Western Gas Resources, Inc. (Western) appeals from-the'district court’s denial of its motion for summary judgment and from the grant of JN Exploration & Production’s (JN) motion for summary judgment. JN cross-appeals, contesting the district court’s denial of JN’s motion for attorneys’ fees and the inclusion of an indemnity clause in the judgment. JN has additionally moved to strike portions of Western’s reply brief. We reverse and remand on Western’s appeal, we deny JN’s motion to strike, and we do not reach JN’s cross-appeal.
I.
JN owns or leases mineral rights to various properties in Billings County, North Dakota. JN is primarily concerned with the production of oil, but in producing its oil, JN necessarily produces a certain amount of natural gas. Years ago, this gas was “flared” at the site of the well. However, environmental legislation enacted in the late 1970s created incentives for oil producers to begin collecting the otherwise “flared” gas for sale. On June 4, 1979, JN’s predecessor-in-interest entered into a gas sales and purchase contract with Western. 2 Pursuant to this contract, JN agreed to sell, and Western agreed to buy, “all the gas .. now or hereafter produced from the said lease/s and land/s” through 1999. (Appellee’s App. at 34.) The parties agreed that Western would construct a processing facility near the wells at which Western would process the gas it bought from JN for resale by Western. The contract provided that Western would receive title to the gas upon delivery at the wellhead. Pursuant to the contract, JN would not be paid for the natural gas delivered to Western until such gas was processed and sold by Western, and the price paid by Western to JN would be equal to “fifty percent of the net sales proceeds” received by Western for the processed gas when Western sold it. Once Western had reached “payout” (i.e., once it had recouped the costs of cohstruet-ing and operating its plant), JN’s compensation would rise to sixty percent of the net sales proceeds.
JN’s contract with Western did not specify at what price or to whom Western would resell the processed gas. However, JN’s predecessor had selected Western over several competing processors, and one factor militating in favor of Western was Western’s then existing contract with Montana Dakota Utilities Co. (MDU). On March 16, 1979-several months before signing the gas sales and purchase contract with JN — Western had entered into a gas purchase contract with MDU pursuant to which MDU promised to purchase all of the plant’s production up to 10,000,000 cubic feet of gas per day from Western. At that time, MDU had the only interstate gas pipeline in the area and was the only readily accessible market for processed natural gas. The contract included a “take-or-pay” clause which obligated MDU, through 1999, to pay for the daily contract quantity of gas even if it did not in fact take that amount. MDU agreed to pay the highest price permitted under federal price regulations. Fifteen months after signing the contract with JN, Western negotiated an amendment to its contract with MDU pursuant to which MDU increased its maximum take to 30,000,000 cubic feet per day.
In the early 1980s, changes in the regulatory structure led to a significant oversupply of natural gas. As a result, MDU was unable to take the amount of processed gas it was obligated to purchase under its contract with Western. As a result, in 1983, 1984, and 1985, MDU requested a short-term abatement in its required take from Western’s processing facilities. In each of those years, Western agreed to such reduction. As partial consideration, MDU agreed to pay an elevated price for the gas it did buy during each of those years.
In 1986, MDU
3
again requested a temporary abatement of its take-or-pay responsibil
On June 30, 1987, Western sent a letter to each of its producers, including JN, notifying them that “negotiations with [MDU] have resulted in a revision of the sales contract resulting in [MDU] assuring Western of continued transportation but significantly altering [MDU’s] obligation to purchase gas.” (Id. at 132.) Western made clear that MDU would no longer provide “any significant market” for gas sold from Western’s processing facility. (Id.) However, Western never notified JN of the $15,000,000 in annual commitment fees it was receiving from MDU.
In the very same letter, Western announced that it would begin purchasing processed gas from the Western plant in the same daily quantities and at the same per-unit price that MDU had been purchasing since the beginning of 1987. (See id. at 132.) It wrote that it did so because “[i]t is Western’s opinion that maintaining a market for the gas that has been purchased by [MDU], at a price consistent with [MDU’s] previous purchases, is important to ... [Western’s plant] and to Western’s producers behind the plant.” Id.
In 1993, JN received a communication from the North Dakota State Land Department which made reference to the $15,000,-000 Western had received pursuant to its settlement with MDU. Less than one month later, JN initiated this action in the District of North Dakota. JN claimed that it was entitled to a portion of the $15,000,000 under several contract theories or under an 'unjust enrichment theory. Both parties moved for summary judgment. The district court granted summary judgment for JN on its unjust enrichment claim. Western appeals both from the grant of summary judgment for JN and from the denial of its own motion for summary judgment. JN cross-appeals, contesting the denial of its motion for attor-. neys’ fees and the inclusion of an indemnity clause in the judgment.
II.
The district court held, in relevant part, “[t]hat although the negotiated settlement of the ‘take-or-pay’ contract was done in good faith and for the probable market advantage of producers and processor, the processor has been unjustly enriched, and under the controlling law of the Eighth Circuit, plaintiff is entitled to relief_” (Appellant’s App. at 21 (emphasis added).) The district court does not appear to have considered any of JN’s contract claims, and we therefore concentrate our analysis on the unjust enrichment theory on which the court granted relief.
A. Standard of Review and Choice of Law
We review the district court’s grant of summary judgment for JN de novo, applying the same standard as the district court.
Get Away Club, Inc. v. Coleman,
Notwithstanding the district court’s invocation of “the controlling law of the Eighth Circuit,” it is axiomatic that federal courts apply state substantive law in diversity suits.
See Erie R.R. Co. v. Tompkins,
B. North Dakota Precedents
“Unjust enrichment is a broad equitable doctrine
which rests upon quasi or con
Under North Dakota law, courts may only apply quasi contractual principles in the absence of a valid express or implied in fact contract.
See, e.g., Estate of Hill,
Because unjust enrichment is synonymous with quasi contract, and because in North Dakota quasi contractual principles find no application in the face of an express contract, it follows necessarily that in the face of an express contract, an action for unjust enrichment cannot lie. The Supreme Court of North Dakota has repeatedly recognized this, stating, “the doctrine [of unjust enrichment] serves as a basis for requiring restitution of benefits conferred
in the absence of
an express or implied in fact contract.”
Sykeston Township,
C. Eighth Circuit Precedents
JN argues that a different result is required by
Klein v. Arkoma Prod. Co.,
In
Klein v. Arkoma,
this court determined that,
under Arkansas law,
a lessor was entitled to share in proceeds acquired by the lessee in a settlement of take-or-pay obligations.
See
JN cites Klein v. Arkoma and Frey in support of its argument that Western was unjustly enriched. For the .reasons discussed below, we do not believe that the Supreme Court of North Dakota would find those cases persuasive.
First, the Harrell rule appears to have won acceptance in only a small minority of jurisdictions. The Texas Court of Appeals recently declined to adopt the Harrell rule even in the context of oil and gas leases, stating:
The “co-operative venture” theory ... is derived from unique state statutes that expand the definition of “royalty” in mineral leases. Most states have no such legislation and therefore, these cases may stand alone. In fact, the co-operative venture theory h*as not received very much additional support, and several. recent eases have eschewed that approach in favor of a literal reading of the lease terms. Accordingly, we decline Alameda’s invitation to depart from precedent and follow the minority “co-operative venture” rule.
Alameda,
However, we are not presented with a lease, but rather with a purchase and sale agreement negotiated between large corporate entities, each with squads of lawyers and industry and marketing experts, in a commercial setting. JN is not a lessor, arid Western is not a lessee. The production of gas from JN’s wells was always ancillary and subservient to JN’s primary purpose — the production of oil. JN cites, and we find, no case in which the Harrell rule has been applied in this very different context. In North Dakota, oil and gas purchase and sale agreements are governed by Article II of the U.C.C.
See Koch Hydrocarbon Co. v. MDU Resources Group, Inc.,
This result makes good sense as well as good law. While lessors are often commercially unsophisticated, ordinary landowners who have deposits of oil and gas under their farms and ranches and who lack the knowledge, expertise, and capital necessary to extract and market these mineral resources, oil and gas producers like JN are large, sophisticated, corporate merchants who can' be trusted to guard their own interests. Therefore, in the absence of procedural unconseio-nability, the role of courts under the U.C.C. is simply to assure each merchant the benefit of its bargain.
See LaSociete Generale Immobiliere v. Minneapolis Community Dev. Agency,
Additionally, JN’s theory is precluded by our decision in
Koch Hydrocarbon,
Most importantly, as discussed above, the jurisprudence of the Supreme. Court of North Dakota clearly forecloses relief on claims for unjust enrichment in the face of an express contract. While the Supreme Court of North Dakota may see fit to carve out exceptions to its rule, we decline to do so here, because “the views of the state’s highest court with respect to state law are binding on the federal courts.”
Wainwright v. Goode,
III.
“We may affirm on any ground supported by the record.”
Doe v. Norwest Bank Minnesota, N.A.,
All of JN’s remaining claims ring in contract. Both JN’s contract with Western and Western’s contract with MDU are primarily for the sale of natural gas and are thus governed by the North Dakota U.C.C.
See Koch Hydrocarbon,
An action for breach of any contract for sale must be commenced within four years after the claim for relief accrued.
A claim for relief accrues when the breach occurs, regardless of the aggrieved party’s lack of knowledge of the breach.
This section does not alter the law on tolling of the statute of limitations....
Id: (emphasis added).
All of JN’s contract claims contest Western’s May 11, 1987, settlement with MDU. JN filed its complaint on May 6, 1993 — nearly six years after the settlement, and more than four years after the last annual payment of $4,000,000 was made on April 26, 1989. The district court applied the discovery rule and found that the statute of limitations had not run, writing, “[t]he action is not time barred, the plaintiffs becoming aware of the $15,000,000.00 payment only when the State of North Dakota demanded a tax payment arising from the payment.” Dist. Ct. Mem. and Order, Apr. 15, 1996, at 5. When it applies, the discovery rule provides that a cause of action “accrues when the plaintiff discovers[ ] or should have discovered the cause of injury.”
Osborn v. United States,
To the extent that the district court was speáking of JN’s contract claims, its reliance on the discovery rule is clearly misplaced. While the Supreme Court of North Dakota has found the discovery rule applicable to some statutes of limitations,
see Hebron Pub. Sch. Dist. No. 13 v. United States Gypsum Co.,
JN argues that the statute of limitations should be tolled because Western fraudulently concealed its settlement with MDU. The North Dakota legislature has codified the doctrine of fraudulent concealment at section 28-01-24, which provides:
When, by fraud or fraudulent concealment, a party against whom a claim for relief exists prevents the person in whose favor such claim for relief exists from obtaining knowledge thereof, the latter may commence an action within one year from the time the claim for relief is discovered by him or might have been discovered by him in the exercise of diligence.
N.D. Cent.Code § 28-01-24 (1991). Article II of the North Dakota U.C.C. indicates that tolling doctrines such as fraudulent concealment are not preempted by the U.C.C. statute of limitations provisions. See id. § 41-02-104(4) (“This section does not alter the law on tolling of the statute of limita-tions_”). In the absence of any authority supporting the contrary position, we therefore conclude that the Supreme Court of North Dakota would apply the doctrine of fraudulent concealment to actions falling under Article II of the U.C.C.
In order to defeat the statute of limitations, JN must establish fraudulent concealment “to the satisfaction of the court or jury, as the case may be, by a fair preponderance of the evidence.”
Id.
§ 28-01-24. The district court did not determine whether Western fraudulently concealed its alleged breach of contract. Nor did it determine when, in the exercise of proper diligence, JN might first have discovered Western’s settlement with MDU. We therefore remand to the district court for consideration of these issues.
See, e.g., Icicle Seafoods, Inc. v. Worthington,
IV.
We hold that the district court erred in entering summary judgment for JN on an unjust enrichment theory, and we reverse. We further hold that Article II of the North Dakota U.C.C. prohibits courts from applying the discovery rule to breach of contract actions arising under it. We remand to the district court for a determination of whether Western engaged in fraudulent concealment and, if fraudulent concealment is found, a decision, on the merits of JN’s contract claims. Because we reverse the district court’s judgment, we do not reach JN’s cross appeal. We deny JN’s motion to strike.
Notes
. JN is the successor-in-interest of Canterra Petroleum, Inc., which was in turn the successor-in-interest of Al-Aquitaine Exploration, Ltd. Similarly, Western Gas Resources is the successor-in-interest of Western Gas Processors, Ltd. In the interests of clarity, we refer to the producer as JN and the processor as Western throughout.
. MDU had been succeeded at this point by its wholly-owned subsidiary Williston Basin Interstate Pipeline Co. For the sake of clarity, we refer to both MDU and its subsidiary simply as MDU.
. This accords with the resolution of the matter in other jurisdictions.
See, e.g., Sutter Home Winery, Inc. v. Vintage Selections, Ltd.,
. Three cases from the 1970s suggest that the Supreme Court of North Dakota had not as of then fully worked out this doctrine.
See Cargill, Inc. v. Kavanaugh, 228
N.W.2d 133, 140 (N.D.1975) (in the
absence
of "unjust enrichment, fundamental unfairness, or miscarriage of law requiring intervention of equity," court's equitable
. We note that JN included in the second claim made in its complaint that Western breached its "duty of fair dealing” and also breached "its fiduciary responsibility" to JN. Neither party argued "breach of fiduciary duty” before us, nor did the district court include any discussion of such a claim in its order on the summary judgment motion. Accordingly, we do not address such a claim here.
