This court withdraws its earlier opinion reported at
In 1983, GHR Energy Corporation and Southern States Exploration, Inc. (collectively referred to hereinafter as “GHR”) filed voluntary petitions for reorganization under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code. As part of GHR’s reorganization, NL Industries, Inc. (“NL”) agreed to service ten of GHR’s gas wells in an attempt to increase their production. The agreement required NL to service the wells using whatever method GHR stipulated but also provided that S.A. Holditch & Associates, Inc. (“Holditch”), an engineering firm, would review GHR’s designs. NL agreed to be paid solely from the revenue produced by the re-worked wells.
NL performed the services that GHR requested, but the wells failed to produce as expected, and NL did not recover its costs. NL sued GHR under a variety of theories, but the pith of its complaint was that GHR used a much riskier and more expensive method to re-work the wells than the method NL thought it would use. NL also sued Holditch, asserting that Holditch failed to use reasonable care in reviewing GHR’s designs.
GHR moved for partial summary judgment asking the district court to dismiss only NL’s claim for punitive damages and
We AFFIRM the district court’s decision to dismiss Holditch from the litigation, but because the district court did not notify NL that its entire complaint against GHR was at risk, we REVERSE that portion of the district court’s order which dismissed issues not raised in GHR’s motion for partial summary judgment; those claims are REMANDED to the district court for further proceedings. We AFFIRM the dismissal of NL’s claim for punitive damages, negligence, and most of the issues raised under its breach of contract theory. But NL has produced enough evidence that GHR’s method for servicing the wells did not conform to the agreement to survive summary judgment; therefore, we REVERSE the dismissal of that portion of NL’s breach of contract theory and REMAND it back to the district court.
I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
A. The Ill-Fated Workover Agreement
Most of GHR’s income comes from the production of oil and gas from more than 300,000 acres of mineral leaseholds in Webb and Zapata counties in Southwest Texas. To generate more revenue for GHR’s bankruptcy estate, 1 in April 1985 the bankruptcy court authorized GHR to enter into a workover agreement with NL, an internationally known corporation specializing in wellsite drilling services. See Agreement for Recompletion, Reworking and Related Activities on Oil and Gas Wells in Webb and Zapata Counties, Texas (“Agreement”) reprinted in Exhibits to NL’s Memorandum in Opposition to GHR’s Motion for Partial Summary Judgment (“NL’s Exhibits”), vol. 1, tab 1. The work-over agreement provided that NL would use “production enhancement procedures” to increase production from ten of GHR’s existing gas wells.
Production from a well can be increased in a number of ways, 2 but in this case, GHR asked NL to augment production by fracturing the hydrocarbon formations under the wells. “Fracturing” is “[a] process of opening up underground channels in hydrocarbon-bearing formations, by force, rather than by chemical action such as aci-dizing.” See 8 H. Williams & C. Meyers, Oil and Gas Law 379 (1987) [hereinafter Oil and Gas Law\ A liquid or other substance, such as sand, is pumped into a well “to crack (fracture) and prop open the hydrocarbon bearing formation” and create channels through which the gas or oil can be extracted. See id. at 377. The method by which this is done is referred to as a “fracture treatment” or “frac.”
The agreement required NL to finance the workover of the ten wells. To compensate NL for its services, GHR assigned NL a “proceeds production payment” equal to seventy-five percent of the “incremental net revenues” attributable to GHR’s working interest in the wells. See Agreement, Exhibit 7. In other words, NL would receive seventy-five percent of the net revenue from the sale of that portion of the gas attributable to the production enhancement procedures. The agreement stated that the income from the proceeds production payment was to be NL’s only source of compensation. See articles 5.1, 5.2. NL also received a right of first refusal for the performance of similar procedures on forty of GHR’s other wells.
The agreement stipulated that GHR was to determine the method for servicing the wells. GHR was to give NL a “detailed written prognosis” explaining how the production enhancement procedure for each
GHR wanted NL to fracture the wells. As with other production enhancement procedures, the agreement required GHR to instruct NL how to perform the fracture treatment, but its frac design was to be based on a model supplied by Holditch, a petroleum engineering consultant. 3 The agreement required GHR to provide NL with instructions for fracturing the well and with a fracture program approved by Holditch; if it failed to do so within ten days after being notified by NL, GHR was deemed to have elected not to fracture the well, and NL was to perform other production enhancement procedures stipulated by the prognosis. See article 4.3.Í.3.
The agreement also contained provisions to comfort GHR’s secured lenders, referred to as the “Banks.” From the beginning, the Banks were intimately connected to the agreement between GHR and NL. Before GHR could assign the proceeds production payment to NL, the Banks had to subordinate their pre-existing security interests in the production of GHR’s wells. Moreover, like any secured lender, the Banks needed to be confident about the financial viability of GHR before they would confirm GHR’s plan of reorganization. Recognizing this, the bankruptcy court required GHR to insert several provisions into the workover agreement to protect the Banks. 4
The agreement contained other clauses that benefitted the Banks in addition to those required by the bankruptcy court,
5
the most important of which provided that GHR could not authorize workovers on
any
well before Holditch and two other petroleum engineering consultants, Netherland, Sewell and Associates (“NSA”) and B.P. Huddleston & Co. (“Huddleston”), certified to the Banks that the workover would increase the discounted present value of future net revenue realized from each well by more than the anticipated cost of the work-over.
See
article 4.1.c. Although the Banks required GHR to include these provisions in the agreement, the Banks were not
As GHR explained to the bankruptcy court when it sought permission to consummate the agreement with NL, the parties expected the agreement to benefit everyone. GHR’s bankruptcy estate would be benefitted by increased production, and “[n]et revenues to GHR [would] increase dramatically once the procedures desired [were] employed.” See Motion for Authority to Enter Into Agreement with NL Industries, Inc. to Perform Recompletions, Work-overs, and Related Activities at 6, reprinted in Defendants GHR Energy Corporation and Southern States Exploration Inc.’s Motion for Partial Summary Judgment, Exhibit B, tab 135. Moreover, the agreement would impose no cash drain on the resources of GHR because NL would be paid only from increased production. As it turned out, the agreement benefitted no one. A portion of the parties’ misfortune can be ascribed to gas prices, which, instead of increasing from $3.40 to $7.50 per mcf (1000 cubic feet), as the parties had predicted, plummeted to less than $2.50 per mcf. NL attributes the remainder of the blame for its misadventure to GHR.
To induce NL to enter into the agreement, GHR had assured NL that the revenue produced by the workovers would compensate it for its expenses within six months. GHR estimated that the production enhancement procedures on the ten wells would cost about $9 million and would produce almost $65 million in present value net revenue. The workover actually cost more than $14 million and produced only $5.4 million in revenue. But NL did not rely solely on GHR's sales pitch; before signing the agreement, NL received a more modest projection from NSA. Using GHR’s estimates of the cost of the workovers, NSA estimated that future revenue, discounted to present value, would be $26,647,000. See Letter to Peter H. Nielsen of NL from Clarence M. Nether-land of NSA, reprinted in Exhibits to GHR’s Supplemental Memorandum in Support of Motion for Partial Summary Judgement [sic] and Response to NL’s Opposition (“GHR’s Exhibits”), tab 8. GHR implies that NL also relied on a third projection from Huddleston, which estimated future net revenue to be $23 million. But this letter was dated May 14, 1985, more than a month after the parties signed the agreement. See GHR’s Exhibits, tab 9.
NL attributes the high cost of servicing the wells and the subsequent lack of revenue to GHR’s frac designs. Before entering the agreement with NL, GHR presented NL with a report which explained that GHR had performed fracture treatments on a series of fifty-five of its wells and had . obtained $34 million of incremental net income within the first fourteen months of production. See Technical Report, attached as Exhibit A to Affidavit of Robert J. Hurley, reprinted in NL’s Exhibits, vol. 1, tab 2. According to NL, all but three of these fifty-five fracture treatments were tailored to the characteristics of the reserves of each well. In other words, the length of each fracture treatment was designed specifically to extract as much gas as possible from a known reservoir. NL insists that it believed that GHR would use this type of frac to enhance production from the ten gas wells covered by the agreement and that article 4.3.L1 of the agreement limited GHR to this type of frac when it stated that any frac used must be “based upon a model prepared by Holditch.”
The fracture treatments that GHR prescribed for the ten wells were not tailored to the contours of each reservoir, however. Instead, GHR used what NL hyperbolically describes as “massive experimental fracs,” which were each 1500 feet long. By fracturing an area larger than the known reservoir, GHR hoped to extract hydrocarbons from potential, adjacent reservoirs without having to drill a new well.
GHR submitted its proposed fracs for seven of the ten wells to Holditch, and Holditch approved them. GHR did not ask Holditch to review its fracture treatment designs for the other three wells. Nevertheless, by December 1985, NL had completed the procedures on all ten wells. Because the incremental net revenue from the wells was much less than expected, NL did
B. The Road to Recovery-
In August 1986, NL sued GHR in federal district court alleging state law claims for breach of contract, mutual mistake, misrepresentation, fraud, and negligence. See Complaint, reprinted in Record on Appeal (“R.”), vol. 5, tab 1, at 1114. NL sought $15,167,491 in actual damages and three times that amount in punitive damages. Jurisdiction was based on diversity of citizenship. That same day, NL filed a proof of claim in bankruptcy court for $15,157,-491, which NL stated was “[t]he full amount of [its] claim.” See Proof of Claim at 2, reprinted in NL's Exhibits, vol. 2, tab 16. NL sought priority for its claim as an administrative expense, undertaken to preserve GHR’s bankruptcy estate. See Bankr.Code §§ 503(b)(1)(A), 507(a)(1).
In September 1986, GHR filed its answer to the district court proceeding and its objection to NL’s proof of claim in the bankruptcy court. One month later, GHR removed the district court proceeding to the bankruptcy court. NL filed a motion to withdraw reference, stating that the bankruptcy court lacked jurisdiction to adjudicate the merits of NL’s state law claims because these claims were not “core proceedings.” See 28 U.S.C.A. § 157(b) (West Supp.1990). The bankruptcy judge agreed with NL and recommended that the district court retain jurisdiction over the case. The district judge agreed and entered an order retaining jurisdiction of NL’s claims. In the meantime, NL amended its district court pleading adding Holditch as a defendant. In September 1987, the bankruptcy court confirmed GHR’s Chapter 11 reorganization plan and classified NL’s claim as a disputed administrative expense to be paid if the district court found GHR liable.
In October 1989, Holditch moved for total summary judgment, see R., vol. 4, tab 133, at 356, and GHR filed a motion for partial summary judgment, see Defendants GHR Energy Corporation and Southern States Exploration Inc.’s Motion for Partial Summary Judgment (“Partial Summary Judgment Motion”), R., Loose in File, tab 135. NL filed memoranda opposing both summary judgment motions and also filed a motion seeking leave to amend its complaint again to assert additional claims against GHR and Holditch. The district court granted summary judgments in favor of both Holditch and GHR dismissing all NL’s claims against them. The court did not notify NL that it was considering dismissing NL’s entire case against GHR. In addition to granting both summary judgment motions, the court refused to give NL leave to amend its complaint. NL appeals, arguing that both summary judgment motions were improperly granted and that the district court abused its discretion when it refused to allow NL to amend its complaint.
II. DISCUSSION
A. Standard of Review
Like the district court, we must review the entire record to determine whether NL has presented enough evidence to warrant a trial on the merits of its actions against Holditch and GHR.
See Dunn v. State Farm, Fire & Cas. Co.,
B. Summary Judgment in Favor of Hol-ditch
Article 4.3.Í.1 required GHR to submit its frac designs to Holditch for review, authorized Holditch to modify GHR’s designs, and provided that “all decisions or modifications by Holditch” with regard to these designs would “be final and binding upon” GHR and NL.
6
In January 1987, when it added Holditch as a defendant to
Texas law permits parties to appoint an expert to act as an arbiter in reviewing engineering or construction designs before they are carried out. The language of article 4.3.Í.1 is similar to the language of other arbiter provisions and clearly expresses the parties’ intent to name Holditch as an arbiter.
Compare City of San Antonio v. McKenzie Constr. Co.,
If the parties do appoint an arbiter, the arbiter’s decision is final and conclusive unless the arbiter “is guilty of fraud, misconduct, or such gross mistake as would imply bad faith or failure to exercise an honest judgment.”
See McKenzie Constr. Co.,
NL’s final argument is that the district court should have permitted it to amend its pleading to allege a variety of additional complaints against Holditch. The district court denied NL’s motion for leave to file its second amended complaint, and the court did not abuse its discretion in doing so.
See Overseas Inns S.A. P.A. v. United States,
C. Summary Judgment in Favor of GHR
1. The Validity of Sua Sponte Summary Judgment
In its motion for partial summary judgment, GHR first sought the dismissal of NL’s action for punitive damages. GHR argued that its Chapter 11 reorganization plan discharged it from liability for punitive damages because NL never filed a proof of claim for punitive damages; i.e., NL’s proof of claim was limited to the
Rule 56(c), Fed.R.Civ.P., permits a court to grant summary judgment in favor of a party that did not request it,
Arkwright-Boston Mfrs. Mutual Ins. Co. v. Aries Marine Corp.,
To exploit the district court’s beneficence, GHR attempts to convert its motion entitled “Motion for Partial Summary Judgment” into a motion for total summary judgment, and it argues that its motion notified NL that GHR was attacking the entire complaint. At the beginning of its motion, GHR stated that it was asking for summary judgment against NL on “claims for damages in excess of [NL’s] alleged administrative claim expense and upon the issues of negligence and breach of contract.” See Partial Summary Judgment Motion at 1 (emphasis added). GHR contends that this phrase notified NL that it was asking the district court to dismiss everything other than NL’s administrative claim, which was still pending before the bankruptcy court. Therefore, GHR reasons, because NL's administrative claim is still “pending,” GHR’s motion really was a motion for “partial” summary judgment.
GHR’s argument is disingenuous. First, it is clear from reading the entire motion that GHR used the phrase “claims for damages in excess of [NL’s] alleged administrative claim” to refer to NL’s claim for punitive damages for which NL did not file a proof of claim and which, therefore, exceeded NL’s administrative claim. Second, NL’s administrative claim in the bankruptcy court encompassed NL’s district court claims. NL’s administrative claim does not entitle NL to any damages absent a determination of liability in the district court.
2. NL’s Motion to Amend, Its Pleading
After GHR filed its motion for partial summary judgment, NL sought to amend its pleading to allege additional complaints against GHR. The district court denied that motion because it “would not add to or detract from the Court’s decision to grant [GHR’s] motion[ ] for summary judgment.”
See
Order,
reprinted in
R., vol. 1, tab 202, at 50. NL sought to amend its pleading more than three years after it filed its first complaint against GHR and only after GHR moved for summary judgment. Therefore, the district court would not have abused its discretion had it chosen to deny NL leave to amend because of undue delay.
See Foman v. Davis,
D. Issues Addressed in GHR’s Motion for Partial Summary Judgment
1. Punitive Damages
When NL filed its initial complaint against GHR, it alleged that it had suffered $15,157,491 in actual damages, and it requested “three times that amount” in punitive damages. But NL submitted a proof of claim to the bankruptcy court stating that the “full amount” of GHR’s liability was $15,157,491. Based on this, GHR contends that the bankruptcy court did not provide for NL’s claim for punitive damages in GHR’s Chapter 11 reorganization plan and that, therefore, NL’s claim for punitive damages has been discharged.
Because NL was seeking to recover an administrative expense from GHR’s bankruptcy estate, it should have requested “payment of an administrative expense” under section 503(a) of the Bankruptcy Code, rather than filing a proof of claim under section 501. NL can recover punitive damages from the estate as an administrative expense only if it can prove that this expense was an “actual, necessary cost[ ] ... of preserving the estate.”
See id.
§ 503(b)(1)(A). Courts have construed the words “actual” and “necessary” narrowly: the debt must benefit GHR’s estate and its creditors.
See In re Dant & Russell, Inc.,
2. Breach of the Workover Agreement
NL alleges that GHR breached the work-over agreement in three ways: first, by not designing fracs based on the “Holditch Model”; second, by not obtaining economic certifications that the revenue created by the production enhancement procedures would exceed the cost of those procedures; and, finally, by failing to obtain Holditch’s
a. Does Article 5.2 Limit NL’s Damages?
Article 5.2 states that for all claims arising under the contract, NL must look exclusively to the incremental net revenue from the wells and, if this revenue is insufficient, that NL has no recourse against GHR or any of its managers or employees. 8 GHR contends that this clause limits NL’s damages. NL responds that this is a “production payment” clause, which deals with amounts owed to NL for its services, not with damages occurring as a result of a breach of the agreement.
The district court made no ruling on the proper interpretation of article 5.2.
9
Under Texas law, however, a court must determine, as a matter of law, whether a provision in a contract is ambiguous.
See Callaway v. Overholt,
Viewed apart from the rest of the contract, the language of article 5.2 is expansive enough to encompass NL’s damage complaint against GHR for breaching the workover agreement; it states that NL must look to the incremental net revenue from the wells “for the satisfaction of all costs and contractual amounts due ... and all other claims arising” under the agreement and that, if there is a deficiency, NL shall have “no recourse” against GHR. But language in the remainder of the contract belies that interpretation and demonstrates that the parties intended this to be a production payment clause.
A production payment is a share of the mineral interest produced from land, “free of the costs of production at the surface, terminating when a given volume of production [has] been paid over or when a specified sum from the sale of such [minerals has] been realized.” 2
Oil and Gas Law
§ 422, at 365-66 (1990) (footnotes omitted). It is very similar to an overriding royalty, the only difference being that an overriding royalty usually continues until the termination of the mineral lease, while a production payment usually
If article 5.2 is a production payment clause, it would not prevent NL from recovering additional damages if GHR breached the workover agreement. The owner or operator of a gas well must protect the interest of the owner of a production payment or an overriding royalty, particularly in a case such as this, in which the entire reimbursement for NL’s services was to come from the production payment.
See id.
§ 420.1, at 356.1-356.2. If the owner or operator of the gas well does something to diminish the value of the mineral interest, the owner of a production payment or an overriding royalty can sue for damages.
See, e.g., Whitson Co. v. Bluff Creek Oil Co.,
The language of the contract supports NL’s contention that article 5.2 only refers to NL’s rights under the contract to recover its costs and does not limit NL’s damages if GHR breached the workover agreement. The most persuasive evidence that article 5.2 does not refer to “causes of action” is the language of article 4.3.k, which states that NL shall indemnify GHR “against any and all claims, demands, damages, losses, or causes of action of any kind or character (including without limitation the amounts of any judgments, penalties, interest, court costs, and legal fees incurred in the defense of same) arising in favor of any third party ...” If the parties intended article 5.2 to limit NL’s right to recovery against GHR, the parties would have used language similar to that of article 4.3.k, rather than simply stating that NL must use proceeds from the well to cover all its “claims.”
The structure of article 5 also indicates that it was meant to apply to NL’s right to compensation, not its right to tort or contract damages. The title for article 5 is “Reimbursement,” and the heading of article 5.2 is “Procedure for Reimbursement.” The introductory paragraph, article 5.1, summarizes the effect of GHR’s assignment of the proceeds production payment, stating that NL “shall be reimbursed for all costs and contractual amounts due ... and for all other claims arising” under the contract. Thus, although article 5.1 plainly refers only to NL’s right to payment for its services, it uses language similar to that of article 5.2.
In this action, NL is not simply seeking reimbursement for the costs of its services. Rather, it is seeking to recover damages caused by GHR’s alleged breach of the terms of the workover agreement. By its terms, article 5.2 applies only to “reimbursement.” Therefore, we conclude that it is a production payment clause, not a damage limitation provision.
b. Did NL present any evidence that GHR breached the workover agreement?
NL’s primary contention is that GHR breached the workover agreement by not designing its fracture treatments in a manner consistent with the “Holditch Model.” To support its argument, NL presented an affidavit from Antonin Settari, an engineer, who defined the “Holditch Model” as a concept for fracturing wells, which appeared in various Holditch publications and in professional literature.
See
Affidavit at 2, NL’s Exhibits, vol. 1, tab 11. Set-tari testified that under the Holditch Model, the length of the fracture treatment varies with the well drainage area and the permeability of the hydrocarbon formation.
GHR points out that the agreement never used the term “Holditch Model” but required GHR to base its design on “a model prepared by Holditch.” See article 4.3.Í.I. GHR did design its fracture treatments using a computer program that was developed and sold by Holditch. See Transcript of Deposition of Oscar Garcia at 26-27, reprinted in Supplemental Record Excerpts for Holditch, vol. 2, tab E, at 344. Consequently, GHR contends that it complied with the contract.
After reviewing the existing record, we believe that NL has demonstrated that article 4.3.Í.1 is ambiguous and, therefore, that the district court must conduct a factual inquiry to determine what the parties understood that provision to mean.
See Security State Bank v. Valley Wide Elec. Supply Co.,
Second, NL has shown that the fracture treatment used by GHR was uncommon at the time GHR and NL signed the workover agreement. In March 1986, three months after NL had completed the workovers, Holditch prepared a report for GHR that summarized and evaluated the production of 300 GHR wells, seven of which had been treated with the large fracture lengths. See Holditch Report, Exhibit G, Holditch & Associate Inc.’s Motion for Summary Judgment, reprinted in NL Record Excerpts, vol. 1, tab 15. The tone of that report indicates that the fracture design was new and that GHR was not sure whether it would work. The report’s stated purpose was “to assess whether the large, high sand concentration fracture treatments currently being pumped are economically justifiable.” In addition, after summarizing the theory behind the longer fracture lengths, the report stated that, “if successful,” the fracs would “increase the area drained by a typical well” (emphasis added).
Finally, NL presented evidence which would support a conclusion that it had no reason to know that GHR intended to use uniform fracs to enhance production from all the wells. 10 These frac designs were used in only three of the fifty-five wells that GHR used to promote the workovers to NL, and Peter Nielsen, NL’s Director of Planning and Business Development, testified that NL did not realize that the fracs it had agreed to finance would be substantially different from fracs that GHR had used in those fifty-five wells, see Transcript of Deposition at 982, reprinted in NL’s Exhibits, tab 4.
On appeal, GHR argues that even if its fracs did not conform to NL’s understanding of article 4.3.Í.1, the agreement provided that Holditch was to review GHR’s fracture designs and that Holditch’s approval of those designs was final and binding on NL. Even though GHR is correct in its assessment of Holditch’s role in reviewing and approving its fracs, Holditch did not have the authority to approve a frac that did not conform to the agreement, i.e., one that was not “based upon a model prepared by Holditch.” If the agreement
Because NL has proven that a genuine dispute exists regarding the type of fracture treatment which GHR was to design for the wells, we reverse the district court’s decision to grant summary judgment on that issue. NL has presented no evidence, however, to support its contention that GHR breached two other provisions of the workover agreement. Therefore, we affirm the summary judgment on those grounds.
First, NL contends that GHR failed to submit three of the ten fracture treatments to Holditch for review and approval as required by article 4.3.Í.I. Although NL’s assertion is factually correct, article 4.3.Í.3 of the agreement provided that NL was required to notify GHR if it failed to receive the approved fracture program for a well and that, if GHR failed to respond to this notification within ten days, NL was “not to perform fracture or other formation stimulation procedures in the relevant” well. Therefore, if NL was injured by GHR’s failure to obtain Holditch’s approval, that injury was caused by NL’s own breach of the agreement.
Second, NL contends that GHR breached articles 4.1.C and 4.3.d of the agreement by failing to obtain certifications from Hol-ditch, Huddleston, and NSA as to the economic viability of each workover. Article 4.1.C required GHR to submit these certifications to the Banks, not NL. If GHR breached this provision, NL was not harmed. Article 4.3.d did require GHR to include these certifications in the production enhancement prognoses that it was to submit to NL, but, by its own terms, that clause did not “apply in any way to the establishment of fracture or other formation stimulation programs.” Even if it did, article 4.3.d required NL to notify GHR if the prognoses were deficient, and NL had the right to terminate the agreement if GHR failed to respond to the notification. By failing to exercise that privilege, NL waived its right to complain about GHR’s breach.
See Horton v. Robinson,
3. Negligence
Finally, NL contends that GHR was negligent in designing its fracs without sufficient data or experience and in underestimating the costs of the fracture treatments. Under Texas law, if a party does not use reasonable care in performing its obligations under a contract, it is liable for damages under both contract and negligence theories.
See Montgomery Ward & Co. v. Scharrenbeck,
The district court correctly determined that Holditch was an arbiter under the workover agreement. Therefore, to recover damages from Holditch, NL was required to show that Holditch was guilty of fraud or extreme misconduct. NL's complaint alleged only that Holditch was negligent. Consequently, the district court’s decision to grant summary judgment in favor of Holditch is AFFIRMED.
In its motion for partial summary judgment, GHR did not ask the district court to dismiss NL’s fraud and mutual mistake complaints. Because the district court rejected those complaints without notifying NL that it intended to do so, that portion of the district court’s order is REVERSED, and those claims are REMANDED to the district court for further proceedings. We also REVERSE and REMAND one issue that was raised in NL’s breach of contract complaint and was addressed in GHR's motion for partial summary judgment: did the fracs that GHR designed for the ten gas wells meet the requirements of article 4.3.-i.l of the workover agreement? The remainder of the court’s order, which dismissed NL’s request for punitive damages, its negligence complaint, and the rest of its breach of contract complaint, is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. After the Chapter 11 petitions were filed, GHR continued to operate its business as a debtor in possession under the name "TransAmerican Natural Gas Corporation.”
. For the numerous ways in which production from a well can be enhanced, see 8 H. Williams & C. Meyers, Oil and Gas Law 758 (1987).
. Specifically, the agreement states that
GHR shall design the specific fracture or other formation stimulation program for a particular Subject Well based upon a model prepared by Holditch, and shall submit to Hol-ditch for review and approval the design for each proposed fracture or other formation stimulation program and an authority for expenditure ("AFE”) setting forth the estimated costs to be incurred in connection therewith. If Holditch does not approve the design and AFE for the relevant proposed program, Hol-ditch shall make such modifications thereto as Holditch deems necessary. GHR and [NL] understand and agree that all decisions or modifications by Holditch of or with respect to any proposed fracture or other formation stimulation program submitted by GHR pursuant hereto shall be final and binding upon the Parties. Any fracture or other formation stimulation program designed by GHR and approved by Holditch as provided herein shall be referred to hereinafter as an "Approved Fracture Program."
See article 4.3.Í.1 (emphasis added).
. For example, the bankruptcy court required that the agreement contain the following provisions: that GHR was not permitted to authorize production enhancement procedures on any wells other than the initial ten wells without obtaining written permission from the Banks; NL was not permitted to exercise its right of first refusal for the performance of production enhancement procedures on the additional wells unless the Banks received written verification that NL had matched the lowest bid for these services; and that NL would commit a material breach of the agreement if it failed to pay its contractors or if it allowed a material-man’s lien to encumber the wells. See Order Authorizing Debtors to Enter Into Agreement for Recompletion, Reworking and Related Activities with NL Industries, Inc., reprinted in Defendants GHR Energy Corporation and Southern States Exploration Inc.’s Motion for Partial Summary Judgment, Exhibit A, tab 135.
.For example, the Banks had the right to monitor NL’s progress in servicing the wells. See article 4.3.j. Also, GHR could not authorize production enhancement procedures for any well producing more than 2,000,000 cubic feet of gas per day without the Banks’ permission. See article 4.1.c.
. For the full text of article 4.3.Í.1, see note 3, supra.
. In its motion for partial summary judgment on NL’s breach of contract action, GHR only raised the affirmative defense that the workover agreement limited NL’s recovery to revenue from the wells, but in its response to this motion, NL not only attacked this affirmative defense but also argued the merits of its complaint. See NL’s Memorandum in Opposition to Motion for Partial Summary Judgment of GHR Energy Corporation and Southern States Exploration, Inc. at 26-32, reprinted in R., vol. 1, tab 152, at 217. In a supplemental brief, GHR responded to the issues raised by NL. Presumably for this reason, NL concedes that the partial summary judgment motion encompassed its breach of contract complaint. See Appellant Brief for NL at 24.
. The relevant portion of article 5.2 states that NL
shall look exclusively to the Incremental Net Revenues received by [NL] under the terms of the Assignments covering the relevant series of Subject Wells for the satisfaction of all costs and contractual amounts due to be paid to [NL] pursuant to the terms hereof and for all other claims arising hereunder with respect to such series of Subject Wells. If the Incremental Net Revenues from the relevant series of Subject Wells are insufficient to satisfy in full all of such costs, contractual amounts due, and all other claims occurring hereunder to be paid to [NL] pursuant hereto with respect to such series of Subject Wells, neither GHR not [sic] any officer, director, shareholder, employee, subsidiary, or affiliate of GHR shall be personally liable for the payment of any such deficiency and [NL] shall have no recourse against GHR, any of the officers, directors, shareholders, employees, subsidiaries, or affiliates of GHR, or any other assets or property of GHR in the event of such a deficiency.
(emphasis added).
. NL asserts that the district court held that article 5.2 "precluded GHR from being liable for any revenue shortfall regardless of GHR’s misrepresentation, fraud, mutual mistake, negligence, gross negligence, or breach of contract.” See Appellant Brief for NL at 27 (emphasis in original). The district court made no such finding. In its recitation of the facts, the court noted that "the agreement and the Plan state that in the event the revenues are insufficient, NL Industries has no recourse against GHR, its officers, agents or affiliates.” See Summary Judgment (GHR) at 2. This just paraphrases the wording of article 5.2.
. Even if GHR did subjectively intend to use longer fracture treatments when it signed the contract, NL’s interpretation will be upheld if NL had no reason to know GHR’s intention, and GHR had reason to know that NL thought that GHR was going to use the more conventional fracs.
See
Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 20(2)(b) (1981);
Exxon Corp. v. Bell,
