Brooks Gas Corp. v. Federal Power Commission

383 F.2d 503, 71 P.U.R.3d 321
CourtDistrict Court, District of Columbia
DecidedAugust 1, 1967
DocketNo. 20430
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 383 F.2d 503 (Brooks Gas Corp. v. Federal Power Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, District of Columbia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brooks Gas Corp. v. Federal Power Commission, 383 F.2d 503, 71 P.U.R.3d 321 (D.D.C. 1967).

Opinion

TAMM, Circuit Judge:

I

Petitioner Brooks Gas Corporation (hereinafter Brooks Gas) operates, under a producer certificate, facilities which gather natural gas from 13 wells in the Eldorado gas field in Schleicher County, Texas. Petitioner transports this gas in its own pipeline to an interconnection with the Brooks Pipeline Company (hereinafter Brooks Pipeline) approximately 11 miles to the north of the Eldorado field; from which point, Brooks Pipeline transports the gas approximately 18 miles to the Mertzon processing plant. Brooks Pipeline is a wholly owned subsidiary of Brooks Gas. Brooks Gas also owns a 72 per cent interest in the Mertzon processing plant. Hydrocarbons are extracted from the natural gas at the Mertzon plant, and the residue gas is delivered to Northern Gas Pipeline Company (hereinafter Northern Pipeline) at the tailgate of the Mertzon plant. The pipeline operated by Brooks Pipeline operates under a certificate granted by the Federal Power Commission (hereinafter the Commission), which classified the facility a “pipeline” (32 F.P.C. 563 (1964)). This certificate allows Brooks Pipeline to transport up to 20.000 Mcf of gas per day. The present level being carried is only 14,000 Mcf, however, and petitioner claims that the 6.000 Mcf of unused capacity is available for use by intervenor Sinclair Oil and Gas Company (hereinafter Sinclair) to transport gas from wells being developed by Sinclair to the Mertzon processing plant of Brooks Gas. Rather than using these facilities of Brooks Gas and Brooks Pipeline, Sinclair, under temporary authority granted by the Commission, built a gathering network to connect its wells in the Eldorado field and connected this to its own processing plant by an 11 mile pipeline.

Petitioner now appeals from the grant of this authority to Sinclair by the Commission. Petitioner claims that the grant of temporary authorization was in violation of section 7(c) of the Natural Gas Act1 and the Commission’s regulations. We do not agree, and we affirm the Commission’s grant of temporary authority.

[505]*505II

On November 15, 1965, Sinclair filed an application with the Commission for a certificate of convenience and necessity under section 7(c) of the Act and sections 157.23-28 of the Commission’s regulations 2 on behalf of itself and Skelly Oil Company to sell additional gas to Northern Pipeline and Northern Natural Gas Company (hereinafter Northern Gas) at the tailgate of Sinclair’s Eldorado processing plant, which is owned 50 per cent by Sinclair and 50 per cent by Skelly Oil Company. Northern Pipeline would carry the additional gas to the pipeline owned by Northern Gas, which would transport it to the ultimate consumers in the middle west. Northern Pipeline is a subsidiary of Northern Gas. Sinclair’s Eldorado plant has been in operation for 10 years, and the sale of gas in the past to Northern Gas by Sinclair was under Commission gas rate schedule No. 90. Such sale was certified a producer sale in Commission Docket No. G-11414. Sinclair entered into the new contract for which it now seeks a certificate with Northern Pipeline and Northern Gas and committed additional reserves and future production for 20 years from fields in a seven-county area surrounding its Eldorado plant. Included in this contract was gas to be produced by Sinclair and Skelly Oil Company in the Eldorado field. This contract had escalation clauses calling eventually for delivery of 40,000 Mcf of gas to Northern Pipeline. Only the facilities to transport the raw gas produced from the 11 wells in the Eldorado field to the Eldorado processing plant owned by Sinclair are at issue in this case.

The proposed sale of gas by Sinclair from the Eldorado field required the construction of a gathering system to a centrally located point in the field and an 11 mile pipeline from this point to the processing plant. The construction of this [506]*506latter line, which was done at a cost of approximately $250,000, is the subject of the present suit, which alleges an unauthorized grant by the Commission and duplication of facilities. Sinclair-would, as previously indicated, transport the gas 11 miles to its processing plant and then deliver it to Northern Pipeline. If Brooks Gas and Brooks Pipeline transported this additional gas, it would travel 29 miles before being processed; however, because the ultimate purchaser Northern Gas would be the same from either routing and the transmission line of Northern Gas runs in a northwesterly direction, when the gas is delivered by the Mertzon plant it is closer to the consumer than when delivered from the Eldorado plant because the Eldorado connection is 34 miles upstream in the transmission line from the Mertzon plant connection.

On November 30, 1965, the Commission issued public notice of Sinclair’s application. On December 22, 1965, Brooks Gas filed a petition to intervene, alleging that the Sinclair line from its central gathering point in the Eldorado field to Sinclair’s processing plant duplicated the Brooks Gas facilities.

Because of the delay which would be caused by the intervention of Brooks Gas, Sinclair, by letter to the Commission dated March 18, 1966, requested temporary authorization (pursuant to section 157.28, reproduced in footnote 2, supra) to commence the sale of the residue gas to Northern Gas pursuant to its pending application.

Brooks Gas, by letter dated March 28, 1966, opposed Sinclair’s request for temporary authorization to the extent that gas would be produced in what Brooks Gas denominated as the “Velrex-Eldorado Field.” The use of this name — not accurately descriptive of any field — resulted in confusion on the part of the Commission. Sinclair, on May 19, 1966, indicated, to further support its request for temporary authorization, that it was suffering drainage by Brooks Gas wells, threatened loss of leases, and economic hardship resulting from the payment of shut-in royalties, because of the lack of authority to transport and sell the gas from wells it owned or operated in the Eldorado field. On the same day, the Commission issued a temporary authorization permitting Sinclair to sell gas to Northern Gas but included ambiguous language that such authorization related to production from fields other than the “Velrex-Eldorado Field.” On May 25, 1966, Sinclair requested that the Commission review its action to clear up the ambiguity, reiterating that there was no field named “Velrex-Eldorado” and emphasizing that it was suffering drainage and economic hardship from the payment of shut-in royalties.

On June 6,1966, Brooks Gas responded to Sinclair’s renewed request. On June 17, 1966, the Commission amended the temporary .authorization by granting to Sinclair the temporary authority to sell residue gas produced in the Eldorado field as proposed in its application. The Commission stated:

Based upon the information contained in the statement filed May 25, 1966, in Docket No. CI66-410 and the response thereto of Brooks Gas Corporation dated June 6, 1966, the temporary certificate issued May 19, 1966, in Docket No. CI66-140 is hereby amended by deleting therefrom the second paragraph thereof and substituting therefor the following:
For the reasons set forth in the separate order issued this day, a hearing on the application is required to consider inter alia the contentions made by the intervener, Brooks Gas Corporation.

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383 F.2d 503, 71 P.U.R.3d 321, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brooks-gas-corp-v-federal-power-commission-dcd-1967.