HONORABLE SHELLEY C. CHAPMAN, UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY JUDGE:
Before the Court is the Debtors' Motion (the "Motion") for an Order Authorizing Rejection of Certain Executory Contracts [ECF No. 371]. By the Motion, the Debtors seek to reject certain contracts between Sabine Oil & Gas Corporation ("Sabine") and Nordheim Eagle Ford Gathering, LLC ("Nordheim"), and between Sabine and HPIP Gonzales Holdings, LLC ("HPIP") pursuant to section 365(a) of the Bankruptcy Code.
On October 8, 2015, Nordheim and HPIP
The Debtors—an independent energy company engaged in the acquisition, production, exploration, and development of onshore oil and natural gas properties in the United States—filed petitions for relief under chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code with this Court on July 15, 2015. The Debtors are operating their businesses and managing their properties as debtors in possession pursuant to sections 1107(a) and 1108 of the Bankruptcy Code. The Court entered an order authorizing the joint administration and procedural consolidation of the Debtors' chapter 11 cases pursuant to Bankruptcy Rule 1015(b) on July 16, 2015. There has not been a request for the appointment of a trustee or examiner in these chapter 11 cases. On July 28, 2015, the Office of the U.S. Trustee for the Southern District of New York formed the official committee of unsecured creditors pursuant to section 1102 of the Bankruptcy Code. Familiarity with the background of the Debtors' businesses and chapter 11 cases, and with the December 16, 2014 combination of Sabine Oil & Gas LLC and Forest Oil Corporation (the "Combination"), is assumed.
As a result of the Combination, Sabine became party to two contracts with Nordheim, each dated January 23, 2014: the first, a Gas Gathering Agreement, and the second, a Condensate Gathering Agreement (together, the "Nordheim Agreements"). By the Gas Gathering Agreement, Sabine agreed to "dedicate" to the "performance" of that agreement all of the gas produced by Sabine from a designated area and deliver such gas to Nordheim, and Nordheim agreed to gather, treat, dehydrate, and re-deliver that gas to Sabine. Nordheim further agreed to construct, at its sole cost and expense, a gathering system of pipelines and treatment facilities to provide certain agreed-upon services. The Gas Gathering Agreement contemplates a separate and subsequent conveyance from Sabine to Nordheim of a mutually agreed tract of land in connection with Nordheim's construction and operation of the gathering system. Sabine also agreed to deliver a certain minimum amount of gas to Nordheim on an annual basis. To the extent it does not deliver such minimum amounts, Sabine is required to make a deficiency payment to Nordheim; Sabine also is obligated to pay monthly gathering fees to Nordheim. The Gas Gathering Agreement has a 10-year term, with automatic yearly renewal subject to termination, and is governed by Texas law.
The Condensate Gathering Agreement between Sabine and Nordheim contains substantially the same terms as the Gas Gathering Agreement, but it relates to liquid hydrocarbons and other liquids rather than gas. The Court will refer to the liquid hydrocarbons, gas, and other products that are the subject of the dedications in the Nordheim Agreements as the "Nordheim Products."
Each Nordheim Agreement specifically provides that the agreement itself is a "covenant running with the [land]" within the designated area, and is enforceable by Nordheim against Sabine, its affiliates, and their successors and assigns.
Sabine also became party to two contracts with HPIP as a result of the Combination: one, a Production Gathering, Treating and Processing Agreement, dated May 3, 2013, and the other a Water and Acid Gas Handling Agreement, dated May 2014, with no specific date (together, the "HPIP Agreements"). The former, the HPIP Gathering Agreement, obligates Sabine to "dedicate" to the "performance" of the agreement certain leases owned by Sabine and the oil, gas, and water produced from the wells located on the land subject to those leases, and to deliver that oil, gas, and water to HPIP. Pursuant to the agreement, HPIP agreed to construct, operate, and maintain gathering facilities to provide certain services with respect to the products delivered by Sabine. The HPIP Gathering Agreement is also governed by Texas law.
The latter, the HPIP Handling Agreement, contains substantially similar terms to those set forth in the HPIP Gathering Agreement, but provides for HPIP to construct, operate, and maintain disposal facilities for and perform disposal services with respect to all of the water and acid gas produced by Sabine from the same land subject to the leases. The Court will refer to the oil, gas, acid, and water that are the subject of the dedications in the HPIP Agreements as the "HPIP Products."
The Debtors seek to reject the Nordheim Agreements and the HPIP Agreements (referred to collectively as the "Agreements") pursuant to section 365(a) of the Bankruptcy Code. Under that provision, a debtor in possession, "subject to the court's approval, may assume or reject any executory contract ... of the debtor."
As the Second Circuit held in Orion Pictures Corp. v. Showtime Networks, the "process of deciding a motion to assume [or reject] is one of the bankruptcy court placing itself in the position of ... the debtor in possession and determining whether assuming [or rejecting] the contract would be a good business decision or a bad one."
The Debtors argue that rejection of the Nordheim Agreements and the HPIP Agreements is a reasonable exercise of their business judgment and is in the best interests of their estates because those Agreements are unnecessarily burdensome. Specifically, the Debtors submit that it is not financially viable for them to deliver the minimum amounts of gas and condensate set forth in the Agreements, and, absent rejection, they would therefore be required to make the contractual deficiency payments, which would impose a considerable and unnecessary drain on the estates' resources. If rejection is authorized, the Debtors state that they plan to enter into new gathering agreements with other gatherers on terms more favorable to the Debtors.
Both Nordheim and HPIP object to the Debtors' proposed rejection, but for slightly different reasons. In its papers, Nordheim argues that the Debtors' decision to reject the Nordheim Agreements does not satisfy the business judgment standard because Sabine's covenants to dedicate the Nordheim Products and to pay a "transportation fee" are covenants that run with the land and therefore would survive rejection.
At oral argument, however, Nordheim put forward an additional and distinct argument for the first time: that while the Court can authorize the Debtors' rejection of the Nordheim Agreements, it cannot in doing so make a determination as to the legal status under Texas property law of those covenants in the Nordheim Agreements that Nordheim argues "run with the land." In support of its argument, Nordheim relies on the Second Circuit's decision in Orion as a legal limitation on the Court's authority in the context of the Motion. In that case, the Second Circuit found that a bankruptcy court had committed reversible error by deciding a disputed factual issue in the context of a motion to assume an executory contract.
Like Nordheim, HPIP argues that Sabine's dedication of certain of its leases and the HPIP Products are covenants that run with the land and are not subject to rejection.
As discussed more fully below, after review of Nordheim's Orion argument and Judge Drain's recent decision in In re The Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Company, Inc. interpreting Orion, the Court concludes that it cannot decide substantive legal issues, including whether the covenants at issue run with the land, in the context of a motion to reject, unless such motion is scheduled simultaneously with an adversary proceeding or contested matter to determine the merits of the substantive legal disputes related to the motion.
At oral argument, counsel for HPIP acknowledged that HPIP does not object to the Debtors' rejection of the HPIP Agreements, stating that "there's no question they should reject"
If it is ultimately determined that the covenants at issue in the Agreements do not run with the land, as the Debtors argue and the Court believes to be the case, the Debtors will be free to negotiate new gas gathering agreements with any party, likely obtaining better terms than the existing agreements provide. If, however, the covenants are ultimately determined to run with the land, the Debtors will likely need to pursue alternative arrangements with Nordheim and HPIP consistent with the covenants by which the Debtors would remain bound. In either scenario, the Debtors' conclusion that they are better off rejecting the Nordheim and
In the absence of any allegation challenging the Debtors' decision-making process, the Court finds that the Debtors have properly and adequately considered the business and legal risks associated with rejection of the Nordheim Agreements and the HPIP Agreements. Taking into account HPIP's consent to the rejection of the HPIP Agreements, and having identified no basis to find otherwise with respect to either the Nordheim Agreements or the HPIP Agreements, the Court defers to the business judgment of the Debtors to reject the Agreements. Rejection of the Agreements relieves the Debtors of those terms that are subject to rejection (whether that be all or some of the terms of the Agreements as will be decided in a subsequent proceeding or agreed to by the parties), and will likely allow for the more efficient use of the Debtors' assets.
The Court's non-binding analysis as to whether the covenants at issue "run with the land" under Texas law follows.
The covenants at issue are (i) the Debtors' dedication to HPIP of the HPIP Products and certain leases to the performance of the HPIP Agreements; (ii) the Debtors' dedication to Nordheim of the Nordheim Products to the performance of the Nordheim Agreements; and (iii) the Debtors' covenant to pay Nordheim a gathering fee. Generally, a covenant may run with the land as a real covenant or as an equitable servitude. Here, the Court preliminarily finds that none of the covenants runs with the land either as a real covenant or as an equitable servitude.
As many practitioners have noted, "[i]n U.S. property law, no rules are more arcane and anachronistic than those governing real covenants,"
The original concept of covenants "running with the land" was introduced in early English law at a time when neither the rights nor the duties created by contract could be assigned. Beginning in the landlord and tenant context, the idea that the benefit and burden of a covenant could run with the ownership interest was applied in other situations, including covenants included in a conveyance of land. These covenants respecting the use of land that ran with the estate came to be known as
In the early cases, the courts tended to restrict the expansion of the use of real covenants by adding requirements to be met in order for a successor to recover for breach of a covenant in the original contract. For example, in one of the earliest cases dealing with the running of a burden, Spencer's Case,
By 1834, the English courts of law had greatly narrowed the scope of legal relief available for breaches of covenants by holding that the running of the burdens on owners in fee violated public policy against encumbering land and restricting alienation. Thereafter, English courts of equity began developing rules for the enforcement of covenants against successive interestholders. Although over time English courts stopped finding that affirmative covenants run with the land, American jurisdictions have generally rejected that approach, instead adopting a policy that the requirements for running with the land should be more strictly applied to affirmative covenants than to negative ones. The covenants that meet the test established by the courts of equity have come to be known as "equitable servitudes."
Over time, the use of covenants, both real and equitable, has become common. Yet, many characterize the law of covenants as an "unspeakable quagmire,"
It is in this historical context that the Court has considered the arguments as to the status under Texas property law of the covenants at issue in this case, and has preliminarily concluded that the covenants do not run with the land either as real covenants or as equitable servitudes.
The parties agree that whether the covenants run with the land is a question of Texas law, which is the law governing the Agreements. Unfortunately, there appears to be no applicable binding decision of the Texas Supreme Court on all aspects of the question. What follows is the Court's analysis of the issue based on existing caselaw.
Under Texas law, language in a contract containing a covenant is the primary evidence of the parties' intent, but terminology is not dispositive.
In their omnibus reply to the objections, the Debtors dispute the existence of three of these elements: (1) that there is horizontal privity of estate between, respectively, Sabine and Nordheim, and Sabine and HPIP; (2) that the relevant covenants "touch and concern" the land; and (3) that the parties intended those covenants to run with the land.
Horizontal privity of estate generally means that there was "simultaneous existing interests or mutual privity" between the original covenanting parties as either landlord and tenant or grantor and grantee.
The facts here do not fit within that traditional model. In this case, the Debtors did not in the context of a relevant conveyance reserve any interest for Nordheim or HPIP; rather, they simply engaged Nordheim and HPIP to perform certain services related to the hydrocarbon products produced by Sabine from its property. The covenants at issue are properly viewed as identifying and delineating the contractual rights and obligations with respect to the services to be provided, and not as reserving an interest in the subject real property.
Moreover, the Agreements do not grant Nordheim or HPIP a real property interest in the Debtors' mineral estate, which is comprised of five real property rights, or "sticks," under Texas law: "(1) the right to develop (the right of ingress and egress), (2) the right to lease (the executive right), (3) the right to receive bonus payments, (4) the right to receive delay rentals, [and] (5) the right to receive royalty payments."
The covenants at issue also do not appear to satisfy the "touch and concern" prong. Courts utilize two tests for determining whether that prong is satisfied under Texas law, although these tests are not "absolute."
Under Texas law, once minerals are extracted from the ground, such minerals cease to be real property and instead become personal property.
Another consideration that the Fifth Circuit has examined in determining whether a covenant burdens the land is whether the action triggering the covenant is one that affects the land.
The dedication covenants are triggered contractually by Sabine's production and saving of the Nordheim and HPIP Products, while the Nordheim gathering fee covenant is triggered by Nordheim's receipt of the Nordheim Products. None of those triggers affects the land from which those products have been produced. Rather, only the products themselves, and, importantly, Sabine's rights with respect to those products, are affected by those covenants.
On this basis, once again, Energytec is distinguishable.
Energytec is also distinguishable by the fact that the obligation to pay the transport fee in that case was triggered simply by the flow of gas through the pipeline. Here, in contrast, the Nordheim gathering fee is triggered by Nordheim's receipt of gas from Sabine into Nordheim's own facilities. Nordheim's gathering fee is thus not as directly tied to the promisor's land as was the case in Energytec. The Nordheim gathering fee covenant therefore has no direct connection to or impact on the land or on Sabine's property rights.
Having found preliminarily that the covenants at issue do not (i) readily fit into the traditional paradigm for horizontal privity of estate or (ii) "touch and concern" the Debtors' land, the Court need not further extend its real covenant analysis at this time; accordingly, the Court has not considered the issue of the parties' intent.
Nordheim, in its surreply, alternatively argues that even if the covenants at issue are personal covenants, they constitute equitable servitudes which cannot be rejected pursuant to the Bankruptcy Code. This argument lacks merit. An equitable servitude is enforceable when the contracting parties are in privity of estate at the time of the conveyance and a subsequent party purchases the land with notice of the restriction.
For all of the foregoing reasons, the Court finds that the decision to reject the Nordheim Agreements and HPIP Agreements is a reasonable exercise of the Debtors' business judgment. Accordingly, the Court authorizes the rejection of those agreements as of the dates requested in the Motion.
As required by Orion, in granting the Motion, the Court does not make any final