Supreme Court of Canada
Sinclair Canada Oil Company v. Pacific Petroleums Limited, [1969]
S.C.R. 394
Date: 1969-01-28
Sinclair Canada Oil
Company (Plaintiff) Appellant;
and
Pacific Petroleums
Limited (Defendant) Respondent.
1968: November 1; 1969: January 28.
Present: Martland, Judson, Ritchie, Hall and
Spence JJ.
ON APPEAL FROM THE SUPREME COURT OF ALBERTA, APPELLATE DIVISION
Contracts—Interpretation—Agreements entered
into by oil development companies—Whether appellant had contractual right to
share in payment made by third company to respondent.
Under an agreement dated December 31, 1951,
an oil company (Act) assigned its interests in certain petroleum and natural
gas permits, which included four permits hereinafter referred to as “the Act
Permits”, to the respondent. Act’s right to convert a 25 per cent carried
interest into a 25 per cent participating interest not having been exercised
within the time provided for in the agreement, i.e. on
[Page 395]
or before August 1, 1953, the position of the
parties, under the agreement, was that the respondent was assignee of all of
Act’s interest in the permits described in the agreement, including the Act
Permits, and that Act was entitled to a 25 per cent interest in the gross
proceeds of sale of production of all leased substances produced and marketed
from all wells drilled on lands covered by the assigned permits after deduction
of the payments and costs made by the respondent, as described in the
agreement.
Under an agreement, dated January 22, 1954,
between A Co. (the respondent’s predecessor in title) and S Co. (the
appellant’s predecessor in title), S Co. acquired from A Co. the latter’s right
to enter upon certain projects (as defined in the agreement) to carry on
exploratory and development work thereon for oil and gas substances. Included
in these projects were lands covered by the Act Permits, as well as other
lands.
A further agreement (i.e. “the
Amendatory Agreement”) was made between A Co. and S Co. on December 11, 1954. Instead of agreeing to expend
the sum of $5,000,000 in an 18‑month period, as provided in the agreement
of January 22, 1954 (i.e. “the Basic Agreement”), S Co. agreed to spend
$10,000,000 during a period of 4½ years. Instead of having to wait for the
obtaining of commercial production from a project, to earn a 50 per cent
interest in the project, S Co. acquired immediately a 25 per cent interest in
all the projects, with the right to obtain an additional 25 per cent interest
in any project from which commercial production was obtained. S Co. agreed to
waive its right of recoupment of acquisition costs.
After the making of the Basic Agreement and.
the Amendatory Agreement, Act approached the respondent with a view to
obtaining a renewal of the right which it had had, under the 1951 agreement,
and which had expired before the Basic Agreement was made, to convert its
carried interest under the 1951 agreement into a working interest. On July 31, 1956, an agreement was made between Act
and the respondent which permitted this right to be exercised by Act, and it
was, in fact, exercised by Act by notice dated June 1, 1962. Upon being
notified by the respondent of the proposed revival of Act’s conversion right, S
Co. not only consented to the revival of this right, but expressed its
willingness to forgo any claim for exploration costs recovered from Act if the
conversion were effected by Act.
Following the conversion of its carried
interest into a working interest, Act paid to the respondent the amounts
stipulated in the 1951 agreement, which related to all of the permits referred
to in that agreement, including the Act Permits. The appellant, successor in
title to S Co., had incurred
total expenditures of $1,868,620.15 in relation to the Act Permits. It claimed
from the respondent the whole of the payment of $467,155.04 made to the
respondent by Act, which represented 25 per cent of the expenditures made in
relation to the Act Permits, this being the amount which Act was required to
pay to the respondent for the privilege of exercising the right of conversion.
An action brought by the appellant to enforce
its claim was dismissed at trial and an appeal from the trial judgment was
dismissed by the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of Alberta. On
appealing to this Court the appellant abandoned its claim for the full amount
of $467,155.04, which had been based on a claim for unjust enrichment. It
contended that it was entitled to recover either: (1) $132,855.13,
[Page 396]
representing 25 per cent of the moneys paid
by Act to the respondent, on the basis that it had acquired a 25 per cent
interest in these moneys, pursuant to the provisions of the Amendatory
Agreement; or (2) $205,194.45, representing the amount referred to in (1), plus
an additional 25 per cent of the payment by Act in respect of a permit on which
the appellant had completed a commercial well on April 24, 1958, as a result of
which it claimed to have acquired an additional 25 per cent interest in that
payment.
Held: The
appeal should be dismissed.
There was nothing in the contractual arrangements
existing between the appellant and the respondent (reference being made to the
appellant and the respondent as though they were the actual parties to the
Basic and the Amendatory Agreements, rather than the successors in title) upon
which a claim to share in the payment made by Act to the respondent could be
founded. That payment was made by virtue of contractual arrangements between
Act and the respondent to which the appellant was not a party. Each of the
alternative claims submitted by the appellant in this Court was dependent upon
the appellant’s establishing a contractual right to participate in the payment
made by Act to the respondent, and, in the Court’s opinion, no such contractual
right existed.
APPEAL from a judgment of the Supreme Court
of Alberta, Appellate Division,
dismissing an appeal from a judgment of Kirby J. Appeal dismissed,
D.P. McLaws, Q.C., and R.S. Dinkel, for
the plaintiff, appellant.
R.A. MacKimmie, Q.C., and G.W. Lade, for
the defendant, respondent.
The judgment of the Court was delivered by
MARTLAND J.:—By an agreement in writing
(hereinafter referred to as “the Act Agreement”) dated December 31, 1951, made
between Act Oils Limited (hereinafter referred to as “Act”) and the respondent,
Act agreed to assign to the respondent all of its estate, right, title and
interest in certain British Columbia Crown Petroleum and Natural Gas Permits
held by Act, which included permits numbered 38, 86, 90 and 98 (hereinafter
referred to as “the Act Permits”).
Clause 6 of the Act Agreement provided as
follows:
6. CARRIED INTEREST OF ACT
The Permits assigned to Pacific under the
provisions of this Agreement shall be held by Pacific in trust for Act as to an
undivided Twenty-
[Page 397]
five per cent (25%) net carried interest,
being a Twenty-five per cent (25%) share or interest in the gross proceeds from
the sale of production of all leased substances hereafter produced, saved,
recovered and marketed from all wells drilled on any of the lands from time to
time hereafter covered by the Permits assigned to Pacific under the terms of
this Agreement after there shall have been deducted therefrom firstly the cash
consideration paid by Pacific to Act as hereinbefore provided, secondly, all
costs and expenses incurred by Pacific in the acquisition and maintenance by it
of its interest in Permits Nos. 38 and 98 under the said Agreement dated the
8th day of November, A.D. 1950, determined in accordance with the provisions
thereof, thirdly all costs and expenses, including Royalty, determined in accordance
with the Scheduled Accounting Procedure hereto annexed as Schedule “B” and the
further provisions hereof, incurred by Pacific in the exploration, drilling,
development and operation of all the lands from time to time comprised within
the Permits and the maintenance of the Permits in good standing.
Clause 8 of that agreement provided that the
respondent should be the Operator of all lands comprised within the assigned
permits.
Clause 12 of the agreement gave to Act the
right, upon giving to the respondent 30 days’ notice, at any time prior to
August 1, 1953, to convert its 25 per cent net carried interest, as provided
for in cl. 6, into a 25 per cent participating interest. It went on to
provide as follows:
Upon converting its interest aforesaid, Act
shall pay to Pacific twenty-five per cent (25%) of all those costs and expenses
which Pacific shall be entitled to recover out of the entire gross proceeds of
sale of production prior to disbursing any moneys to Act in clause 6 hereof,
calculated as of the expiration of such thirty (30) day period. From and after
such date Act shall furnish its proportionate share of all costs and expenses
for the maintenance, development and operation of the lands covered by the
Permits assigned to Pacific under this Agreement and the provisions of the next
succeeding clause hereof shall thereupon be and become operative in lieu of and
in substitution for clauses 6 and 7 hereof, and Pacific shall stand possessed
of the Permits in trust for itself and Act as to all its rights and interests
thereunder and all production of leased substances from the lands covered
thereby and all wells and equipment thereon in the following proportions,
namely:—
Pacific ……………………… 75%
Act ………………………….. 25%
This right was not exercised by Act within the
time limited by cl. 12. After that time had expired, the position of the
parties, under the Act Agreement, was that the respondent was assignee of all
of Act’s interest in the permits described in the Act Agreement, including the
Act Permits, and that Act was entitled to a 25 per cent interest in the gross
proceeds of sale of production of all leased substances produced, saved,
recovered and marketed from
[Page 398]
all wells drilled on lands covered by the
assigned permits after deduction of the payments and costs made by the
respondent, as described in cl. 6.
This was the situation when an agreement in
writing, hereinafter referred to as “the Basic Agreement”, dated January 22,
1954, was made between Canadian Atlantic Oil Company, Ltd., hereinafter referred
to as “Atlantic”, and Southern Production Company, Inc., hereinafter referred
to as “Southern”. The appellant is the successor in title to Southern, and the
respondent is the successor in title to Atlantic.
Article I of the Basic Agreement defined various
words and terms used in the agreement. Paragraph 1 of this
Article provided:
1. Where the word “Project” is used it
shall mean, subject to the selection provided for in Schedule C hereof with
respect to Projects B-4 and B-7 those tracts of land identified by Schedules A
and B, and designated on one of the two maps by the corresponding number, and
shall include the oil and gas substances within, upon, or under such lands and
all rights, titles, and interests granted under or resulting from the reservations,
permits, licenses, leases, deeds and grants pertaining thereto or concerning
any part thereof, including renewals or extensions thereof;
Article II set out the covenants of
Atlantic as follows:
ARTICLE
II
COVENANTS
OF ATLANTIC
1. Atlantic undertakes and warrants that it
is entitled to enter in or upon the Projects and to carry on Exploratory Work
and development work thereon for oil and gas substances.
2. Atlantic undertakes and warrants that
Southern shall have the right, subject to the provisions of and, for any term
of, this Agreement, to enter upon the Projects as listed in Schedules A and B
and to carry on Exploratory Work and development work in the same manner and
with the same rights as if such work was carried on by it. With respect to the
Projects, Atlantic will
endeavor to make such right of Southern exclusive.
3. Except as otherwise specifically
provided with respect to Projects A-2, A-7 and B-7 in Schedule C annexed hereto
and made a part hereof, upon Southern completing the first Commercial Well on
any Project, Atlantic will assign and convey to Southern an undivided one-half
of its right, title and interest in such Project and will enter into an
Operating Agreement substantially in the form hereto attached as Schedule D,
providing for the joint operation and development of the Project. One or more
separate Operating Agreements will be entered into for each Project.
Southern agreed to spend, during the period from
January 1, 1954, to June 30, 1955, the sum of $5,000,000 in performing the obligations required to be
performed by Atlantic under the terms of the various reservations,
[Page 399]
licences, permits, leases, deeds and grants to
maintain Atlantic’s rights in
the projects and in performing such exploratory works as Southern might determine
on such of the projects as Southern might select. Included in the projects
described in the agreement were the lands covered by the Act Permits, as well
as other lands.
It was agreed that Southern would be the
operator of the defined projects, and provision was made for the recovery by
Southern, from production, of its costs and expenses. This provision was
contained in art. VI of the Operating Agreement which was annexed to the
Basic Agreement.
A further agreement, hereinafter referred to as
“the Amendatory Agreement”, was made between Atlantic and Southern on December
11, 1954. The major changes effected in the Basic Agreement by the Amendatory
Agreement were as follows:
1. Instead of agreeing to expend the sum of
$5,000,000 in an 18-month period, as provided in the Basic Agreement, Southern
agreed to spend $10,000,000 during a period of 4½ years, from January 1, 1954, to June 30, 1958.
2. Instead of having to wait for the obtaining
of commercial production from a project, to earn a 50 per cent interest in the
project, Southern acquired immediately a 25 per cent interest in all the
projects, with the right to obtain an additional 25 per cent interest in any
project from which commercial production was obtained.
3. Southern agreed to waive its right of
recoupment of acquisition costs, retroactive to the date of the Basic
Agreement. “Acquisition Costs” were defined in the Amendatory Agreement as
including “all exploratory work and any and all rentals payable under the terms
of the Basic Agreement, as amended, plus direct and overhead costs to Southern
as provided in the Basic Agreement”.
The Amendatory Agreement also provided that
art. VI of the Operating Agreement, previously mentioned, which provided
for Southern’s recovery of costs and expenses from production, should be
deleted. All of the amending provisions in the Amendatory Agreement were made
retroactive to and effective as from January 1, 1954.
[Page 400]
It was subsequent to the making of the Basic
Agreement and the Amendatory Agreement that Act approached the respondent with
a view to obtaining a renewal of the right which it had had, under the Act
Agreement, and which had expired before the Basic Agreement was made, to
convert its carried interest under the Act Agreement into a working interest.
On July 31, 1956, an agreement was made between Act and the respondent which
permitted this right to be exercised by Act, and it was, in fact, exercised by
Act by notice dated June 1, 1962.
Before this amending agreement was made,
Southern had been notified by the respondent of the proposed revival of Act’s
conversion right. No objection was taken by Southern, and, in fact, by its
letters to the respondent, dated March 6, 1956, and May 11, 1956, Southern not only consented
to the revival of this right, but expressed its willingness to forgo any claim
for exploration costs recovered from Act if the conversion were effected by
Act.
Following the conversion of its carried interest
into a working interest, Act paid to the respondent the amounts stipulated in
the Act Agreement, which related to all of the permits referred to in the Act
Agreement, including the Act Permits. The appellant, successor in title to
Southern, had incurred total expenditures of $1,868,620.15 in relation to the
Act Permits. It claimed from the respondent the whole amount of the payment of
$467,155.04 made to the respondent by Act, which represented 25 per cent of the
expenditures made in relation to the Act Permits, this being the amount which
Act was required to pay to the respondent for the privilege of exercising the
right of conversion.
Before this Court the appellant abandoned its
claim for the full amount of $467,155.04, which had been based on a claim for
unjust enrichment. It did contend that it was entitled to recover either:
(1) $132,855.13, representing 25 per cent of the
moneys paid by Act to the respondent, on the basis that it had acquired a 25
per cent interest in these moneys, pursuant to the provisions of the Amendatory
Agreement; or
(2) $205,194.45, representing the amount referred
to in para. (1) above, plus an additional 25 per cent of the payment by
Act in respect of permit 38, on which the
[Page 401]
appellant had completed a commercial well on
April 24, 1958, as a result of which it claimed to have acquired an additional
25 per cent interest in that payment.
In respect of the submissions made by the
appellant in this Court, the primary issue to be determined is whether, under
the terms of the Basic Agreement and the Amendatory Agreement, the appellant
has any contractual right to recover from the respondent either of the amounts
which it now claims. For the purpose of greater clarity I will be referring to
the appellant and the respondent as though they were the actual parties to
these agreements, rather than successors in title.
The appellant’s contention is that, by the terms
of those agreements, the respondent assigned to the appellant a 25 per cent
interest, not only in the oil and gas substances underlying the lands described
in the agreements, but also an undivided 25 per cent interest in any benefits
to be derived by the respondent pursuant to the various instruments by which
the respondent held its interest in such oil and gas substances, and that, by
accepting such assignment, the appellant assumed, in addition to its
obligations under the Basic Agreement, an undivided 25 per cent of the
obligation of the respondent contained in such instruments.
The granting clause, contained in the Amendatory
Agreement (amending cl. 3 of art. II of the Basic Agreement),
provides that:
Immediately and upon the execution and
delivery of this Agreement, Southern will be entitled to receive from Atlantic
and Adherents, and Atlantic and Adherents will assign and convey to Southern an
undivided one-fourth of their respective interests in the Projects, as defined
in the Basic Agreement and in the Schedules attached thereto.
The definition of the word “Project” is
contained in para. 1 of art. I of the Basic Agreement, which has
already been quoted.
In my opinion, this definition covers certain
tracts of land, described in the schedules A and B, and, specifically, oil and
gas substances within, upon or under those lands. When the clause goes on to
refer to “rights, titles, and interests granted under or resulting from the
reservations, permits, licences, leases, deeds and grants pertaining
thereto” it is referring to rights, titles and interests in oil and gas
substances derived from such instruments. The
[Page 402]
words “pertaining thereto”, which I have
italicized, relate back to the words “oil and gas substances”. The granting
clause, therefore, refers to an assignment of a one-fourth interest in the
assignor’s interest in oil and gas substances in certain tracts of land, as
derived from various instruments.
The schedule to the Basic Agreement, when
referring to those projects with which we are here concerned, refers to a
permit “Subject to Act’s 25 per cent net carried interest”, or “Act 25 per cent
carried”. What was assigned in respect of those projects was, therefore, one‑fourth
of the respondent’s interest in the oil and gas substances underlying the lands
described in the Act Permits, which interest was subject to the 25 per cent net
carried interest of Act, as defined in cl. 6 of the Act Agreement.
That clause, previously quoted, defined the
carried interest as a 25 per cent share in “the gross proceeds from the sale
of production of all leased substances” produced and marketed from wells
drilled on the lands described in the permits. Before Act became entitled to
share in such proceeds, certain deductions were to be made, as defined in this
clause.
The appellant’s submission is that the
assignment of the 25 per cent interest contained in the Amendatory Agreement
assigned to it an undivided 25 per cent of the respondent’s right to recover
moneys from Act under that clause and that, consequently, when the right to
convert was revived and Act made a money payment to the respondent to effect
such conversion, its right continued and applied to those moneys. I do not
agree with this contention. Clause 6 of the Act Agreement did not create a
right to recover money from Act. It created, in favour of Act, a carried
interest in the proceeds of sale of oil and gas substances. It is true that in
computing the amount of money which Act would be entitled to receive, provision
was made for the prior deduction from gross proceeds of sale of certain
expenditures. It is also true that, to the extent of such deductions, the
balance remaining, initially to the respondent, and, after the making of the
Basic Agreement and the Amendatory Agreement, to the respondent and to the
appellant, would have been that much the greater. But any benefit accruing to
the appellant, if cl. 6 had remained operative, and no conversion had been
[Page 403]
effected by Act, was not by virtue of any
assignment to the appellant of a right to recover money from Act. Such benefit
would have accrued indirectly and only because it had an interest in the oil
and gas substances and the proceeds of their sale determined after deducting
therefrom the amount of Act’s carried interest. What the appellant got as a
result of the assignment was a 25 per cent interest in the respondent’s
interest in the oil and gas substances underlying the tracts described in the
projects. In the case of the Act Permits, what it got was 25 per cent of the
whole interest in those permits, less Act’s carried interest, as defined in
cl. 6.
It is my opinion, therefore, that at the time
the Basic Agreement and the Amendatory Agreement were made, the appellant had
not acquired by assignment any right to receive moneys payable by Act.
Furthermore, since prior to the making of the Basic Agreement the right to
convert by Act had ceased to exist, the appellant did not acquire, by virtue of
the Basic Agreement and the Amendatory Agreement, any right to share in moneys
which might be paid by Act in order to exercise its right of conversion.
The renewal of Act’s conversion right was
effected after the Amendatory Agreement had been made, with both the knowledge
and the consent of Southern, the appellant’s predecessor in title. The
appellant did not stipulate for any share in the payment to be made by Act in
order to exercise that right. On the contrary, Southern stated its willingness
to forgo any claim thereto.
In the result, I can find nothing in the
contractual arrangements existing between the appellant and the respondent upon
which a claim to share in the payment made by Act to the respondent could be
founded. That payment was made by virtue of contractual arrangements between Act
and the respondent to which the appellant was not a party.
The foregoing reasoning applies equally to each
of the alternative claims submitted by the appellant in this Court, for
$132,855.13 and for $205,194.45 respectively. Each claim is dependent upon the
appellant’s establishing a contractual right to participate in the payment made
by Act to the respondent, and, in my opinion, no such contractual right exists.
[Page 404]
In view of the conclusion reached in respect of
the submissions made on this point, in this Court, it is unnecessary to
determine whether, in any event, the appellant’s claim would be defeated by
virtue of the appellant’s waiver of its right to recoupment of acquisition
costs, as provided in the Amendatory Agreement, or on the basis of contract or
estoppel arising from the exchange of correspondence between the respondent and
Southern.
In my opinion the appeal should be dismissed
with costs.
Appeal dismissed with costs.
Solicitors for the plaintiff, appellant:
McLaws & Company, Calgary.
Solicitors for the defendant, respondent:
MacKimmie, Matthews, Wood, Phillips & Smith, Calgary.