Phoenix Exploration, Inc. v. Yaquinto (In Re Murexco Petroleum, Inc.)

                      United States Court of Appeals,

                                Fifth Circuit.

                                  No. 93-1636

                               Summary Calendar.

         In the Matter of MUREXCO PETROLEUM, INC., Debtor.

               PHOENIX EXPLORATION, INC., Appellants,

                                        v.

   Robert YAQUINTO, Jr., Trustee for Murexco Petroleum, Inc.,
Appellee.

                                Feb. 28, 1994.

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern
District of Texas.

Before JOLLY, WIENER, and EMILIO M. GARZA, Circuit Judges.

     PER CURIAM:

     Appellant Robert Yaquinto, Jr., Trustee for Murexco Petroleum,

Inc.,   appeals   a    decision    of   the   district   court   reversing   a

bankruptcy court judgment which held that a contract between

Murexco and Appellees Phoenix Exploration, Inc., Phoenix Operating

Co., and Renown Petroleum, Inc. (Phoenix) was executory when

Murexco filed its Chapter 11 petition.                As we agree with the

district court's conclusion that the bankruptcy court erred in

holding that the contract was executory, we affirm the judgment of

the district court.

                                        I

                             FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

     Murexco   and     the    predecessor     of   Phoenix,   HarCor   Property




                                        1
Management, Inc.,1 entered into an Asset Purchase Agreement (the

APA) on February 29, 1988.      Under the APA, Murexco agreed to sell

many of its assets in two independent stages:                     At the first

closing, all of Murexco's proven undeveloped reserves and possible

reserves,   along   with    certain    other   assets—including      Murexco's

operating rights under all of its oil and gas well operating

agreements—would be sold to HarCor.          At the second closing, all of

Murexco's proven developed, producing, and behind the pipe reserves

would be sold to HarCor.

     The first closing was completed as scheduled on February 29,

1988. Murexco received $500,000 for the sale, of which $289,419.61

was allocated to HarCor's acquisition of Murexco's oil and gas well

operating rights.      The Letter Agreement accompanying the APA

(Exhibit 11 to the APA) provided that HarCor would be the contract

operator for   Murexco      "until    such   time   as   HarCor    becomes   the

operator of record."       Murexco was the operator of record on wells

in Louisiana, Texas, and Oklahoma.             Although it is clear that

HarCor became the "contract operator," the parties dispute whether

HarCor, or its successor, Phoenix, ever became the "operator of

record."

     The second closing never occurred because disputes erupted

between the parties as to Murexco's ability to convey clear title

to the developed reserves that it was supposed to deliver at the


     1
      HarCor Property Management, Inc. became HarCor Exploration,
Inc. HarCor Energy, Inc. succeeded to the rights of HarCor
Exploration, Inc. For our purposes, we will refer to any or all
of these entities as HarCor.

                                       2
second closing.       By letter agreement dated August 30, 1988, HarCor

agreed to pay Murexco approximately $180,000 as liquidated damages

for failure of the second phase to close.          Thus no performance

remained due between the parties as to the second closing.

       Murexco filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy on May 4, 1992, and

filed a "Motion of Debtor to Reject Executory Contract."           The

purpose of the motion was to enable the trustee to reject the

Letter Agreement, which is considered a severable portion of the

APA.       Phoenix contested the motion, arguing that the APA was not

executory and thus the severable Letter Agreement—and the sale of

Murexco's operating rights—could not be rejected by the Trustee.

       At the trial on the motion, Murexco's president testified that

Murexco still had a duty—but only one duty—to perform under the

APA: to obtain consents of nonoperating working interest owners in

the affected wells to Murexco's sale of its operating rights.

Murexco relies on the Joint Operating Agreements (JOAs) to supply

this duty.       Without those consents, Murexco argued, HarCor could

not become the operator of record.2

       The bankruptcy court construed the Letter Agreement and the

APA.       That court concluded that the provisions of the APA that set

up the contract operatorship were executory, and held that the

contract operating agreement was executory.3       Phoenix appealed.

       2
      Under the APA and Letter Agreement, however, Murexco's duty
was to use its "best efforts" to have HarCor named the operator
of record, not to name HarCor the operator of record.
       3
      Although both parties state that the APA was found to be
executory and was rejected, in reality the bankruptcy court held
that the "portion of the [APA] that created a contract operator

                                     3
     The district court reversed, holding that the contract was not

executory, as failure to have HarCor named the operator of record

would not result in a material breach of the APA.                  The trustee

appeals the ruling of the district court.

                                       II

                                    ANALYSIS

A. Standard of Review

         Although this case has already been reviewed on appeal by the

district court, we review the bankruptcy court's findings as if

this were an appeal from a trial in the district court.4                   The

bankruptcy court's findings of fact are reviewed for clear error;

its conclusions of law are reviewed de novo.5

B. Executory Agreement?

         To dispose of this appeal, we need only review the conclusion

that the APA or the Letter Agreement was executory at the time the

bankruptcy petition was filed.

         Section   365   of   the   Bankruptcy   Code   provides    that   "the

trustee, subject to the court's approval, may assume or reject any

executory contract or unexpired lease of the debtor."6                     This

provision allows a trustee to relieve the bankruptcy estate of

burdensome agreements which have not been completely performed.


rights [sic] is determined to be an executory contract, and is
hereby rejected. Murexco ... retains its rights as the operator
under the Joint Operating Agreement."
     4
      Matter of Killebrew, 888 F.2d 1516, 1519 (5th Cir.1989).
     5
      Id.
     6
      11 U.S.C. § 365(a).

                                       4
The Code does not define "executory contract," but both parties

agree that the relevant inquiry is whether performance remains due

to some extent on both sides.7           Courts applying § 365(a) have

indicated that an agreement is executory if at the time of the

bankruptcy     filing,   the   failure   of   either   party   to   complete

performance would constitute a material breach of the contract,

thereby excusing the performance of the other party.8

     Harcor has the continuing duty to perform under the Letter

Agreement as the contract operator.           The issue, then, is whether

Murexco has any duties the nonperformance of which would constitute

a material breach of the letter agreement.          We think not.

         First, the Letter Agreement obligates Murexco to make HarCor

the contract operator of the wells in question.          Neither disputes

that HarCor is the contract operator of the wells.9            Second, the

Letter Agreement requires Murexco to use its "best efforts to cause




     7
      NLRB v. Bildisco & Bildisco, 465 U.S. 513, 522 n. 6, 104
S.Ct. 1188, 1194 n. 6, 79 L.Ed.2d 482 (1984) (quoting H.R.Rep.
No. 95-595, 95th Cong., 1st Sess. 347 (1977)).
     8
      See, e.g., In re Child World, Inc., 147 B.R. 847
(Bankr.S.D.N.Y.1992); In re Flexible Automation Systems, Inc.,
100 B.R. 986 (N.D.Ill.1989); In re Placid Oil Co., 72 B.R. 135,
137 (Bankr.N.D.Tex.1987). The source of this definition is a
two-part article by Professor Vern Countryman, Executory
Contracts in Bankruptcy: Part I, 57 Minn.L.Rev. 439, 458-62
(1973), and Executory Contracts in Bankruptcy: Part II, 57
Minn.L.Rev. 479 (1974).
     9
      Although the Letter Agreement anticipated the negotiation
of a "definitive contract operating agreement," Murexco does not
urge this as a possible ground to conclude that the Letter
Agreement is still "executory."

                                     5
HarCor to become the operator of record."10          Whether this condition

has been met is not necessarily decisive of the executory or

non-executory status of the Letter Agreement: the issue is whether

Murexco's failure to perform this obligation would constitute a

material breach of the Letter Agreement.                   We agree with the

district court's conclusion that nonperformance of Murexco's duty

to use its "best efforts" would not constitute a material breach.

We rely on the APA itself to reach this conclusion.

     The parties agreed that "best efforts" means "a good faith

attempt by each party to cause the designated actions to occur";

provided that "if one or more of such actions do not occur, the

validity of the Agreement, and the actions otherwise required to be

taken by the Parties, shall not be affected."              Thus as a matter of

law, the failure of Murexco to complete performance would not

constitute a material breach of the contract—it would not excuse

HarCor's performance.       The parties' clearly intended that if

Murexco did not succeed in having HarCor named the operator of

record, the remainder of the APA—including HarCor's duty to perform

as the contract operator of the wells—would be unaffected by such

failure.   Clearly, then, Murexco's failure to perform any duty

subject to   the   "best   efforts"       clause   would    not   constitute   a


     10
      Although Murexco argues that its duty was to obtain
consents of the nonoperating working interest owners, that
"duty," if it is one, is one arising under the JOAs, not under
the APA. Such consents were allegedly required so that Phoenix
could be named the operator of record. But Murexco was not
obligated to name HarCor the operator of record; rather, Murexco
was obligated to use its best efforts to have HarCor named the
operator of record.

                                      6
material breach excusing performance by HarCor.

     Nevertheless, Murexco argues that HarCor's "acquisition" of

consents of the working interest owners or gaining operator of

record status was a condition precedent to the first closing under

Article VIII of the APA.       But Article VIII of the APA specifically

states that "[a]ll conditions precedent shall be deemed to have

been satisfied upon the occurrence of the First Closing."              As the

first     closing   did   occur,   the    "outstanding   duty"—that   Murexco

insists is a condition precedent—was deemed satisfied by the plain

wording of the APA.         As that duty is thus deemed performed by

agreement of the parties, Murexco cannot now argue that it has an

outstanding, unperformed duty under the APA.              It follows, then,

that as neither the APA nor the severable Letter Agreement is

executory, neither may be rejected by the trustee under 11 U.S.C.

§ 365(a).

                                         III

                                   CONCLUSION

     For the foregoing reasons, we find that at the time Murexco's

Chapter 11 petition was filed, neither the APA nor Exhibit 11 to

the APA was not executory.               We therefore affirm the district

court's reversal of the bankruptcy court's judgment.11

     AFFIRMED.



     11
      As the bankruptcy court judgment has been reversed, it is
void. Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Co. v. St. Joe Paper Co., 216
F.2d 832, 833 (5th Cir.), cert. denied, 348 U.S. 963, 75 S.Ct.
522, 99 L.Ed.2d 750 (1954). The findings and conclusions in
support of that reversed judgment are thus void.

                                          7