a summary judgment ruling
that the due care and diligence clause
was not a condition precedent to coverage
(as Travelers asserted), but a covenant
made to Travelers to act in a certain manner while
conducting well-related activities. Plaintiffs further argued
that compliance with
that covenant was enforced
by the policy’s Common Condition 5.c, which excludes
coverage for breach
of the due care and diligence
clause. The Court agreed with Plaintiffs and held that Travelers would have the burden of proving that Plaintiffs failed to exercise
due care and diligence. The Court rejected Plaintiffs’ motion, however, insofar
as Plaintiffs sought
to incorporate a “gross negligence” standard, extrinsic to the contract, to define the standard of care by which due diligence should be measured. These rulings have not been challenged.
[2]The
Court dismissed with prejudice Plaintiffs’ causes of action
for breach of the common law duty
of good faith and fair dealing, violations of section 541 of the Texas Insurance
Code, and violations of section 17.46(b)
of the Texas Deceptive Trade Practices Act, and request
for punitive damages. This ruling
has not been challenged.
[3]
The Court also granted Plaintiffs’ summary judgment
motion with regard to certain affirmative defenses, and dismissed other affirmative defenses
as moot or because Travelers had agreed to withdraw
them. These rulings
have not been challenged.
[4]
The Court notes that it also found that whether
the P&A costs were reasonably incurred was a fact
issue for the jury, as the Court had insufficient evidence in the summary judgment
record to determine reasonableness. This ruling
has not been challenged.
See Mem. Op. at 27, ECF No. 211.