JOHN W. SEDWICK, Senior District Judge.
At docket 75, former plaintiff Cook Inlet Energy ("CIE") filed a motion for partial summary judgment as to its material breach-of-contract claim (Count 2) and breach-of-implied-and-express-warranties claim (Count 5) against Defendants Cudd Pressure Control, Inc., ("Cudd") and RPC, Inc. CIE filed its supporting memorandum and evidence at dockets 82 and 83. It argues in its motion that there are no issues of material fact as to Cudd's breach claims and all that is left to determine is the amount of damages. Cudd filed a response to the motion at docket 101, and CIE filed a reply at docket 108. Subsequently, the United States Bankruptcy Court for the District of Alaska approved the joint plan of reorganization of CIE's parent company, Miller Energy Resources, Inc., and CIE's claim against Cudd was assigned to Charles Gebhardt Liquidating Trustee of Miller Energy Creditors Liquidating Trust ("Plaintiff"). At docket 120 the court dismissed the motion for summary judgment at docket 75 without prejudice to afford Plaintiff an opportunity to "proceed in whatever manner it ultimately sees fit."
CIE is an oil and gas exploration and production company. In 2009 it purchased an offshore oil and gas platform, the Osprey Platform, located in the Cook Inlet of Alaska. A prior owner of the Osprey Platform had drilled multiple oil and gas wells, but when CIE acquired the platform those wells had gone out of production and needed a "workover." A workover is the process used to maintain and repair a well and often includes the removal and replacement of casing, spent explosives, and failed electrical submersible pumps from the well. Any failed, lost, or stuck equipment in a well is referred to as "fish," and the process used to remove such items from a well is referred to as "fishing." In 2011, CIE decided to look into conducting workovers of three wells from the Osprey Platform: wells RU-1, RU-3, and RU-7. It also was considering the possibility of drilling new wells.
CIE contacted Cudd, an energy services company, about supplying a rig for the workovers. Through a series of conversations, meetings, and emails, the two companies agreed that Cudd would provide the equipment and related services to complete the three workovers. The deal primarily involved Cudd sending a special workover rig—a "Hydraulic Workover Unit" ("HWO unit")—and a crew to operate the rig from Louisiana to Alaska to perform the requested workovers on RU-1, RU-3, and RU-7. No written contract was signed. Rather, the parties formulated the deal through their communications and finalized it in mid-to-late February of 2011 when Cudd's credit department approved CIE's credit application and when Cudd's service manager for its HWO units, Bobby Bray, sent CIE's CEO an email indicating that Cudd was planning to send the rig chosen, and Hall responded "yes, please proceed." While there were discussions about the Cudd rig performing the drilling for the new wells, the parties did not come to an agreement regarding the use of the rig for that type of work.
On about April 20, 2011, after the selected HWO unit—Cudd Rig #138—arrived in Alaska and had been set up and tested, Cudd began the attempted workover of RU-3. The workover was unsuccessful despite numerous attempts and efforts to reach the "fish" in the well.
CIE filed its complaint in early 2013 alleging in part that Cudd breached an implied contractual warranty to perform in a workmanlike manner and an express warranty to provide a rig with a certain amount of torque capacity. The parties agree that their contract was not an "end result" one, but rather, an agreement where the Cudd rig would be used to perform the workovers on a time and material basis at the prices that CIE and Cudd had agreed upon. Therefore, Plaintiff does not contend that the unsuccessful results on the RU-3 and RU-1 workovers in and of themselves constitute a breach. However, Plaintiff claims that the unsuccessful attempts to workover those wells were the result of Cudd's failure to perform in a workmanlike manner, either because the rig Cudd sent for the workovers was not suitable for the job based on its failure to produce the required torque or because its crew was not competent to perform the job. Plaintiff also alleges that the rig did not have the torque capabilities that were expressly represented to CIE during the parties' discussions and, therefore, Cudd also breached an express warranty in addition to the implied warranty of workmanlike performance.
Originally Cudd had filed a counterclaim for a breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing in its performance of the contract. Plaintiff sought summary judgment on that counterclaim as well. However, that claim has subsequently been dismissed pursuant to the parties' stipulation after the bankruptcy proceedings.
Summary judgment is appropriate where "there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law."
The moving party has the burden of showing that there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact.
Plaintiff argues that Cudd breached its implied warranty of workmanlike performance. This implied warranty of workmanlike performance is essentially a "particular application" of a tort negligence standard.
The parties do not dispute that in this federal diversity action, the court should apply Alaska substantive law. Under Alaska law, whether Cudd had a duty of care to perform in a workmanlike manner as a result of the contractual undertaking, and the scope of that duty, is a question of law for the court.
The scope of the duty of care imposed by the implied warranty to perform in a workmanlike manner is "directly related to the scope of the duties and obligations imposed on the parties by their contract."
Plaintiff argues that Cudd failed to provide a workover rig that was suitable to perform the required tasks and, therefore, breached its implied warranty, or, alternatively, if the rig itself was sufficient, that the crew assigned to operate the rig did not do a competent job. It argues that Cudd's rig #138 should have been able to produce 22,000 ft.-lbs. of torque, which it argues would have been sufficient to complete the well workover based on CIE's subsequent completion of the RU-3 workover with a different, albeit more powerful, rig that used about 18,000 to 20,000 ft.-lbs. to complete the task. Whether a defendant breached its duty of care and whether any breach caused the damages suffered is typically a factual question for a jury and not susceptible to resolution on a motion for summary judgment.
Plaintiff points to a variety of evidence in support. Deposition testimony confirms that Cudd chose the rig to send to Alaska after looking at CIE's well schematics and that Cudd intended to send a "big rig" to Alaska for the job. It cites evidence showing that Cudd chose its rig #138 as the rig to do the work and represented that the rig was similar to another one of its larger rigs that was being used in Cook Inlet for another oil production company. It points to evidence showing that Cudd intended the rig to have a 22,000 ft.-lbs. rotary head on it and in fact sent a rig with a 22,000 ft.-lbs. rotary head on it. It is undisputed that a rig with that size of rotary head on it should be able to produce up to 22,000 ft.-lbs. of torque.
In response, Cudd argues that the evidence does not show that, as a matter of undisputed fact, the rig, or its operation thereof, was defective. It contends that there is enough evidence in the record to put the issue of the rig's suitability or the operator's competency to the jury. The affidavit of Cudd's representative, Bobby Bray, states that it is "inherently difficult to know and understand the conditions that will be encountered [inside a well] until the job has begun" and that is why contracts for workover services are done on a time and material basis.
Cudd also argues that CIE never attempted increase the torque applied by the rig beyond 11,500 ft.-lbs. because of limitations on the drill pipe CIE was using for the well. Cudd relies on an entry in the Baker Hughes' daily logs again, which states that the fishing specialist for Baker Hughes asked Cudd's rig operator to increase torque to 11,500 ft.-lbs., that the rig was able to do so, and that he concluded that "more torque is no help."
Plaintiff takes issue with Cudd's argument that a drill pipe limitation, not the rig's capability, was the reason for inadequate torque, arguing that 11,500 ft.-lbs. is far below the maximum torque CIE's drill pipe could withstand. It is undisputed that CIE's drill pipe was 3 ½ inches in diameter. The parties dispute what the torque limitation is for this size of drill pipe, but only CIE produced admissible evidence on which the court may rely. Based on CIE's evidence, the recommended torque that could be applied to that size of drill pipe was 13,200 ft.-lbs. and, with CIE's approval, the torque could have gone up to 16,500 ft.-lbs.
Plaintiff argues that there is no such evidence from which a juror could conclude otherwise. It asserts that the record does not contain a "scintilla of evidence to support Cudd's claim that [its rig] produced [less than] its maximum torque capability because CIE made a decision to limit torque."
Plaintiff also argues that the rig operator admitted that he would have mentioned the drill pipe limitation if that had been preventing an increase in torque. In his deposition testimony, the rig operator acknowledges that if he had been concerned about going over torque limitation or if the fishing operations supervisor or well-owner representative wanted to go above the torque limitation he would have had a conversation with CIE's representatives on the platform,
While the affidavit from the fishing specialist states that the rig stalled out continuously and that Cudd's rig operator could not get the rig to generate torque beyond 11,500 ft.-lbs., Cudd has at least put forward some evidence to suggest that the torque may have been purposefully limited at that point. It is undisputed that there was a drill pipe limitation that the parties would not want to exceed, there is evidence to suggest that the fishing specialist and CIE's on-site supervisor were involved in troubleshooting the problems and directed Cudd's rig operator to increase the rig's torque to 11,500 ft.-lbs., which he did. There is no specific record of a CIE agent asking the rig's operator to increase torque beyond 11,500 ft.-lbs. and that the rig failed to do so. The rig operator testified that the rig could have produced more torque.
Plaintiff argues that these questions of fact about whether the parties were limiting torque for a reason or whether the rig was defective are not relevant because, as a matter of law, Cudd's operator was not performing his duty when he failed to inform CIE that the drill pipe needed to be larger to increase the torque, which constitutes a breach apart from the suitability of the rig. In other words, Plaintiff argues that Cudd's warranty to perform in a workmanlike manner included a duty to warn CIE of any issues that prevented its rig from generating more torque.
In support, Plaintiff relies on Lewis v. Anchorage Asphalt Paving Co.
On appeal, the Supreme Court of Alaska upheld the lower court's interpretation of the contract. It therefore concluded that the duty to perform the contract in a workmanlike manner only reached to the contractor's grading and shaping of the existing subgrade and the paving. It explained that the "end result" contract only meant that the contractor had to successfully grade and shape what was there and then pave over it with quality materials, which he did successfully. However, the court concluded that, as part of the duty to perform in a workmanlike manner, a contractor of an end result contract has a duty to provide notice to the owner, regardless of an owner's personal expertise, if the owner is calling for an end product under circumstances which the contractor knows or should know are bound to lead to failure.
Plaintiff argues that based on Lewis, as part of its duty to perform in a workmanlike manner, Cudd had a duty to warn CIE, regardless of CIE's expertise, about the effect of the drill pipe limitation on the rig's torque. Plaintiff contends that because it is undisputed that Cudd did not do so, there is an undisputed breach of that duty. The court concludes that Lewis's holding does not extend to the situation presented here. The contract at issue in Lewis was an end result contract. The owner was calling for a specific end product from the contractor. In such a situation, if the contractor knows about a defect that would cause the contractor's end product to fail, even if the defect was not the contractor's fault or within the scope of the contract to fix, he has a duty to report that defect to the owner. The Alaska Supreme Court acknowledged that a similar duty to warn would exist under a "plans and specifications" contract where the contractor agrees to build according to detailed plans and specifications prepared by the owner. In such a situation, the contractor would have a duty to warn the owner if there are defects in the plans that the contractor must follow.
There is other evidence in the record that prevents the court from taking the issues of fact regarding Cudd's breach and causation away from the jury here. The logs created by the Baker Hughes' representative during the course of the workover operations, as well as the daily logs created by CIE itself, do not clearly indicate that the rig was suspected of being defective at the time. Also, Cudd points to evidence that no complaints were lodged to Cudd's management about the performance of its rig or its operator. Finally, the fact CIE paid Cudd for amounts owed on Cudd's first three invoices, which involved the time and materials spent on RU-3, supports an inference that CIE did not take issue with the rig's torque capabilities.
Plaintiff also argues that Cudd breached an express warranty to provide a rig with up to 15,600 ft.-lbs. of torque. It relies on an analysis Cudd conducted regarding whether its rigs could be used to drill CIE's proposed new wells. That analysis concluded that the rig would need to be able to produce as much as 15,600 ft.-lbs. of torque. Even though the parties never agreed that the rig would be used to drill the new sidetrack wells, Plaintiff points to deposition testimony to show that Cudd nonetheless believed the rig could do so. Aside from the uncertainty as to whether Cudd's analysis constituted a promise about the rig's torque capabilities and whether CIE expected that much torque and relied on such a promise, as stated above, there are issues of fact as to how much torque the rig could generate.
Based on the preceding discussion, Plaintiff's motion for partial summary judgment at docket 141 is DENIED.