Co-author Gunner West

Slant Operating, LLC and Slant Holdings, LLC v. Octane Energy Operating, LLC, reveals the benefits and purposes of the Texas Business Court in resolving complex energy disputes (such as convincing businesses to abandon Delaware). The parties were presented with three detailed written opinions spelling out the Court’s rulings and the reasons for each.
The facts
Slant Operating and Octane, neighboring operators of wells in the Permian, signed a Letter Agreement exchanging reciprocal waivers of off-lease penetration point objections. Slant Operating waived objections to Octane’s five Green Gables wells. In return, Octane agreed to waive objections to future Slant wells drilled into off-lease penetration points on Octane’s leasehold in exchange for production data. Later, Slant Operating requested waivers for six Gardendale wells in mid-2024. Octane refused and filed objections with the Railroad Commission.
The orders flow from the same defect in the Slant parties’ organizational structure: Slant Operating signed the contract but doesn’t own the minerals; Slant Holdings owns the minerals but didn’t sign the contract. This was bad news for the Slant parties.
Order 1 was a win for the Slant parties on the merits. Octane breached the contract. But Order 2 and Order 3 limited recovery because the entity with the contract right (Operating) had no damages, and the entity with the damages (Holdings) had no contract rights.
Judge Bullard granted Operating’s or motion for partial summary judgment on liability and denied Octane’s competing motion. The Letter Agreement was a valid, enforceable contract, not an “agreement to agree.” The Future Waiver Provision contained sufficiently definite essential terms: Octane must provide waivers for Operating’s future off-lease wells on Octane’s leasehold and Operating must provide production data in return. The court rejected Octane’s arguments that the provision was too indefinite (missing well names, locations, dates), reasoning that future-looking provisions in the oil-and-gas context don’t require that level of specificity. The court also noted that Operating’s partial performance (providing the Green Gables waiver) further confirmed enforceability.
The court rejected Octane’s remaining defenses, concluding,
- the contract was not unreasonable, oppressive, or absurd (both parties had perpetual obligations);
- Operating was not required to exhaust Railroad Commission administrative remedies because the Commission has no jurisdiction over private breach-of-contract claims; Octane’s waiver, estoppel, and excuse defenses failed for lack of evidence;
- Operating’s earlier attempt to purchase Octane’s Section 13 leasehold did not constitute waiver of its contractual right to request waivers.
Bottom line
Octane’s defenses failed; it breached the Letter Agreement as a matter of law.
Octane moved for summary judgment on all three categories of damages plaintiffs sought:
- lost revenue from the six Gardendale wells,
- lost revenue from 35 future unidentified wells, and
- drilling redesign costs.
The court granted in part and denied in part.
- Holdings (the leaseholder/mineral owner) was not entitled to damages because it was neither a party to nor a third-party beneficiary of the Letter Agreement.
- Operating could not recover lost revenue for either the Gardendale wells or the future wells because Operating does not own any leasehold or mineral interests. Holdings owns all of the working interest. The court was unpersuaded by Octane’s argument that Operating “feels” the economic harm because it holds Holdings’ treasury account. Custody of another entity’s revenue does not establish entitlement to revenue.
- Summary judgment on Operating’s drilling redesign costs denied. Operating produced invoices from a Railroad Commission regulatory expert who provided guidance on how to reconfigure the Gardendale wells after Octane’s refusal. This constituted more than a scintilla of evidence of consequential/expectancy damages. Those were foreseeable expenses Octane should have anticipated when it refused the waiver.
- Summary judgment on reliance damages denied. There was no evidence that Operating incurred expenses in reliance on Octane’s promise before the breach.
The court also struck a late-filed affidavit (filed one day past the November 3 deadline) because Plaintiffs failed to seek leave of court.
Bottom line
The only surviving damages claim is Operating’s drilling redesign costs and related regulatory expenses. All lost-revenue claims are dead. Operating doesn’t own the minerals, and Holdings can’t sue on the contract. This creates a significant damages gap given the $10MM+ originally sought.
Order 3: Third-Party Beneficiary / Jurisdiction
This order addressed whether Holdings (owner of the mineral interests Operating develops) qualified as a third-party beneficiary of the Letter Agreement between Operating and Octane. In resolving four competing motions the Court concluded Holdings was not a third-party beneficiary.
The court rejected three arguments from the Slant entities.
- All operators inherently contract to benefit their affiliated leaseholders. Good try but such a ruling would impose a default third-party-beneficiary presumption across the industry, violating the well-established Texas presumption against third-party beneficiary status.
- Reliance on Commission Statewide Rule 86 (governing horizontal drilling applications and requiring notice to mineral owners) failed. Any benefit to the leaseholder under Rule 86 is at best implied and does not reflect the contracting parties’ mutual intent.
- The “creditor beneficiary” theory failed on three sub-arguments: Holdings’ mineral ownership doesn’t automatically make it a beneficiary of every contract its operator signs. Unity of financial interests between affiliated entities doesn’t override corporate separateness; and a reference to “Slant Energy” in the Letter Agreement’s header/footer doesn’t constitute intent to benefit Holdings.
The court sustained Octane’s plea to the jurisdiction and dismissed Holdings’ claims. The Court confirmed, however, that its overall jurisdiction over the lawsuit was not affected by dismissing Holdings (jurisdiction once properly acquired is not defeated by later events).
Bottom line
The case isn’t over but Holdings is out of it. The operator/leaseholder corporate structure does not automatically make Holdings a third-party beneficiary of the operator’s contracts.
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