Braly v. BOARD OF FIRE COMMISSIONERS OF CITY OF LOS ANGELES

321 P.2d 504, 157 Cal. App. 2d 608, 8 Oil & Gas Rep. 849, 1958 Cal. App. LEXIS 2282
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 17, 1958
DocketCiv. 22457
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 321 P.2d 504 (Braly v. BOARD OF FIRE COMMISSIONERS OF CITY OF LOS ANGELES) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Braly v. BOARD OF FIRE COMMISSIONERS OF CITY OF LOS ANGELES, 321 P.2d 504, 157 Cal. App. 2d 608, 8 Oil & Gas Rep. 849, 1958 Cal. App. LEXIS 2282 (Cal. Ct. App. 1958).

Opinion

PATROSSO, J. pro tem. *

This is an appeal from a judg ment ordering the issuance of a writ of mandate directing the defendant Board of Fire Commissioners of the City of Los *610 Angeles to issue a permit for the drilling of an oil well upon property of the petitioners.

There is no dispute as to the facts. Petitioners Riehley are the owners of a parcel of real property situate in the Wilmington oil field in the city of Los Angeles subject to an oil and gas lease executed by them to their copetitioners. The subject property is bounded on the north, east and west by public streets and on the south by a parcel of property owned by the city of Los Angeles. The area of petitioners’ property is 25,762.6 square feet or approximately 59/100 of an acre. In addition the Richleys also own the underlying fee to one-half of the adjacent streets totaling 17,898.6 square feet or a total, including one-half of the adjacent streets, of 43,661.2 square feet or slightly in excess of one acre. To the north, northwest and east of the petitioners’ property, but separated therefrom by intervening streets, there are located five wells producing oil, gas and other hydrocarbons from the same geological oil structure as that underlying the land of the petitioners, and three of which wells are admittedly draining oil and gas and other hydrocarbons from beneath petitioners’ property.

Petitioners filed with the defendant board of fire commissioners an application for a permit to drill, maintain and operate an oil well upon their property at a proposed location thereon approximately 65.76 feet from the sidewalk portion of an adjacent public street, and 74 feet from the actual roadway portion thereof. This application, although otherwise in the form prescribed, was" denied by the board for the stated reasons that (1) petitioners’ land contained less than one acre of contiguous land exclusive of abutting or adjoining streets, alleys or sidewalks, and (2) the site of the proposed well was only 74 feet from an adjacent street contrary to various provisions of the Municipal Code of the City of Los Angeles. These, insofar as material, provide in part as follows :

Section 57.55 (B) (1). “No oil well shall be drilled within 75 feet of any public street or highway, or within 50 feet of the outer boundary of any operating unit. ...”
Section 57.55 (E). “Every operating unit shall consist of at least one net acre of contiguous land. Parcels of land interrupted by or intersected by a public street shall not be deemed to be contiguous parcels of land; ...”
Section 57.55 (0). “. . . no permit shall be issued by any board . . . authorizing the drilling ... of any oil well . . . unless the applicant . . . has available for a drilling site at least one net acre of contiguous ground. . . .
*611 “In computing the area of an acre drilling site, no part of the acre falling within any abutting or adjoining street, alley or sidewalk shall be included; ...”
Section 57.55 (P). “No permit authorizing the drilling for oil, or the location or construction of any derrick to be used for the purpose of drilling for oil or other hydrocarbon substances, shall be issued if the granting of such permit would cause a parcel of property of less than one (1) acre contiguous to the property involved in the application for permit to be isolated so that such isolated property could not join with other contiguous property and become part of a drilling site of at least one (1) acre of ground, except upon condition that the permittee, his successors and assigns pay in money or kind to the owner of such isolated parcel a share of that proportion of all oil, gas or other hydrocarbon substances produced and saved from the well that the area of such isolated parcel bears to the whole area of the property described in the application, plus such isolated parcel; ...”

Petitioners’ property is so situate that it is impossible to drill a well thereon at a point distant 75 feet from any public street and which is also 50 feet or more from its outer boundary. It is petitioners’’ contention, sustained by the trial court, that, under the circumstances and as applied to petitioners, the provisions of the municipal code hereinabove referred to, insofar as they prohibit the drilling of an oil well upon their property, are unconstitutional, and constitute the taking of property without due process. The correctness of this determination is the sole question presented upon this appeal.

A similar question was presented in Bernstein v. Bush (1947), 29 Cal.2d 773 [177 P.2d 913]. There the Supreme Court had occasion to consider the constitutionality of section 3600 of the Public Resources Code, declaring any well to be a public nuisance thereafter drilled for oil or gas which was located within 100 feet of the outer boundary of the parcel of land (which might comprise several contiguous parcels operated as one lease) on which the well was situated, or within 100 feet of a public street or highway dedicated prior to the commencement of drilling, or within 150 feet of a well being drilled or theretofore drilled and which was producing or capable of producing oil or gas. There the petitioners owned drilling rights on six small isolated and noncontiguous parcels of land each containing less than an acre, but altogether aggregating an acre or more. Bach parcel was surrounded *612 by land owned by others and the oil beneath petitioners’ land was being drained off by neighboring wells. Petitioners’ application for a permit to drill was denied for the reason that, although the parcels involved in the lease comprised an acre or more, they were noncontiguous and a well drilled on any one of them would constitute a public nuisance within the meaning of section 3600. In holding that the statute as applied to the petitioners was unconstitutional, the court said:

“Here then we are more directly concerned with the contention of the petitioners that in its application to them the statute is discriminatory and therefore unconstitutional. They assert that such discrimination results from the fact that the enforcement of the regulations permits some owners of lands overlying the oil basin to exercise and enjoy their property right to take oil from the field, while the petitioners, who are property owners overlying the same oil supply, are deprived of the use and enjoyment of their coequal right. The mere assertion of the problem suggests the answer.

“ Under the law of this state the landowner has a property right in oil and gas beneath the surface, not in the nature of an absolute title to the oil and gas in place, but as an exclusive right to drill upon his property for these substances. His unqualified and absolute title attaches after the substances have been reduced to possession. (Tanner v. Title Ins. & Trust Co., 20 Cal.2d 814, 819 [129 P.2d 383] ; Bandini Petroleum Co. v. Superior Court, supra, 110 Cal.App. 123, 127 [293 P.

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Bluebook (online)
321 P.2d 504, 157 Cal. App. 2d 608, 8 Oil & Gas Rep. 849, 1958 Cal. App. LEXIS 2282, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/braly-v-board-of-fire-commissioners-of-city-of-los-angeles-calctapp-1958.