OWL ASSETCO I, LLC, Plaintiff, v. EOG RESOURCES, INC., Defendant.
Cause No. 25-BC11A-0052
THE BUSINESS COURT OF TEXAS ELEVENTH DIVISION
December 5, 2025
2025 Tex. Bus. 47
JERRY D. BULLARD
BEVERLY CRUMLEY, CLERK
OPINION AND ORDER
Syllabus*
The Court addresses whether the Texas Legislature’s amount-in-controversy threshold reduction gives the Texas Business Court jurisdiction to hear a previously remanded action and whether the subsequent removal of the action was proper and timely. The Court examines the statutory construction of House Bill 40 and determines removal was both proper and timely under
* The syllabus was created by court staff and is provided for the convenience of the reader. It is not part of the Court’s opinion, does not constitute the Court’s official description or statement, and should not be relied upon as legal authority.
OPINION
¶ 1 Before the Court is Plaintiff OWL AssetCo1, LLC (“OWL”)’s Motion to Remand (“Second Remand Motion”), filed October 3, 2025, challenging the Court’s authority to hear this case. Defendant EOG Resources, Inc. (“EOG”) filed its Response in Opposition to OWL AssetCo 1, LLC’s Motion to Remand (“EOG’s Resp. to Second Remand Motion”) on October 24, 2025. OWL filed its Reply in Support of Motion to Remand on November 7, 2025. The Court held a hearing on the Second Remand Motion on November 19, 2025. As stated at the hearing and further discussed below, the Court concludes that removal is proper under
I. BACKGROUND1
A. The Parties
¶ 2 OWL is a service company that “provides water-related services to oil and gas producers in New Mexico, Texas, Colorado, Wyoming, and Ohio.” OWL Original Petition (“Orig. Pet.”) at 2. EOG is “an exploration and production company that produces oil and gas in the Permian and Delaware Basins in New Mexico.” EOG’s Resp. to Present Remand at 2. In December 2019, EOG and OWL entered into a contract concerning the transportation and disposal of produced water in and around Eddy County, New Mexico. Id.; see Orig. Pet. at 14-15. On April 9, 2025, OWL filed a breach of contract action against
B. First Removal and First Remand
¶ 3 EOG filed its initial Notice of Removal to Business Court (“First Removal Notice”) on May 12, 2025, claiming the Business Court had jurisdiction to hear the matter under
C. House Bill 40
¶ 4 After EOG filed its First Removal Notice, the Texas Legislature enacted House Bill 40 (“H.B. 40”). The bill lowered the amount in controversy from $10 million to $5 million for actions arising out of qualified transactions under
D. Second Removal and Second Remand
¶ 5 Two days after H.B. 40’s effective date, on September 3, 2025, EOG filed its Second Removal Notice. In its second notice, EOG claims the Business Court now has jurisdiction over the action pursuant to
- (1) EOG’s removal was improper because a change in the law is not the discovery of “facts establishing the Business Court’s jurisdiction,” and
- (2) EOG did not discover any new case-related facts within 30 days of H.B 40’s effective date because EOG has long-known the amount in controversy exceeds $5 million.
See Second Remand Notice at 6-8, 9.
II. LEGAL STANDARDS
A. Subject Matter Jurisdiction
¶ 6 Subject-matter jurisdiction “[i]nvolves a court’s power to hear a case.” Tellez v. City of Socorro, 226 S.W. 3d 413 (Tex. 2007). It exists “when the nature of the case falls within the general category of cases the court is empowered, under applicable statutory and constitutional provisions, to adjudicate.” Diocese of Galveston-Hous. v. Stone, 892 S.W.2d 169, 174 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 1994, no pet.) (citing City of El Paso v. Madero Development, 803 S.W.2d 396, 399 (Tex. App.—El Paso 1991, writ denied)). When
B. Removal and Remand
¶ 7
III. DISCUSSION
¶ 9 EOG is sound in its plain-meaning interpretation of H.B. 40’s jurisdictional establishment and it properly removed the action to this Court. As stated above, removal is proper when done not later than 30 days after a party discovered or reasonably should have discovered, facts establishing the Business Court’s jurisdiction over the action. See
¶ 10 In the instant matter, the Court adheres to the plain meaning of
A. Owl’s focus on “facts” in the abstract overlooks “establishing the business court’s jurisdiction over an action.”
¶ 11 H.B. 40’s reduction of the amount-in-controversy threshold from $10 million to $5 million is a “fact” sufficient to establish this Court’s jurisdiction. In promulgating the removal timelines in
¶ 12 The Business Court outlined this principle when it addressed a similar interpretation issue in Safelease Ins. Services LLC v. Storable, Inc., 2025 Tex. Bus. 6, 707 S.W.3d 130 (3rd Div. 2025). There, the Court held that the removal period is not triggered solely by the removing party’s knowledge of facts that may satisfy the Business Court’s jurisdictional threshold. Id. at ¶ 8-10, 132-33. Rather, the 30-day removal deadline in
¶ 13 The Court follows SafeLease’s logic and will not impose an undue burden on the parties that they must learn novel information prior to filing a notice of removal to the Business Court. In this matter, no set of facts could establish this Court’s jurisdiction over this action before the implementation of H.B. 40’s lower amount-in-controversy threshold.
B. Legislative intent is evident by H.B. 40’s retroactive application to all cases filed in the Business Court
¶ 14 The Court examines “discovery” through the lens of legislative intent and finds the legislature’s intent of H.B. 40 is evident by its retroactive application to all cases filed in the Business Court since the Business Court’s inception. Courts cannot establish jurisdiction over matters absent statutory or constitutional grant. See In re Doe (Trooper), 444 S.W.3d 603, 608 (Tex. 2014) (state district court cannot order discovery for copyright claim, as such matters fall exclusively within federal jurisdiction). EOG could not discover facts establishing this Court’s jurisdiction over the action until H.B. 40 lowered the amount-in-controversy threshold and brought the action back into the Court’s purview. Black Mountain SWD, LP v. NGL Water Sols. Permian, LLC, 2025 Tex. Bus. 24, ¶¶ 18-20, 30-31, 718 S.W.3d 281, 288-89, 291–92 (8th Div. 2025) (allegations falling below the Business Court’s required amount in controversy preclude its jurisdiction).
¶ 15 EOG sufficiently “discovered” this information upon H.B. 40’s enactment and it promptly filed its Second Removal Notice two days after H.B. 40’s effective date. Said differently, EOG timely removed this action once the lowered amount in controversy established the Court’s authority to hear it. To conclude otherwise would contradict the Legislature’s intent and effectively dissuade parties from removing cases with less than $10 million in controversy to the Business Court.
IV. CONCLUSION
¶ 16 For these reasons, the Court finds that EOG’s removal was both proper and timely. OWL’s Second Remand Motion is DENIED.
SO ORDERED.
JERRY D. BULLARD
Judge of the Texas Business Court, Sitting by Assignment
SIGNED: December 5, 2025.
