Carter Oil Co. v. State

240 P.2d 787, 205 Okla. 541
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 17, 1951
Docket34122
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 240 P.2d 787 (Carter Oil Co. v. State) 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
Carter Oil Co. v. State, 240 P.2d 787, 205 Okla. 541 (Okla. 1951).

Opinion

O’NEAL, J.

This is an appeal from an order of the Corporation Commission of the State of Oklahoma, fixing the allowable production of oil from a ten-acre tract of land, and fixing the amount of percentage thereof to be taken by the Carter Oil Company, the holder of an oil and gas lease covering said ten-acre tract as to oil and gas produced below the 4,000 foot level below the surface, and Van-Grisso Oil Company, the holder of an oil and gas lease covering said tract as to the oil and gas to be produced from above the 4,000 foot level below the surface.

The Carter-Knox-Woods pool is a source of supply of oil and gas underlying several sections of land in township 3 north, range 5 west, Grady county. The productive portion of the formation is quite narrow horizontally, being approximately 600 to 700 feet wide running in a northwest and southeast direction. The productive portion of said formation is so situated within the section as to dip from the northeast to the southwest at an angle of approximately 60 degrees and is to a depth of approximately 4,000 feet, extending from several feet above said depth to several feet below that depth. The Carter Oil Company owned an oil and gas lease covering the ten-acre tract here involved, namely: The southwest quarter of the southeast quarter of the southeast quarter of section 6, township 3 north, range 5 west of the I. M. On May 26, 1938, it assigned said oil and gas' lease to T. H. McCasland “insofar as said lease covers producing horizon above the depth of 4,000 feet.” Later Van-Grisso Oil Company, Norman W. Brillhart and Glen S. Norville acquired a part of the interest of Mc-Casland. Under the lease as now owned the Carter Oil Company asserts the right to produce oil and gas in said formation below the depth of 4,000 feet and Van-Grisso Oil Company and associates assert the right to produce from above the depth of 4,000 feet.

In April, 1948, the Carter Oil Company drilled, and completed for production, a well on said tract about 80 feet west of the center of said tract. Thereafter, May 17, 1948, Van-Grisso Oil Company and associates filed an application with the Corporation Commission for permission to drill a well on said ten-acre tract, as an exception to the Commission’s rule 202, which, without such exception, prohibited the drilling of another well below the depth of 2,500 feet. The application stated the matter of divided lease ownership; the drilling of a well by the Carter Oil Company, and alleged refusal of the Carter Oil Company to recognize the right of applicant to share in the production of said well, and asserted that unless permission were granted to drill the additional well under an exception to rule 202 of the Commission, they would lose oil rightfully belonging to them.

The application was set for hearing June 11, 1948, before W. H. Sollers, trial examiner, at which time W. D. Grisso produced evidence in support of the application. At that hearing W. D. Grisso, representing the applicants, suggested that the matter of division of the allowable production as between the two wells be deferred until after the Van-Grisso well had been drilled so that the capacities of the respective wells could be ascertained and more exact information as to the producing formation might be made known. The Carter Oil Company requested that a temporary division of allowable be fixed prior to the drilling of the Van-Gris-so well to be effective upon completion of such well and pending final hearing on the question of division of the allowable production.

*544 Van-Grisso and Republic Natural Gas Company owned a lease on the ten-acre tract directly south of the Carter - Van-Grisso ten-acre tract. They had drilled a well on the south ten-acre tract and filed a consent and waiver as to the drilling of the second well on the Carter-Van-Grisso ten-acre tract. After said hearing, and based thereon, the report of the trial examiner recommended, and the order of the Corporation Commission granted, permission to Van-Grisso to drill the additional well, and fixed temporary division of the normal per well allowable of 200 barrels per day at 50% to each well in the event the Van-Grisso well be completed as a producer. This order was dated June 22, 1948. On or about October 22, 1948, Van-Grisso commenced the drilling of their well and completed it as a producer on November 23, 1948. On November 30, 1948, Van-Grisso and associates filed'an application for an order by the Commission fixing a percentage division of the allowable of the two wells. Hearing was had on this application January 5, 1949, resulting in findings of fact and an order: ... (2) That the allowable from said tract be fixed at the allowable production for other tracts in a common source of supply, or the capacity of the larger well on the tract, whichever is the smaller; (3) that the Conservation Department make quarterly tests of the capacity of the two wells to produce, for the purpose of fixing the allowable production from said tract; (4) that each of the two wells be allowed to produce 50 per cent of the allowable from the tract as of June 22, 1948, and that all oil produced from said tract subsequent to that date be divided equally between the owners of the two wells located on said tract;

“(5) That the production from the Carter Oil Company’s well should be hereafter limited to 10 barrels of oil per day, and the applicants herein should be permitted to produce the remainder of the allowable from said tract from their well until such time as the amount of oil produced from said tract subsequent to June 22nd, 1948 has been produced equally by both parties, and that when such production has been equalized, then the parties should be permitted to produce from said common ■ source of supply underlying said tract of land, equal amounts of the allowable production herefrom.”

And:

“(6) That in the event either of said wells are not capable of producing its share of the oil allowed to be produced from said tract, then the other wells (sic) should be permitted to produce only such percentage of its share of the allowable production.”

The Carter Oil Company appeals from said findings and order.

The first contention of the Carter Oil Company is that the retroactive provision of the order of the Corporation Commission, making the division of the allowable production of the two wells effective prior to the completion of the second (Van-Grisso) well, is contrary to the applicable law and to the evidence presented in the matter.

The uncontradicted evidence is that the Carter Oil Company completed its well in April, 1948, in the Woods sand formation below a depth of 4,000 feet. The trial examiner found that the Carter Oil Company has drilled a well for oil and gas on said ten-acre tract of land to the Dornick-Hills-Woods sand to a depth of about 4,200 feet, and set their casing at a depth of 4,005 feet below the surface, and are producing oil from said well at a depth of 4,005 feet; that the Dornick-Hills-Woods sand was encountered at a depth of 3,986 feet.

As above stated, the Corporation Commission approved said finding and entered an order permitting Van-Grisso and associates to drill a well on said ten-acre tract to a depth of 4,000 feet for the purpose of producing oil that may be recovered above said depth which belongs to them; that the allowable for wells in that area is 200 barrels per day, and if the well to be drilled by applicants (Van-Grisso and

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Bluebook (online)
240 P.2d 787, 205 Okla. 541, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carter-oil-co-v-state-okla-1951.