Affirmed in Part, Reversed in Part, Remanded, and Majority, Concurring,
and Concurring and Dissenting Opinions on Remand filed August 15, 2013.




                                      In The

                    Fourteenth Court of Appeals

                              NO. 14-09-00118-CV

                      WOLF HOLLOW I, L.P., Appellant
                                        V.

  EL PASO MARKETING, L.P. AND ENTERPRISE TEXAS PIPELINE,
                       LLC, Appellees

                    On Appeal from the 165th District Court
                            Harris County, Texas
                      Trial Court Cause No. 2006-70615

CONCURRING AND DISSENTING OPINION ON REMAND

      I respectfully disagree with the majority’s treatment of Wolf Hollow’s gas
quality claim. The majority concludes that this claim must be remanded because
the Texas Supreme Court reversed two of the trial court’s declarations. In my view,
the supreme court did not address the merits of any declaration in the trial court’s
final judgment; the court held only that the declarations were not moot. Addressing
the merits for the first time on appeal, I would uphold each of the trial court’s
declarations and affirm the trial court’s judgment that Wolf Hollow takes nothing.

      The question on remand is whether Wolf Hollow may recover replacement
power damages in its claims against El Paso. Insofar as Wolf Hollow’s gas quality
claim is concerned, our review requires that we determine the correctness of the
trial court’s third and fourth declarations. Those declarations provide as follows:

      3.     Wolf Hollow’s exclusive remedy regarding gas quality claims
             for gas delivered by Enterprise Texas Pipeline is to receive an
             assignment as set forth in Article XIV, Section 14.1 of any
             claims that El Paso Marketing, L.P. may have against such
             transporter.
      4.     Article XXI of the Agreement does not apply to gas quality
             claims for gas delivered to Wolf Hollow on the Enterprise
             Texas Pipeline (referenced as “EPGT” or E.P.G.T. Texas
             Pipeline in the Agreement).

      The majority concludes that the supreme court disposed of these
declarations. I, however, cannot find any such holding in the supreme court’s
opinion. The supreme court ended its opinion with a final holding paragraph that
only briefly addressed the trial court’s declaratory relief. The court held: “Because
Wolf Hollow’s replacement-power claim survives, the trial court’s declaratory
judgment is not moot.” El Paso Mktg., L.P. v. Wolf Hollow I, L.P., 383 S.W.3d
138, 146 (Tex. 2012). There was no additional holding specifically rejecting the
trial court’s individual declarations.

      The majority nevertheless construes the supreme court’s opinion as having
reached the merits on the trial court’s declaratory judgment. I do not believe that
the posture of this case permits such a construction. When we decided this case on
original submission, we made a limited holding vacating the trial court’s
declarations as moot. Our holding was guided by a determination that Wolf

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Hollow’s damages were consequential in nature, and therefore barred by
contractual waiver. This reasoning made a merits-based decision on the
declarations unnecessary. See Wolf Hollow I, L.P. v. El Paso Mktg., L.P., 329
S.W.3d 628, 639, 642 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2010). Based on our
narrow holding, the supreme court had no occasion to address the merits of the trial
court’s declaratory judgment. The court simply rejected our waiver analysis and
remanded for additional proceedings. Our court must now address the merits for
the first time on remand.

      When read together, the declarations describe the types of relief that are
unavailable to Wolf Hollow when nonconforming gas is delivered on the
Enterprise pipeline. Specifically, the declarations hold that Wolf Hollow is
precluded from bringing gas quality claims against El Paso (Declaration 3) and
from seeking the remedies provided by Article XXI (Declaration 4). In my
opinion, this correctly states the rights of the parties under the contract.

      I begin my analysis with a review of Article XIV, which the parties have
entitled “Quality.” As the caption appropriately suggests, Article XIV of the
contract describes El Paso’s general obligation to supply Wolf Hollow with natural
gas that meets or exceeds certain quality specifications. This section also
prescribes two distinct remedies available to Wolf Hollow when nonconforming
gas is delivered to its facility. The applicable remedy is determined according to
the pipeline that carried the nonconforming gas. The first remedy applies to the
main pipeline, which is owned and operated by Enterprise. This remedy states as
follows:

      [I]f [Enterprise] fails to deliver Gas at the [Enterprise] Point of
      Delivery that meets such quality specifications, then [El Paso] shall
      assign to [Wolf Hollow], or otherwise cause [Wolf Hollow] to be
      subrogated to, any claim that [El Paso] may have against [Enterprise]

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      as a result of such delivery failure under the Gas Transportation
      Agreements to which [Enterprise] is a party, as assigned by [Wolf
      Hollow] to [El Paso] . . . .

      The second remedy refers to an alternative pipeline, the LSP pipeline. When
nonconforming gas is delivered in this context, the parties bargained for the
following remedy:

      In the event that . . . [El Paso] delivers Quantities of Gas on the LSP
      pipeline at the LSP Point of Delivery that fail to meet the quality
      specifications set forth herein, [Wolf Hollow] may refuse to accept
      any such Quantities of Gas. Any Quantity of Gas that [El Paso]
      delivers to the LSP point of Delivery and that [Wolf Hollow] rejects
      in accordance with this Section 14.1 shall be deemed a failure of [El
      Paso] to deliver such Quantity of Gas in accordance with the terms of
      this Agreement, with [El Paso’s] liability for such failure determined
      in accordance with Article XXI hereof.

      Thus, for quality disputes arising on the Enterprise pipeline, Article XIV
requires that El Paso assign any claim to Wolf Hollow that El Paso might have
against Enterprise. For disputes on the LSP pipeline, Article XIV allows Wolf
Hollow to sue El Paso directly, with El Paso’s liability determined by Article XXI.

      Article XXI is the “Default and Remedies” provision of the contract. The
parties drafted this article in three parts. The first part, Section 21.1, outlines the
procedures for obtaining and calculating replacement power damages. Unless
excused by events of force majeure, this part comes into play whenever El Paso
fails to deliver a necessary quantity of gas. The final two parts concern “Events of
Default.” Section 21.2 is a definition section. Without referencing any gas quality
issues, this section defines the term as either a failure to meet certain payment
obligations or, as in Section 21.1, a failure to deliver a “Quantity of Gas” at the
appropriate point of delivery. Section 21.3 prescribes several remedies available in
the event of a default. The final remedy is broadly written in a form similar to a

                                          4
Mother Hubbard clause, stating that the non-defaulting party may “pursue any
other remedy provided under this Agreement, or now or hereafter existing at law or
in equity or otherwise.”

      Wolf Hollow alleged that the nonconforming gas was delivered on the
Enterprise pipeline, not the LSP pipeline. In light of this fact, I believe that Wolf
Hollow is unable to recover replacement power damages in a quality claim against
El Paso. The parties bargained for two separate remedies under Article XIV, and
the contract classified these remedies based on the individual pipeline involved: an
assignment when the nonconforming gas is delivered on the Enterprise pipeline,
and the Article XXI remedies when the gas is delivered on the LSP pipeline. This
distinction manifests the parties’ intent that Article XXI remedies should not be
available in quality disputes involving gas delivered on the Enterprise pipeline.

      The trial court’s declarations are corollaries of this distinction. If I am
correct that Article XXI is excluded from the pool of available remedies, then Wolf
Hollow must be precluded from “pursu[ing] any other remedy provided under this
Agreement, or now or hereafter existing at law or in equity,” as provided under
Section 21.3. Accordingly, Wolf Hollow’s assignment remedy must be exclusive.
And not only is Section 21.1 unavailable because of the exclusivity of the
assignment remedy, Section 21.1 treats only remedies for quantity issues, not
quality.

      The majority claims that the supreme court overruled the trial court’s third
declaration when it stated that “nothing in [Article XIV] suggests that [Wolf
Hollow] cannot sue El Paso for breach of the Supply Agreement in allowing poor
quality gas to be delivered.” See ante, at Part IV.B (quoting El Paso Mktg., L.P.,
383 S.W.3d at 144). It is true, generally, that Wolf Hollow may look to El Paso for
damages resulting from nonconforming gas, but the supreme court never stated

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that this remedy is available in every context. The court did not acknowledge that
two pipelines were connected to Wolf Hollow’s plant or that there were separate
remedies afforded under Article XIV. I would uphold the trial court’s third
declaration and conclude, consistent with the supreme court’s opinion, that Wolf
Hollow can sue El Paso for quality issues under Article XIV, but only when the
quality dispute arises on the LSP pipeline.

      The majority also claims that the trial court’s fourth declaration was rejected
based on the following sentence in the supreme court’s opinion: “We thus
conclude that there is evidence Wolf Hollow is entitled to recover replacement-
power damages under Section 21.1(c) of the Supply Agreement, precluding
summary judgment against Wolf Hollow based on the consequential damages
waiver.” See ante, at Part IV.C (quoting El Paso Mktg., L.P., 383 S.W.3d at 145). I
do not believe that this pronouncement even relates to the trial court’s fourth
declaration. The fourth declaration pertains specifically to “gas quality claims,” but
the word “quality” never appears in Section 21.1(c). That section deals strictly with
gas quantity failures.

      The majority overstates the supreme court’s opinion when it relies on the
statement quoted above. This statement is the concluding sentence to Part III of the
supreme court’s opinion, and contrary to the majority’s suggestions, the focus of
Part III is not whether Wolf Hollow should recover replacement power damages,
but whether those damages survive the waiver of consequential damages. The
court’s holding was that replacement power damages are consequential damages,
but they are excepted from the contract’s waiver provision because the parties
specifically bargained for them in their cover standard.

      In Part III, the supreme court also considered whether Wolf Hollow had
followed the procedures for applying the contract’s cover standard. On original

                                          6
submission, our court held that Wolf Hollow had failed to abide by the procedures.
See Wolf Hollow I, L.P., 329 S.W.3d at 639 (“Wolf Hollow does not contend that
all of the predicates to its recovery of replacement power costs under Section 21.1
occurred in this case. In short, section 21.1 provides very specific remedies for
very specific circumstances that Wolf Hollow does not alleged occurred in this
case.”). The supreme court disagreed with our judgment and held that there was
evidence that Wolf Hollow had complied with the procedures. See El Paso Mktg.,
L.P., 383 S.W.3d at 145 (“The court of appeals held that Wolf Hollow did not
comply with the first two steps, which are prerequisites to the third. But there is
evidence that it did.”). The court then remanded to us for further proceedings.

      The majority treats Part III as a definitive holding that Wolf Hollow “is
entitled” to replacement power damages. As I read the opinion, the supreme court
was simply deciding that our reasons for denying relief were incorrect. The ball is
now in our court to consider whether the provisions cited in the trial court’s
declarations preclude Wolf Hollow’s recovery of replacement power damages.

      The majority finally decides that Article XXI is applicable to both quantity
and quality disputes. See ante, at Part IV.C. The majority arrives at this conclusion
because the supreme court substituted the term “Quantity of Gas,” which is a
specially defined term under the contract, for “gas as contractually required.” See
El Paso Mktg., L.P., 383 S.W.3d at 140 n.8. The substitution appears to have been
done for ease of the reader, and not for some larger purpose.

      The contract defines a “Quantity of Gas” in terms of MMBtus, which are
thermal units rather than units of volume. Wolf Hollow argues that a certain
volume of conforming gas will yield a certain amount of thermal units, whereas the
same volume of nonconforming gas will yield a different amount. This makes
sense in the abstract; a fuel laden with contaminants will not burn as efficiently as

                                         7
a fuel that is pure. But even if the term includes an implicit quality component,
neither Wolf Hollow nor the supreme court has explained how this is enough to
bring gas quality disputes within the scope of Article XXI. The contract already
provides a mechanism for dealing with gas quality disputes. It’s Article XIV. The
parties clearly intended for Articles XIV and XXI to work together; the former
even cross-references the latter. This court should strive to find an interpretation of
the contract that gives effect to both provisions. Under the majority’s view,
however, Wolf Hollow may bypass Article XIV altogether.

      I agree with the majority that Wolf Hollow cannot recover replacement
power damages on its gas delivery claim. The majority correctly upholds the trial
court’s first and second declarations on this point. See ante, at Part IV.A. For the
reasons stated above, I would also uphold the third and fourth declarations, and
conclude that replacement power damages are unavailable on Wolf Hollow’s gas
quality claim. Because the majority holds otherwise, I respectfully dissent.




                                        /s/       Adele Hedges
                                                  Chief Justice


Panel consists of Chief Justice Hedges and Justices Christopher and Busby.
(Christopher, J., majority). (Busby, J., concurring).




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