FOREST OIL CORPORATION, now known as Sabine Oil & Gas Corporation, Petitioner, v. EL RUCIO LAND AND CATTLE COMPANY, INC., San Juanito Land Partnership, Ltd., McAllen Trust Partnership, and James Argyle McAllen, Respondents
No. 14-0979
Supreme Court of Texas.
April 28, 2017
Argued February 8, 2017
518 S.W.3d 422
IV.
CONCLUSION
Laura Murphy failed to establish that El Paso Healthcare illegally retaliated against her or tortuously interfered with her contract with West Texas OB. We therefore reverse the trial court‘s judgment and render judgment that Murphy take nothing on her claims.
Joseph B.C. Fitzsimons, Robert Park, Uhl Fitzsimons Jewett & Burton, PLLC, San Antonio, for Amicus Curiae Texas Agricultural Land Trust.
Roger D. Townsend, Alexander Dubose Jefferson & Townsend LLP, Houston, Geoffrey L. Harrison, Johnny W. Carter, Manmeet Singh Walia, Richard Wolf Hess, Susman Godfrey LLP, Houston, Jennifer Ruth Josephson, Alexander Dubose Jefferson & Townsend LLP, Austin, Mitchell C. Chaney, Colvin Chaney Saenz & Rodriguez LLP, Brownsville, for Petitioner.
Warren W. Harris, Jeffrey L. Oldham, Bracewell LLP, Houston, G. Roland Love, Winstead PC, Dallas, Jon Christian Amberson, Larissa Janee Hood, Jon Christian Amberson, P.C., San Antonio, William M. Parrish, Dinovo Price Ellwanger & Hardy LLP, Austin, for Respondents.
Chief Justice Hecht delivered the opinion of the Court, in which Justice Green, Justice Johnson, Justice Willett, Justice Guzman, Justice Lehrmann, Justice Boyd, and Justice Devine joined.
The principal question in this case is whether the Railroad Commission (RRC), which regulates oil and gas operations in Texas, has exclusive or primary jurisdiction over claims for environmental contamination, thus precluding suits for damages and other judicial relief. We answer no. We also decide whether the arbitration award in this case should be vacated for the evident partiality of a neutral arbitrator or because the arbitrators exceeded their powers,1 and whether the parties agreed to judicial review of the exemplary damages award. Again, we answer no. Accordingly, we affirm the judgment of the court of appeals.2
I
Through family entities, respondent James A. McAllen controls the 27,000-plus-acre McAllen Ranch (“the Ranch“) once owned by his great-grandfather, for whom the City of McAllen, on the Rio Grande River near the southern tip of Texas, is named. Petitioner Forest Oil Corporation (“Forest“) has produced natural gas on the Ranch for over 30 years. Forest‘s leases cover about 1,500 acres, and it maintains a processing plant on 5.75 acres.
In the 1990s, McAllen sued Forest for underpayment of royalties and underproduction of the lease. The parties resolved their disputes with a “Settlement Agreement” and a “Surface Agreement“. The latter provided in part:
8. [Forest] will not bring on the Leases any hazardous material.... Further [Forest] agree[s] (1) to remove from the Leases, if, as and when required by law, any hazardous material placed or released thereon by [Forest], (2) to perform remedial work where the need therefore arises as a result of and is caused by [Forest‘s] operations or activities on the Leases, and (3) to comply in all respects with all federal, state and local governmental laws and regulations governing operations by [Forest] and remedial work on or associated with the Leases.
9. [Forest] shall not store or dispose of any hazardous materials on the surface of the Leases....
The Surface Agreement also incorporated an arbitration provision in the Settlement Agreement.3
In 2004, McAllen learned from a former Forest employee that Forest had contaminated the property. Also, McAllen was told, used oilfield tubing Forest had donated to him for construction of a rhinoceros pen was contaminated with naturally occurring radioactive material (NORM). When McAllen was diagnosed with sarcoma in his ankle, resulting in the amputation of his right leg below the knee, he blamed Forest.
McAllen sued Forest for environmental contamination, improper disposal of hazardous materials on the Ranch, and maliciously donating the contaminated pipe that caused his injury. Forest moved to compel arbitration, McAllen objected, and the trial court denied the motion. We reversed.4 Meanwhile, in 2007, McAllen asked the RRC to investigate contamination of the Ranch by Forest. The RRC referred Forest to its voluntary Operator Cleanup Program to propose and implement plans to remediate soil and groundwater conditions affected by its operations on the Ranch. The RRC has approved portions of Forest‘s proposals but has yet to approve Forest‘s proposed final remediation plan.
Arbitration proceeded before a panel of three neutral lawyer-arbitrators. Forest chose B. Daryl Bristow of Houston, and McAllen chose Donato Ramos of Laredo. When Bristow and Ramos could not agree on a third arbitrator, Forest asked District Judge Dion Ramos of Houston (no relation to Donato) to name one, and each side proposed candidates. Judge Ramos chose Clayton Hoover of Austin, whom McAllen had proposed.5 A divided panel refused
a. [Forest] has a continuing obligation and duty under the Surface Agreement to locate, remediate, and dispose of all hazardous and non-hazardous materials from the [Ranch] related to [Forest‘s] operations;
b. [Forest] is required to perform remedial work where the need therefore arises, which shall include the removal of any and all hazardous and non-hazardous materials when those materials are no longer necessary in the conduct of [Forest‘s] operations on the lease;
c. [Forest] is solely responsible for reimbursing [McAllen] for any future costs and expenses incurred by [McAllen] in conducting investigations which result in the identification of additional locations requiring remediation of hazardous and non-hazardous materials on the [Ranch] resulting from [Forest‘s] operations; and
d. [Forest] is solely responsible for all future remediation costs and activities related to pollutants, contaminants, and hazardous and non-hazardous materials that are known to be present and/or discovered under those lands covered by the Surface Agreement.
The panel also ordered Forest to provide McAllen a $10 million bond to assure its performance of these continuing obligations. Arbitrator Bristow issued a 40-page dissent.
Forest moved to vacate the award on several grounds. Forest argued that the RRC had exclusive or primary jurisdiction over McAllen‘s claims, precluding the arbitration. Forest also offered evidence that McAllen had earlier objected to using Ramos as a mediator in another case, apparently to avoid any conflict in Ramos’ serving as an arbitrator in this case. McAllen had not communicated with Ramos in the other case, and while the opposing party had contacted Ramos’ staff, there was no evidence that Ramos knew of the mediation. Neither McAllen nor Ramos had disclosed these facts to Forest when Forest named Ramos an impartial arbitrator; Forest argued that this nondisclosure showed Ramos’ evident partiality and thus required vacatur of the award. Forest also argued that the damages awards were in manifest disregard of Texas law, and that the parties had agreed to expanded judicial review of the arbitration award. The trial court vacated the award‘s $10 million bond requirement but otherwise denied Forest‘s motion. The court of appeals affirmed.6
We granted Forest‘s petition for review.7 We consider first whether the RRC has exclusive or primary jurisdiction over McAllen‘s claims, and then whether the grounds for vacatur Forest has raised are valid.
II
The RRC has extensive statutory authority to regulate contamination from oil
A
“An agency has exclusive jurisdiction when the Legislature gives the agency alone the authority to make the initial determination in a dispute.”8 As a rule, when an agency has exclusive jurisdiction, a party must exhaust all administrative remedies before seeking judicial review of the agency‘s action, and then “only at the time and in the manner designated by statute.”9 Until then, the trial court lacks subject-matter jurisdiction and must dismiss the claims within the agency‘s exclusive jurisdiction.10
Forest argues that the RRC has exclusive jurisdiction over this dispute, foreclosing McAllen‘s common-law contamination claims, so that the arbitration panel lacked jurisdiction to enter the award and the trial court the jurisdiction to confirm it. Abrogation of a common-law right, as we have said, “is disfavored and requires a clear repugnance” between the common-law cause of action and the statutory remedy.11 A statute‘s “express terms or necessary implications” must indicate clearly the Legislature‘s intent to abrogate common-law rights.12 Absent such a clear indication, the RRC did not have exclusive jurisdiction over the claims at issue.
As a clear indication of such intent, Forest points to
Forest argues that if landowners may seek remediation of contamination both from the RRC and through the courts, they can recover twice for the same injury, holding operators liable to pay damages for contamination they are also ordered to clean up. Further, if a landowner does not spend a damage award on remediation, the RRC remains responsible to the public to order cleanup of the contamination. But the problem lies within the operator‘s control. By seeking an RRC determination of contamination allegations and complying with RRC cleanup orders, an operator can reduce or eliminate the landowner‘s damages. Forest argues nonetheless that the risk of operators’ double liability remains, is “unsound public policy“, and is reason enough to confer on the RRC exclusive jurisdiction over contamination claims. But that is an argument for the Legislature. The issue for us is whether the Legislature has demonstrated its clear intent to do so. It has not.21
B
Unlike exclusive agency jurisdiction, which implicates courts’ subject-matter jurisdiction, primary jurisdiction is a prudential doctrine that allocates power between courts and agencies when both have authority to make initial determinations in a dispute.22 Under this doctrine, trial courts should allow an administrative agency to initially decide an issue when: (1) an agency is typically staffed with ex-
The doctrine of primary jurisdiction does not apply to claims that are “inherently judicial in nature“,25 such as trespass,26 one of McAllen‘s claims. McAllen also asserted claims for negligence, negligence per se, fraud, assault, intentional battery, and breach of contract, all inherently judicial in nature. Nor is the RRC‘s “primary jurisdiction ... so broad-sweeping as to oust the courts of jurisdiction just because the Commission might have jurisdiction to determine some facts related to the controversy.”27 While the RRC may make determinations with respect to McAllen‘s contamination claims - indeed, it has already done so - it cannot thereby oust the court of jurisdiction to decide those claims or refer the decision to arbitration.
Forest argues that the RRC has primary jurisdiction over McAllen‘s claims because the Surface Agreement required that Forest remove hazardous material it placed on the Ranch only “if, as and when required by law“, and only the RRC can determine what the law requires. But while RRC regulations and orders certainly inform the extent to which remediation of contamination is required by law, they do not supplant Forest‘s common-law duties, which are also required by law. Further, the Surface Agreement also provides that Forest “shall not store or dispose of any hazardous materials on the surface of the Leases“, “will not bring on the Leases any hazardous material“, and will “perform remedial work where the need therefore arises as a result of and is caused by Lessees’ operations or activities on the Leases.” The RRC‘s determinations of Forest‘s obligations under its rules do not preclude enforcement of Forest‘s obligations under the Surface Agreement. McAllen‘s common-law claims are not dependent on the standards of regulatory compliance. Because McAllen‘s claims are inherently judicial, the doctrine of primary jurisdiction does not apply and vacatur is not warranted for failure to abate the arbitration hearing.
III
Forest argues that the arbitration award must be vacated because of arbitrator Ramos’ evident partiality and the panel‘s manifest disregard of Texas law. Forest also argues that the Surface Agreement provides for full judicial review of the award.28
A
Courts must vacate arbitration awards when “the rights of a party were prejudiced by ... evident partiality by an arbitrator appointed as a neutral arbitrator.”29 Evident partiality is established by the nondisclosure of “facts which might, to an objective observer, create a reasonable impression of the arbitrator‘s partiality“,30 regardless of whether the nondisclosed information necessarily shows partiality or bias.31 But disclosure is required only if facts are material; an arbitrator need not disclose “trivial” matters.32 Some undisclosed relationships are too insubstantial to warrant vacating an award.33 And an arbitrator‘s impartiality cannot be affected by something of which he is completely unaware.34
McAllen‘s objection to Ramos’ serving as a mediator in another case was not disclosed to Forest. It is difficult to see how Ramos could be partial to McAllen for objecting to his serving as a mediator in a case in which McAllen was a party. One would think, if anything, the objection would have made Ramos biased against McAllen. But in any event, there is no direct evidence that Ramos knew of the possible mediation, much less that McAllen had objected to avoid any conflict with Ramos’ serving as an arbitrator in this case. Even if the fact that Ramos’ staff was contacted about his serving as a mediator is circumstantial evidence that Ramos knew of the mediation, we must defer to the trial court‘s contrary finding if supported by the evidence.35 The trial court judged the witnesses’ credibility and weight of their testimony, ultimately concluding that Ramos “should not be disqualified for failure to disclose a trivial, non-prejudicial, not consummated invitation to act as mediator.” The trial court‘s implied finding that Ramos was unaware of the mediation is supported by the evidence.36
B
Forest argues that the arbitration award must be vacated because the panel exceeded its authority under the Settlement Agreement by awarding damages not permitted by Texas law and issuing declarations that imposed its own notion of economic justice, all in manifest disregard of the law. In determining whether an arbitrator has exceeded his authority, the proper inquiry is not whether the arbitrator decided an issue correctly, but rather, whether he had the authority to decide the issue at all.37
The Settlement Agreement calls for arbitration of McAllen‘s claims,38 including that Forest breached the Surface Agreement‘s requirement that Forest “perform remedial work where the need therefore arises as a result of and is caused by
C
Generally, the
* * * * *
Accordingly, the court of appeals’ judgment is
affirmed.
Justice Brown did not participate in the decision.
