Ashland Oil, Inc. v. Corporation Commission

1979 OK 17, 595 P.2d 423, 63 Oil & Gas Rep. 331, 1979 Okla. LEXIS 181, 1979 WL 396340
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 6, 1979
Docket48786
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 1979 OK 17 (Ashland Oil, Inc. v. Corporation Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ashland Oil, Inc. v. Corporation Commission, 1979 OK 17, 595 P.2d 423, 63 Oil & Gas Rep. 331, 1979 Okla. LEXIS 181, 1979 WL 396340 (Okla. 1979).

Opinion

SIMMS, Justice:

Ashland Oil, appellant, seeks review of Corporation Commission Order No. 114104 which required Ashland to replug two abandoned wells, one of which was first plugged in 1946, the other in 1959.

The order was entered pursuant to proceedings initiated by an application for an enforcement order filed by the Manager of Pollution Abatement in the Conservation Division of the Commission.

Evidence adduced before a Trial Examiner for the Commission disclosed that Ash-land drilled two wells on adjoining tracts of land in Hughes County, Oklahoma. The first, Fream No. 1, was drilled to a depth of 3,306 feet in 1945 and brought in as a gas well. Surface casing on this well reached a depth of 130 feet. Fream No. 1 was plugged and abandoned in 1959.

The record shows that the second well, Fream No. 2, was drilled in 1946 to a depth of 3,100 feet, but was plugged as a dry hole in the same year. Surface casing of Fream No. 2 reached a depth of 88 feet. Testimony further indicated that a water well located no more than 330 feet from Fream No. 1 was over 200 feet deep. Ashland’s witnesses testified that no fresh water was encountered in either well bore.

Cecil Collis, the surface owner of the quarter section on which both wells were located, testified that in 1971, he noticed salt water issuing from the side of the mountain above his house, pond, and water well. Tests of the water in the pond and well evidenced the presence of chloride pollution.

The Commission determined that the surface casing put down in the wells under investigation was not sufficient to protect the domestic fresh water in the area. The Commission also found that the wells in question were the probable and most likely cause of ongoing salt water pollution in the vicinity of the Collis pond and water well. Consequently, the Commission ordered Ash-land to replug Fream Nos. 1 and 2 in such a way as to protect fresh water in the area. It is from this order that Ashland appeals.

Ashland urges on appeal that Minshall v. Corporation Commission, Okl., 485 P.2d 1058 (1971) controls. In Minshall, the Corporation Commission found that a well drilled, plugged, and abandoned by Minshall was leaking gas through and onto the ground. Apparently relying upon 52 O.S. Supp.1965, § 310 1 , the Commission ordered Minshall to replug the well.

On appeal, the Minshall court stated in its syllabus:

“Neither 17 O.S.1961, § 53, nor any of the provisions of Senate Bill No. 396 of the Thirtieth (1963) Oklahoma Legislature (Chapter 191 O.S.L.1965; 52 O.S.Supps. 1965-1969, §§ 309 through 317) imposes upon any one an obligation to replug, or repair, an abandoned well that has been plugged but is presently leaking salt water, oil, gas, or other deleterious substances.”

*425 Minshall, however, does not address the question of the Commission’s authority to require proper plugging of an improperly plugged well, nor the question of replugging an abandoned well when the well was not properly cased when drilled. At page 1061 of Minshall, we read:

“ * * * If the well has been plugged, the question of whether or not it was properly plugged in accordance with the then-effective rules and regulations is not involved.”

Additionally, as the Commission correctly points out, the Court in Minshall clearly limited its consideration to the application of 52 O.S.Supps.1965-1969, §§ 309-315 on the question of an operator’s responsibility and did not concern itself with amendments to that Act enacted subsequent to the order of the Commission or with any other existing statutes.

For purposes of the instant action it is important to note that the Court did not consider the impact of the 1970 Amendment to § 310 (Laws 1970, ch. 217, § 2) which provides:

(( ⅜ * %
(b) that the operator or any other person responsible for plugging, replugging or repairing the well in such manner as is necessary to prevent further pollution cannot be found, or is financially unable to pay the cost of performing such work.
* * * It

Without question, this provision supplies the explicit legislative imposition of the operator’s liability for “plugging, replugging or repairing” which was found missing at the time Minshall was decided. Consideration of this provision together with numerous other statutory declarations 2 leaves absolutely no room for doubt that the Corporation Commission has the statutory power to order an operator to replug wells which were improperly plugged.

The Commission is empowered by legislative enactment to adopt rules and regulations relative to the drilling of oil and gas wells as may be necessary to protect fresh water strata. Title 52, O.S.1971, §§ 243, 273. 3

Commission Rule 206(a) 4 was in effect at the time both Fream No. 1 and Fream No. 2 were drilled. The rule was introduced into evidence and is part of the record in these proceedings. It reads:

“Suitable and safe surface casing shall be used in all wells. In all wells drilled in areas where pressure and formations are unknown, sufficient surface casing shall be run to reach a depth below all domestic fresh water levels, and shall be of sufficient size to permit the use of an intermediate string of casing. Surface easing shall be set in or through an impervious formation, and shall be cemented by the pump and plug or displacement method with sufficient cement to circulate to the top of the hole.
“In wells drilled in areas where sub-surface conditions have been established by drilling experience, surface casing size at the operator’s option shall be set and cemented to the surface by the pump and plug or displacement method at a depth sufficient to protect all domestic fresh water.
“Cement shall be allowed to set a minimum of twelve (12) hours under pressure before drilling the plug.”

Then, in essence, 206(a) required that where pressure and formations were unknown, surface easing should be run to reach a depth below all domestic fresh water levels. On the other hand, where sub-surface con *426 ditions are known, surface casing must be run to a depth sufficient to protect all domestic fresh water.

The Commission maintains that the object of the appealed order is to remedy a violation of 206(a) which resulted in a threat to fresh water sources in the area. The Commission’s position is that by failing to set the surface casing through an impervious strata, Ashland failed to insure against the possibility of communication between oil or gas bearing formations and fresh water levels.

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Bluebook (online)
1979 OK 17, 595 P.2d 423, 63 Oil & Gas Rep. 331, 1979 Okla. LEXIS 181, 1979 WL 396340, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ashland-oil-inc-v-corporation-commission-okla-1979.