Ashland Oil, Inc. v. Phillips Petroleum Co.

463 F. Supp. 619, 62 Oil & Gas Rep. 483, 1978 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6977
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 28, 1978
Docket67-C-238
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 463 F. Supp. 619 (Ashland Oil, Inc. v. Phillips Petroleum Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. 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. Phillips Petroleum Co., 463 F. Supp. 619, 62 Oil & Gas Rep. 483, 1978 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6977 (N.D. Okla. 1978).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

BOHANON, District Judge.

Introduction

(See also Findings Nos. 1-13)

Plaintiff Ashland seeks compensation for helium contained in the natural gas stream *620 acquired from plaintiff by defendant Phillips, which was subsequently extracted and sold separately to the United States government. Originally tried in 1973, this case was remanded on appeal to retry controlling factual issues. In the first trial plaintiff and defendants’ legal theories and approaches were sufficiently divergent to prevent a joining of issues. Consequently, crucial factual considerations were never fully developed evidentially. At retrial the significant factual matters were developed more fully and thoughtfully than before. Thus, the court must be amenable to discarding earlier erroneous conclusions. The interests of justice, aptly perceived by the circuit court opinion in this case, require no less.

In adjudicating this controversy a second time, the court was assisted by the appellate court’s enunciation of certain controlling legal principles. The basic legal relationships among the landowners, producers and gas purchasers were established, notably including the lessee-producer’s right to the reasonable value of the contained helium. Northern Natural Gas Company v. Grounds, 441 F.2d 704 (10th Cir. 1971); Ashland Oil, Inc. v. Phillips Petroleum Company (hereafter Ashland v. Phillips), 554 F.2d 381 at 384 (10th Cir. 1975).

The prime responsibility of this court is to determine the reasonable value of the helium herein when commingled at the wellhead with other natural gas. Ashland v. Phillips, supra at 385-386. Such “value” is basically a factual matter to be ascertained through application of the appropriate legal doctrines. Ashland v. Phillips, supra at 385. Optimally, a product’s “fair market value” is determinable by examining comparable sales of the same product. Ashland v. Phillips, supra at 387. Significantly, some sales of commingled helium offered in evidence here were too remote in time, and otherwise incomparable, to be relied on solely.

The “Work-Back’’ Method

The next best approach is the “work-back” or “value less expense” method whereby a raw material’s value is extrapolated by using as a starting point an end product of that material whose value is certain. The costs of transforming the raw material from the stage where its value is unknown to that where its value is certain are subtracted from the starting value to reveal the value being sought.

“The work-back valuation is well recognized in the production and early processing of natural gas. . . . There is nothing unusual about the method, it is subject to proof, and can be just as accurate as any other method, but it is more difficult to apply.” Ashland v. Phillips, supra at 387.

Effective application of this method requires selection of an appropriate starting value in the form of a processing stage whose product possesses a value certain; accurate assessment of the costs accruing between the known stage and the one in question is also essential. In developing a resource from a raw material into a finished product, each production stage will add economic value to what was initially only the value of the raw material. The value added at each stage of production is essentially the cost of resources used in taking the material through that stage of production. The work-back method essentially establishes at each production stage the value of the product at that point. By subtracting out all production costs, the value of the raw material is revealed. 1 Appli *621 cation of this approach, however, can be difficult. Market structures vary at different production stages and correlating figures from one stage to the next can require abstruse analytical calculations, easily resulting in error. The selected starting point should be as close as possible to the. production stage in question. 2

With these theoretical considerations in mind, two potentially viable starting points emerge. One is helium in its crude form; the other is helium in its pure Grade A refined form, the starting point initially adopted by this court.

Refined Helium Market (See also Findings Nos. 14-18)

If one fact has clearly emerged at retrial, it is the inappropriateness of using refined helium prices as a starting value in extrapolating commingled helium’s value at the wellhead.

Possession of a production phase where the raw material has been processed to a point of possessing a value certain is crucial to the work-back method, whose efficacy is based on employing known data to extrapolate the unknown. Refined helium prices for the time period relevant to this case were not only distorted by monopolistic market conditions which prevented pure helium’s prices from reflecting the product’s “fair market value,” but even more significantly there was never any relationship whatsoever established between the commingled helium in this case and any refined helium market.

All of the commingled helium in this case was processed into crude helium and placed in underground storage by the government, where it remains today. None has been refined into Grade A helium. 3 It was acquired with conservational intent and for consumption at some undetermined future time. Any suggestion that the helium in this case could have been refined and subsequently sold at then prevailing market prices of $20 to $35 per Mcf is at variance with what the most persuasive evidence before this court demonstrates to be the truth. 4

*622 Refined helium prices during the period in question consistently were distorted by effects of a monopolistic seller’s market and never were determined by free and open competition. Government prices based on long-term policy considerations completely dominated the market in the initial years significant to this case, and were influential throughout the entire course of the pertinent time period. Introduction into the refined helium market of even a small percentage of the large helium quantities at issue here would have plummeted prices industry-wide, not only because any reasonable competition would have constituted an effective assault on the then prevailing artificially high price structure, but also due to the relatively inelastic helium demand at the time. Only a small number of end uses for refined helium exist, and those end uses can absorb only limited quantities of refined helium. 5

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463 F. Supp. 619, 62 Oil & Gas Rep. 483, 1978 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6977, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ashland-oil-inc-v-phillips-petroleum-co-oknd-1978.