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Slant Operating v. Octane Energy Operating

Tex. Bus. Ct.December 22, 2025No. 24-BC08A-0002
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Case Details

Status — whether other courts must follow this ruling
Published
Procedural Posture — the stage the case had reached
motion to dismiss

Related Laws

No specific laws identified for this ruling.

Excerpt

This opinion addresses whether a leaseholder is a third-party beneficiary to a reciprocal waiver agreement between two operators, and whether the Court's jurisdiction and authority over the entire lawsuit is affected by the Court's disposition of the leaseholder's third-party-beneficiary claim. The Court concludes (1) the leaseholder is not a third-party beneficiary to the reciprocal waiver agreement, and (2) the Court retains jurisdiction and authority over the entire lawsuit after the leaseholder's claims are dismissed. Ruling that recent resolutions with some defendants do not affect the Court's jurisdiction over remaining claims and declining to rule at this stage whether the remaining defendant owes fiduciary duties to certain plaintiffs. Denying the defendants' motion to dismiss under Rule 91a. The Court first finds that the case falls within the Court's jurisdictional scope and that the plaintiff's non-suit was not filed in time to prevent the court's ruling on the Rule 91a motion. It next finds that the plaintiff's application to wind up a partnership under section 11.314 of the Business Organizations Code provided sufficient factual allegations to support her claims at this early stage of the case. The Court declined to award fees. This opinion addresses the ability of the Court to adjudicate legal malpractice and fractured malpractice-based claims arising out of an alleged attorney-client relationship involving an attorney, two business associates, and multiple business entities. The Court declines to consider whether an attorney-client relationship existed between the attorney and business entities but does address whether it has subject-matter jurisdiction to hear claims emanating from the alleged relationship. The Court concludes the legal malpractice and fractured malpractice-based claims are improperly before it and, accordingly, dismisses all claims against the attorney-Defendant without prejudice. Granting Plaintiff's motion to remand for untimeline

What This Ruling Means

This case involved a dispute between energy companies Slant Operating and Octane Energy Operating over a waiver agreement and whether a third party (a leaseholder) had rights under that agreement. **What happened:** The main issue was whether a leaseholder could claim benefits from a "reciprocal waiver agreement" - essentially a contract where two companies agree not to sue each other for certain damages - that was made between Slant Operating and Octane Energy Operating. The leaseholder argued they should be protected by this agreement even though they weren't directly part of it. **What the court decided:** The court ruled that the leaseholder was not entitled to protection under the waiver agreement between the two companies. The court said the leaseholder was not a "third-party beneficiary," meaning they had no legal right to benefit from a contract they weren't part of. The court also decided it still had authority to continue overseeing the entire lawsuit despite this ruling. **Why this matters for workers:** This decision reinforces that workers and other third parties generally cannot claim rights under contracts made between their employers and other companies, unless they are specifically named as beneficiaries. Workers should not assume they're protected by agreements their employers make with other businesses.

This summary was generated to explain the ruling in plain English and is not legal advice.

More Rulings in This Case

Other orders and opinions in Slant Operating v. Octane Energy Operating from the same court.

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