Northern Natural Gas Company v. Tract No. 1062710 et al
Filing
478
MEMORANDUM AND ORDER granting in part and denying in part 419 Motion to Compel filed by L.D. Drilling, Inc. See Order for detailed holding. Signed by Magistrate Judge Donald W. Bostwick on 3/31/2012. (Bostwick, Donald)
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF KANSAS
NORTHERN NATURAL GAS
COMPANY,
)
)
)
Plaintiff,
)
)
v.
)
)
Approximately 9117.53 acres in
)
Pratt, Kingman, and Reno Counties, )
Kansas and as further described
)
herein;
)
)
Tract No. 1062710 containing 80.00 )
acres more or less, located in
)
Kingman County, Kansas, and as
)
further described herein, et al.
)
)
Defendants.
)
Case No. 10-1232-MLB-DWB
)
MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
Defendant, L.D. Drilling, Inc., has filed a Motion to Compel Northern to
Produce Documents from Prior Administrative and Court Proceedings concerning
the Cunningham Storage Field. (Doc. 419.) Plaintiff, Northern Natural Gas
Company, has filed its Response (Doc. 429), and L.D. Drilling has filed a Reply.
(Doc. 440.) After reviewing the motion and briefs, the Court is prepared to rule.
For the reasons set forth below, the motion is granted in part and denied in part as
described in this Memorandum and Order.
FACTUAL BACKGROUND
At dispute are ten requests for production of documents by L.D. Drilling
which seek materials concerning the Cunningham Storage Field from the time it was
first converted to a natural gas storage field to the present date, including documents
from both administrative proceedings before the Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission and the Kansas Corporation Commission, as well as documents from
prior federal court cases involving Northern and various producers and/or
landowners. L.D. Drilling identifies eight factual issues it claims are critical in this
condemnation case, and argues that the requested materials are calculated to lead to
the discovery of admissible evidence concerning those factual issues:
1.
the amount of storage gas, if any, that has migrated out of the
Cunningham storage reservoir;
2.
the causes and mechanisms of any such migration from the
Cunningham storage reservoir;
3.
the timing of any such migration;
4.
the extent to which gas produced from or lying within the Extension
Area is migrated storage gas, as opposed to native gas;
5.
the capacity of gas-holding formations within and beyond the
2
Extension Area;
6.
the amount of gas produced from the extension area;
7.
the extent to which Northern and the producers knew of any migration
and its causes; and
8.
the credibility of the present expert opinions on which Northern is now
relying, evaluated in light of those same experts’ opinions in earlier
proceedings, and in light of the still-earlier opinions of Northern’s
previous experts.
(Doc. 419, at 2.)
Northern first notes that it “has produced, and will continue to produce, all
data regarding migration of gas from the Cunningham Storage Field to the
Authorized Extension Area, including the data developed by Northern with
Netherland Sewell (‘NSAI’).” (Doc. 429, at 3 n. 3.) Furthermore, Northern notes
that it has not objected to the part of Request No. 1 that seeks materials related to
FERC Docket No’s CP07-107-001 and CP09-465-000, which are the FERC
applications which led to the present condemnation action. (Doc. 429, at 3 n. 4.)
Presumably these documents have already been produced. Northern does object to
production of documents from other FERC dockets.
Northern objects to producing documents described in Request No. 2 that
3
were supplied to the Kansas Corporation Commission claiming that they were not
relevant due to the jurisdictional holding in Colorado Interstate Gas Company v.
Thomas E. Wright, et.al., 2010 WL 1488934 (D. Kan. Apr. 13, 2010). Northern did
agree to produce documents from KCC Docket No’s 06-CONS-225-CUNB.
Similarly, as to Request No. 7, Northern raised the same jurisdictional objection, but
did agree to produce responsive documents in their possession, custody or control.
The Court assumes that these documents concerning both Requests No’s 2 and 7
have been produced. See Doc. 429, at 3-4 n’s 5 & 9.
As to Request No. 3 concerning expert reports prepared for use in several
federal court cases by experts who testified on behalf of Northern or other parties in
those cases, Northern has objected based on relevance as to all cases except for the
case of Northern Natural Gas Co. v. L.D. Drilling, Inc., Case No. 08-1405. (Doc.
429, at 4 n. 6.) Presumably Northern has therefore already produced any such
reports in that case.1 Northern also notes that present counsel for L.D. Drilling were
1
Case No. 08-1405-MLB-DWB involves common law claims (conversion,
nuisance, unjust enrichment, civil conspiracy, etc.) by Northern that the defendants have
produced storage gas that migrated from the Cunningham Storage Field. Discovery in
that case has been stayed by the Court in order for the parties to focus on discovery in
this condemnation case. (Case No. 08-1405, Doc. 474.) Issues concerning ownership of
storage gas that has migrated are presently before the Kansas Supreme Court in the
pending appeal in Case No. 10-104279-AS.
4
counsel in the Trans Pacific case;2 Nash was a party in the Trans Pacific case and its
prior counsel represents Val Energy in this case; and Mr. Black, counsel for some of
the landowners in this case was counsel for some of the plaintiffs in the Beck case.3
Id. The Court also notes that counsel for Val Energy in the present case was also
counsel in the Nash case.4 The fact that defendants’ current counsel were involved
in these prior lawsuits, albeit sometimes on behalf of clients other than the present
defendants, does not mean that Northern should be relieved of any obligation to
produce documents concerning those prior suits. Clearly Northern has retained
documents concerning those prior lawsuits since it has attached at least some of the
transcripts of trial in those cases to pleadings in this case. See e.g., Doc. 429-1.
Northern objected to Request No. 15 based upon burdensomeness. That
request seeks all communications between Northern and the FERC with respect to
the migration of storage gas from the Cunningham Storage Field, and any related
application made to the FERC, including communications with respect to Northern’s
use of eminent domain power to acquire the interests of defendants in this
proceeding. The objection was based on the fact that there was no temporal or
2
Northern Natural Gas Co. v. Trans Pacific Oil Corp., Case No. 02-1418.
3
Beck v. Northern Natural Gas Co., Case No. 96-1150.
4
Northern Natural Gas Co. v. Nash Oil & Gas, Inc. Case No. 04-1295.
5
geographic limitation stated in the request which would require Northern to review
“endless amounts [of] information” since Northern has regular contact with its
governing agencies on a variety of matters.
Objections to the other requests were generally based upon relevance. (Doc.
429, at 4-5 no’s 10, 11 & 12.)
Finally, Northern makes a general objection that the requests are overly broad
and unduly burdensome on their face which would require Northern to spend
unnecessary time and effort to ponder, speculate and decide to rummage through
documents going back thirty years, including reports, letters, briefs, emails,
testimony, affidavits, declarations, exhibits, data submissions, etc., to determine
what is and what is not responsive. (Doc. 429, at 18-20.) Northern also notes that
it has expended additional time and considerable expense to convert documents
produced in this case to searchable .pdf files for electronic production to all parties
and that this was done at the request of L.D. Drilling’s counsel. (Doc. 429, at 19.)
In its Reply, L.D. Drilling disputes Northern’s claim of burdensomeness
noting that it attempted to narrow its requests by eliminating inconsequential FERC
proceedings from its request. (Doc. 440, at 3.)5
5
In its initial brief, LD. Drilling stated that if “there be any such proceedings
genuinely irrelevant to any of the technical issues raised or potentially raised in the
present action (e.g., proceedings seeking administrative approval for painting of pipelines
6
DISCUSSION
As has been true throughout this case, the parties come at this discovery
dispute from two opposite viewpoints: L.D. Drilling views Northern’s refusal to
produce all prior information concerning the storage field as an attempt to conceal
or hide their alleged prior misrepresentations to the FERC concerning the migration
of gas (Doc. 440, at 3); Northern views L.D. Drilling’s requests for prior
information as being a “stuck-in-the-past view of the world.” (Doc. 429, at 19.)
The Court is unwillingly to fully accept either party’s characterization.
The issue in this condemnation case is the determination of the just
compensation to be paid to defendants as a result of the condemnation of their
respective property interests. One such interest involves just compensation for gas
in place under the Expansion Area. The legal issue of whether Defendants have title
to only native gas in place or title to gas that may have migrated to the Expansion
Area from the Cunningham Storage Field, is an issue to be decided in the pending
appeal before the Kansas Supreme Court. This Court has also determined that
Northern retains title to any gas that migrated to the Expansion Area after June 2,
2010, when the FERC issued its Order concerning the Expansion Area. Northern
or planting of grass seed), then L.D. Drilling withdraws any request for documents
generated in connection with such proceedings, to minimize overbreadth in its request.”
(Doc. 419, at 16.)
7
Natural Gas Co. v. 9117.53 Acres, 781 F. Supp.2d 1155, 1160 (D. Kan. 2011)6;
Northern Natural Gas Co. v. 9117.53 Acres, 2011 WL 2118642 at * 4 (D. Kan.
May 27, 2011).7 An important element regarding the gas in place involves the
volume of gas (and general size of the reservoir capable of holding gas) which is
located beneath the Expansion Area. This is a matter for determination based on
expert testimony.
In a hearing on October 5 & 6, 2011, in connection with its request for
immediate possession of the property and in order to determine the amount of any
bond to be posted, Northern presented expert testimony from Randall Brush
concerning his opinion as to the volume of gas which had migrated into the
Expansion Area by 1985. Brush has been working on issues concerning the
Cunningham Storage Field since 2006. (Doc. 432, at 22.) His calculations indicate
that 1.045 Bcf of storage gas had migrated to the Expansion Area.8 (Doc. 432, at
64-69.) He also concluded that there is no economically producible native gas
6
Doc. 183, at 8.
7
Doc. 187, at 8.
8
Mr. Brush’s calculations were based upon a porous thickness of the Viola
formation of 75 feet. (Doc. 432, at 67.) The Court cannot determine whether Mr. Brush
made any calculations concerning the Simpson formation even though both formations
are part of the Cunningham Storage Field and there is admitted communication between
the formations.
8
beneath the Expansion Area. (Doc. 432, at 65.) While Mr. Brush testified that he
had not reviewed or relied upon the opinions and findings of Northern’s earlier
experts, Netherland Sewell, it is clear that he had available any and all historical
information in Northern’s possession concerning the Cunningham Storage Field,
including information gathered by Netherland Sewell, in order to complete his study
and issue his opinion. (Doc. 432, at 22-24.)
Likewise, any reservoir engineer retained by Defendants to study the
reservoir underlying the Expansion Area would need access to this historical
information concerning operation of the Cunningham Storage Field and any studies
concerning migration of gas from the storage field to the Expansion Area. This
would presumably include information in Northern’s possession concerning the
amount of storage gas, if any, that has migrated out of the Cunningham storage
reservoir; the causes and mechanisms of any such migration from the Cunningham
storage reservoir; the timing of any such migration; the extent to which gas
produced from or lying within the Extension Area is migrated storage gas, as
opposed to native gas; and the capacity of gas-holding formations within and
beyond the Extension Area and the amount of gas produced from the extension area.
These are the first six factual issues identified by L.D. Drilling to support their
request for the historical data and records from Northern. See Doc. 419, at 2.
9
Generally speaking, discovery of documents related to this type of historical
information would appear to be calculated to lead to the discovery of admissible
evidence that relates to the issue of just compensation in this case and is therefore
relevant for discovery purposes. Discovery relevance is “minimal relevance,”
meaning that it is possible that the requested information may reasonably lead to the
discovery of admissible evidence. See Teichgraeber v. Memorial Union Corp. of
Emporia State University, 932 F.Supp. 1263, 1265 (D. Kan. 1996).
L.D. Drilling lists two additional bases for seeking the requested discovery.
First, L.D. Drilling indicates that the information sought relates to the extent to
which Northern and the producers knew of any migration and its causes. (Doc. 419,
at 2.) This issue, however, appears to be related to the common law claims brought
by Northern in Case No. 08-1405 rather than issues of just compensation in the
present condemnation case. This is supported by L.D. Drilling’s claims that it
wants to present such information “to the Commission that will try this case and to
the jury in Case No. 08-1405.” (Doc. 440, at 3) (emphasis added).
Second, L. D. Drilling argues that the request information could be used to
impeach credibility of either Northern’s employees or Northern’s expert witnesses.
Both sides spend a considerable amount of time and paper discussing whether or not
statements made by an expert witness called by Northern in either administrative
10
proceedings or prior federal court litigation could be admissible as admissions of
Northern under Fed. R. Evid. 801(d)(2).9 However, where as here, the requested
information is found to be discoverable on other grounds, any extended review of
this rule of evidence adds nothing to resolution of the present discovery dispute.
Ultimate questions as to the admissibility of statements pursuant to Rule 801(d)(2)
are best left for determination at the time of trial.10
The practical problem over which the Court has spent considerable time and
thought involves precisely what historical information should be produced now in
this condemnation proceeding as opposed to possible production later in the related
case (No. 08-1405) involving common law claims by Northern. As noted above, it
seems that any information sought concerning the extent to which Northern and the
producers knew of the causes of any gas migration is relevant only to the common
9
The Advisory Committee Notes to the 2011 Amendments of Rule 801(d)(2)
emphasize that statements falling under the hearsay exclusion provided by the rule are no
longer referred to as “admissions.”
10
Rule 801(d)(2), as amended effective December 1, 2011, sets out various
instances where statements offered against an opposing party will not be considered to be
hearsay. Northern cites Koch v. Koch Industries, Inc., 37 F. Supp.2d 1231, 1245 (D.
Kan. 1998), rev’d on other grounds, 203 F.3d. 1202 (10th Cir. 2000), which interprets
subparagraph C of Rule 801(d)(2) and concludes that since an expert witness is not
subject to the control of the party opponent, the expert witness cannot be deemed an
agent for purposes of this subparagraph. L.D. Drilling claims that the present case is
factually distinguishable from the holding in Koch, and also urges that other
subparagraphs (A, B and D) of Rule 801(d)(2) may be applicable. As noted, these
evidentiary arguments are left for determination at trial.
11
law claims in Case No. 08-1405, and not to a determination of just compensation in
this condemnation case. As a practical matter, however, information on what
Northern may have known about the causes of the gas migration is inextricably
intertwined with historical information which is relevant to issues in this
condemnation case, including FERC filings and prior federal court litigation, that
deal with the mechanisms and volumes of gas migration and any gas volumes
underlying the Expansion Area. It seems to the court that it will be impossible to
separate these categories of information for purposes of deciding what Northern is
to produce.
This presents the court with a problem concerning overlapping discovery
between this condemnation case and the common law claims made in Case No. 081405. Initially, the court ordered that discovery in this condemnation case could be
used in Case No. 08-1405 since all the parties in Case No. 08-1405 are also parties
in this condemnation case. See Scheduling Order, Doc. 306, at 12 ¶ 2p.
Subsequently, however, the court stayed discovery in Case No. 08-1405 so that the
parties could focus on discovery in this condemnation case. (Case No. 08-1405,
Doc. 474.) Now, if discovery is allowed concerning what Northern and the
producers may have known about the cause of gas migration, this could raise the
possibility of duplicative discovery in the future in Case No. 08-1405. It appears to
12
the court that the only resolution of this possible duplication of effort is to direct that
no further document requests seeking production of the same materials may be made
to Northern in the future by any parties in the related Case No. 08-1405.
Somewhat related to the issue of possible duplication of discovery is the issue
of how Northern is to allow discovery of the information requested by L.D. Drilling
which obviously could be very voluminous. In order to minimize the costs of
production of the information requested in these document requests and allowed by
this Memorandum and Order, the court will direct that Northern is only obligated to
collect the requested materials in one central location and then allow L.D. Drilling
and any other defendants to review those materials and mark or otherwise designate
what they wish to have copied. The materials can then be copied by an independent
copy company selected by Northern at the expense of the requesting parties.
However, there will be no requirement that Northern also convert the documents
produced to searchable .pdf files for electronic production. The court notes that this
appears to be generally how document discovery was handled in prior litigation with
Northern see Doc. 419-10, at ¶¶ 3-4, and how document discovery is conducted in
many administrative proceedings which utilize the concept of production of
documents in a “data room.”
Northern completes its objections by claiming that L.D. Drilling’s requests
13
are overly broad and unduly burdensome. See Doc. 429, at 18-19. The court will
subsequently address the overly broad claim as to each numbered document request.
First, however, is the issue of burdensomeness.
The underlying basis of Northern’s burdensomeness claim is the fact that the
requests on their face are so extensive as to be burdensome since they involve thirty
years of documents many of which allegedly will have nothing to do with
determination of just compensation and the value of the interests being condemned.
This allegation, however, flies in the face of the way Northern has accommodated
its own expert witness over the past five years in providing him with voluminous
information so that he could undertake a “grass roots evaluation of the Cunningham
Field and the issues associated with migration from the Cunningham Field; and that
included evaluating the history of the Cunningham Field itself and of wells in the
adjoining area.” (Doc. 432, at 22.) Simply stated, Northern cannot have it both
ways. They cannot provide extensive historical data to their own expert while
refusing to produce similar information for use by defendants.11
11
As was the case concerning the motion to compel filed by the Huff Landowner
Group, Northern has not shown how each request is unduly burdensome by submission of
affidavits or other types of evidence. It is not enough to claim that the requests “by their
very nature” or “on their face” are unduly burdensome. See e.g., Lowery v. County of
Riley, et.al., Case No. 04-3101-JTM-DWB, 2009 WL 648928, at *4 (D.Kan., Mar. 12,
2009) .
14
This brings us to a consideration of each specific request to determine
whether any request is overly broad. After considering each specific request, the
court makes the following findings:
Request No. 1:
Northern will be required to produce the requested
materials concerning all of the listed FERC dockets; provided however, that L.D.
Drilling has agreed to exclude any such dockets to the extent that they do not
involve “technical issues raised or potentially raised in the present action. (See
Doc. 419, at 16.)12
Request No. 2:
Northern will be required to produce the requested
materials concerning all of the listed KCC proceedings.
Request No. 3:
Northern will be required to produce all requested expert
reports in all the listed cases for experts who testified whether live or by affidavit or
declaration.
Request No. 4:
Northern will be required to produce all documents
described in this request.
Request No. 5:
Northern will be required to produce any documents
12
The court notes that Northern has not disputed the statements attributed to its
prior counsel about the fact that Northern kept its litigation and administrative files
concerning the Cunningham Field precisely because it anticipated that they might be
needed in future judicial or administrative proceedings. See Doc. 419, at 16; Doc. 41910.
15
which contain facts and data provided by Northern or its attorneys to any expert
witness and which the expert considered or relied on in forming the opinions in any
of the cases or administrative proceedings identified in the request.13
Request No. 7:
Northern will be required to produce any documents
described in this request.
Request No. 8:
Northern will not be required to produce the documents
identified in this request. The request is unduly broad since it seeks not only the
trial exhibit itself, but all underlying documents which might have involved the
creation of the exhibit. If there were questions concerning those matters, they
should have been asked at trial and should be reflected in the transcript. The court
will not require Northern to attempt to reconstruct events that occurred in a case
filed in 2002.
Request No. 9:
Northern will be required to produce any detailed map
which is prepared pursuant to Judge Marten’s order referenced in this request;
provided however, that Northern will not be required to produce any other
13
This does not include any expert witness retained or specially employed in
anticipation of litigation or administrative proceedings or to prepare for such proceedings,
but who was not expected to be called as a witness at trial. See Fed. R. Civ. P.
26(b)(4)(D). Since the designated proceedings have already taken place, this means that
the request applies only to facts and data provided to any expert who actually testified in
person or by affidavit or declaration at the trial or administrative proceedings.
16
documents “which pertain” to such a map.
Request No. 10:
Northern will be required to produce the documents
identified in this request. It appears that such documents were provided to Mr.
Brush by Northern in connection with his work and expert testimony.
Request No. 15:
Northern will not be required to produce the broad
category of documents outlined in this request. To the extent that Northern has
communicated with the FERC in connection with the dockets identified in Request
No. 1, those documents will be produced in response to Request No. 1. As such,
much of this request is duplicative. The request for information concerning
Northern’s communication concerning use of eminent domain powers is not
calculated to lead to the discovery of admissible evidence in this case. Finally, the
reference to “any other agency or branch of the United States Government” is
unduly broad.
Northern’s production of the above-described documents shall be made in the
manner previously described in this Memorandum and Order. Northern shall gather
the documents in one central location or one “data room” as provided herein and
shall make the documents available for inspection during business hours at that
location by any party wishing to examine the documents for a period of two weeks.
The documents shall be made available for inspection no later than April 30, 2012.
17
Because production of the documents described in L.D. Drilling’s request
may, of necessity, involve intertwined materials related to the common law claims
by Northern in Case No. 08-1405, the court directs that the documents produced in
response to this request may be used in Case No. 08-1405 and no additional
document requests seeking production of the same materials may thereafter be made
of Northern in Case No. 08-1405 by any party to that case. Therefore, any party in
Case No. 08-1405 who may wish to examine the documents being produced by
Northern pursuant to the requests by L.D. Drilling shall do so within the two-week
period provided in this Memorandum and Order.
For the above reasons, the motion to compel by L.D. Drilling (Doc. 419), is
GRANTED in PART and DENIED in PART as set out in this Memorandum and
Order, and to the extent that the motion is granted, Northern shall produce the
documents in the manner set out herein.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Dated at Wichita, Kansas this 31st day of March, 2012.
S/ DONALD W. BOSTWICK
DONALD W. BOSTWICK
U.S. MAGISTRATE JUDGE
18
Disclaimer: Justia Dockets & Filings provides public litigation records from the federal appellate and district courts. These filings and docket sheets should not be considered findings of fact or liability, nor do they necessarily reflect the view of Justia.
Why Is My Information Online?