OPINION
This appeal concerns plaintiffs who seek to compel arbitration with defendants pursuant to an arbitration agreement between the defendants and a company that markets and sells the plaintiffs’ product to the defendants. The plaintiffs are appellants, Rene van Zanten, Westhoff Ranch, LP, and Cookin’ with Gas, LP (collectively, “the Owners”). The Owners contend the trial court erred by refusing to compel arbitration of their claims filed against the defendants, appellees, Energy Transfer Partners, L.P., Energy Transfer Company a/k/a La Grange Acquisition, LP, ETC Marketing, Ltd., Houston Pipe Line Company, L.P., Energy Transfer Partners GP, L.P., Energy Transfer Partners LLC, LA PG, LLC, LGM, LLC, and HPL GP, LLC (collectively, “the Energy Companies”). In their sole issue, the Owners contend the trial court erred by rendering judgment staying the arbitration because under Texas law the direct benefits estoppel doctrine allows non-signatories to an arbitration agreement to compel arbitration. We conclude that the direct benefits estoppel doctrine is not a proper basis to allow the plaintiff Owners to compel arbitration based on an arbitration agreement to which they are not signatories. We affirm.
Background
The Energy Companies are in the natural gas marketing and transportation business. Roughly fifteen percent of all natural gas produced in the United States flows through their gas gathering and transportation pipelines. Houston Pipe Line is a major purchaser of natural gas in the Gulf Coast, South Texas, and East Texas areas.
The Owners include an individual royalty owner who resides in Travis County, Texas, and working interests owners in oil and gas properties located in Jackson County, Texas. The Jackson County Owners are signatories to an operating agreement with Encon Services, Inc. (“Encon”); the agreement provides that Encon will sell and market their gas.
Encon has a gas purchase agreement with Houston Pipe Line. Pursuant to this agreement, Encon sold the Owners’ gas to Houston Pipe Line. In this agreement, Encon represents that it acts as an agent for itself and “all other interest owners.” The agreement between Encon and Houston Pipe Line also contains an arbitration clause that provides that “... all claims, demands, causes of action, disputes, and other matters arising out of or relating hereto, whether sounding in contract, tort or otherwise shall be resolved by binding arbitration pursuant to the Federal Arbitration Act.”
The Owners alleged that the Energy Companies, individually and collectively, engaged in an intentional scheme to ma
Direct Benefits Estoppel
Although the parties agree that the theory of “direct benefits estoppel” precludes a defendant from claiming the benefits of a contract while simultaneously attempting to avoid the burdens that contract imposes, the Owners contend we should extend that concept to include the opposite situation. The Owners assert the estoppel theory should be extended to enable a plaintiff who claims to have received direct benefits from a contract containing an arbitration clause, to which the plaintiff is not a signatory, to compel arbitration of claims arising from that contract against a defendant who is a signatory to the agreement.
A. Applicable Law
When the facts are undisputed, as here, a summary judgment presents a question of law that we review de novo.
Valence Operating Co. v. Dorsett,
The parties agree that the Federal Arbitration Act (FAA)
1
applies to this case. To determine whether an arbitration agreement under the FAA is binding on a non-signatory, Texas courts apply Texas procedural rules.
In re Weekley Homes, L.P.,
As stated by the Fifth Circuit, “[I]n certain limited instances, pursuant to an equitable estoppel doctrine, a non-signatory-to-an-arbitration-agreement-defendant can nevertheless compel arbitration
B. Analysis
Here, the fact pattern does not fit the description of the estoppel theory in
Grigson. See Grigson,
This case is also distinguishable from the Texas supreme court cases applying direct benefits estoppel. In
Meyer,
the party “seekfing] by his claim ‘to derive a direct benefit from the contract containing the arbitration provision’ ” is the party who may be estopped.
The Owners acknowledge that the facts of this case do not fit within the facts of other cases applying direct benefits es-toppel. They assert, instead, that estoppel is “an evolving doctrine” and that there is no authority holding that estoppel “is strictly confined to one set of facts or circumstances.” Estoppel is an equitable
In this case, the Owners have not identified any conduct of the Energy Companies on which the Owners relied in deciding to file their claims in arbitration rather than in court. Absent some conduct on the part of the Energy Companies that can form the basis of an estoppel, the Owners cannot prevail on this theory.
See Ulico Cas. Co.,
Agent
In their brief to this Court, the Owners also assert that they may compel arbitration because Encon was acting as their agent when it entered the contract containing the arbitration clause with Houston Pipe Line. We have reviewed the Owners’ motion for summary judgment, and Encon’s status as the Owners’ agent is not asserted in the motion as a ground for summary judgment. Because this ground for summary judgment was not raised in writing to the trial court, it may not serve as a basis to reverse the trial court’s judgment.
See
Tex.R. Civ. P. 166a(c) (“Issues not expressly presented to the trial court by written motion, answer or other response shall not be considered on appeal as grounds for reversal.”);
McConnell v. Southside Indep. Sch. Dist.,
Conclusion
We overrule the sole issue and affirm the judgment of the trial court.
