Lexpert Magazine

June 2017

Lexpert magazine features articles and columns on developments in legal practice management, deals and lawsuits of interest in Canada, the law and business issues of interest to legal professionals and businesses that purchase legal services.

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28 LEXPERT MAGAZINE | JUNE 2017 BIG SUITS A LOOK AT THE ALBERTA COURT OF APPEAL'S UPHOLDING OF THE DECISION IN THE REDWATER ENERGY CORP. RECEIVERSHIP AND BANKRUPTCY PROCEEDINGS, WHICH FOUND THAT REDWATER'S RECEIVER AND TRUSTEE, GRANT THORNTON, WAS ENTITLED TO DISCLAIM REDWATER'S NON-PRODUCING OIL WELLS AND SELL ITS PRODUCING ONES ORPHAN WELL ASSOCIATION V. GRANT THORNTON DECISION DATE: APRIL 24, 2017 In a landmark appeal decision released on April 24, 2017, the majority of the Alberta Court of Appeal dismissed an appeal by the Alberta Energy Regulator (AER) and Or- phan Well Association (OWA) of the May 2016 decision of the Honourable Neil Witt- mann, Chief Justice of the Court of Queen's Bench of Alberta in the Redwater Energy Corp. (Redwater) receivership and bank- ruptcy proceedings. In its decision, the majority of the Alberta Court of Appeal held that Grant ornton Ltd., the receiver and trustee in the Redwater Energy Corp. receivership and bankruptcy proceedings, was entitled to disclaim Redwa- ter's non-producing oil wells and sell its pro- ducing ones. Redwater is a junior oil and gas producer that went into insolvency in the spring of 2015. Some of Redwater's oil wells are valu- able, while others might be considered "or- phans" because the costs of environmental re- mediation required to abandon them exceed the value of those wells. Redwater's trustee in bankruptcy wanted to renounce or disclaim Redwater's interest in the orphan wells, but keep and sell the valuable wells to maximize the recovery of the secured creditor. e Al- berta Energy Regulator argued that that was not permissible, and that a sufficient portion of the sale proceeds from the valuable wells should be set aside to meet the expected costs of remediating the orphan wells. e decision of the Alberta appellate court dismissed the appeals of the AER and the OWA, who had argued that Chief Jus- tice Wittmann erred in finding that Grant ornton should not have to carry out the abandonment, reclamation and remediation obligations of Redwater's non-producing wells, or perform abandonment orders as is- sued by the AER, which included paying a security deposit. Specifically, the majority of the Court of Appeal (comprising the Honourable Mr. Justice Frans Slatter and the Honourable Madam Justice Frederica Schutz) held that: By attempting to extract security deposits or the performance of abandonment obliga- tions on a transfer of AER licenses, the AER was in effect transferring the proprietary value in the bankrupt estate from the under- lying real property assets of Redwater (which were interests in its oil and gas properties) to the AER licences, contrary to the scheme of distribution contemplated under the Bank- ruptcy and Insolvency Act (BIA). A trustee and receiver is entitled to aban- don or renounce oil and gas assets encum- bered with environmental obligations, the court found. "It is commonplace for trustees and re- ceivers to disclaim or 'abandon' assets," Jus- tice Slatter wrote in the majority decision. "Whether they formally abandon the assets, or merely leave them unrealized at the end of the bankruptcy process makes little differ- ence. A trustee must transfer unrealized assets to the bankrupt at the end of the process. ... If a trustee decides that an oil and gas well has no net realizable value, ... the trustee can ef- fectively ignore the asset. ... "[T]he BIA recognizes the ability of a trustee to abandon assets that are subject to environmental obligations." e AER's requirement that security be posted for abandonment obligations, or di- verting value from the bankrupt estate to ensure that remediation is performed, is sufficient to classify the claims of the AER as financial in nature, making them a credi- tor whose claims are subject to the priorities prescribed by the BIA. e AER cannot in- directly interfere with the value of assets in a bankruptcy by placing financial precondi- tions on the transfer of AER licences. Based on the doctrine of federal para- mountcy, the obligations of trustees and receivers under both the Oil and Gas Con- servation Act (OGCA) and the Pipeline Act (PA) to abandon oil wells and pipelines; pay the costs of remediation performed by other persons; and to obey any order of the AER is in operational conflict with section 14.06 of the BIA. Section 14.06 of the BIA exempts a receiver or a trustee from personal liability, allows a trustee and receiver to disclaim assets, and prescribes the priority of environmental remediation costs. e majority of the Alberta Court of Ap- peal also held that the applicable sections of the OGCA and PA frustrate the federal purpose of the BIA of managing the winding up of insolvent corporations and settling the priority of claims against them. e majority therefore confirmed that such obligations of the AER are unenforceable as against the Re- ceiver and Trustee. Arguing the applications on behalf of Grant ornton were Jeffrey Oliver, with Danielle Maréchal of Cassels Brock & Blackwell LLP and Tom Cumming of Gowling WLG (Canada) LLP. Bennett Jones LLP acted for Orphan Well Association with a team that included Kenneth Lenz, Q.C., and Michael Selnes. Alberta Energy Regulator was represented internally by Patricia Johnston, Q.C., and Keely Cameron. Blake, Cassels & Graydon LLP acted for Alberta Treasury Branches with a team that included Ryan Zahara and Chris Nyberg. e Minister of Justice and Solicitor General of Alberta was represented inter- nally by Lillian Riczu, Lisa Semenchuk and Vivienne Ball. e Attorney General of Canada was rep- resented internally by Bruce Hughson. Lawson Lundell LLP represented the Ca- nadian Association of Petroleum Producers with a team that included Lewis Manning. McMillan LLP represented the Canadian Association of Insolvency and Restructur- ing Professionals with a team that included Caireen Hanert and Adam Maerov. e Attorney General for Saskatchewan was represented internally by R. J. Fyfe. British Columbia (Natural Gas Develop- ment) and the British Columbia Oil and Gas Commission was represented inter- nally by A. Welch.

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