Choctaw Gas Company v. Corporation Commission

1956 OK 110, 295 P.2d 800, 5 Oil & Gas Rep. 1226, 13 P.U.R.3d 424, 1956 Okla. LEXIS 426
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 27, 1956
Docket36637
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 1956 OK 110 (Choctaw Gas Company 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
Choctaw Gas Company v. Corporation Commission, 1956 OK 110, 295 P.2d 800, 5 Oil & Gas Rep. 1226, 13 P.U.R.3d 424, 1956 Okla. LEXIS 426 (Okla. 1956).

Opinion

BLACKBIRD, Justice.

This appeal involves an order of the Corporation Commission with reference to pro-ration of gas from the Carney area of the Quinton Gas Field. As far as concerns our consideration of the issues herein, all gas from this common reservoir is produced by five wells belonging to Choctaw Gas Company, and almost sixty belonging to Oklahoma Natural Gas Company. The principal adversary parties will be hereinafter referred to as “Choctaw” and “Natural”, respectively, while the Corporation Commission and the Gas Service Corporation, the other parties hereto, will be referred to merely as the “Commission” and.“Service Corporation”, respectively.

For more than the first fifteen years of production from the common source of gas supply referred to as the Carney area or field, no order of the Commission regulating said production was enforced. Thereafter, on October 21, 1947, the Commission, in its Cause CD No. 1729, entered its Order No. 20539, establishing a proration schedule and allocation formula for such production. Among other things, this order provided that each well in said reservoir should have allocated to it, a ratable proportion of the total amount of gas taken from the reservoir monthly, according to a prescribed allocation formula. The total amount of gas to be produced from said reservoir in any given month was to be determined by applying the allocation formula to the market demand for gas from said field for that month, which market demand, is determined by the Commission on the basis of so-called “nominations” by the producers in said field. These “nominations” are merely declarations by each producer showing ⅛⅞ volume of gas it needs to produce through its wells in order to supply its market.

Order No. 20539 recognized that in the course of its operation some of the wells would produce more and some less than their allowable under said method of fixing allowables. This was referred to in the order as overproduction and/or “overage” and underproduction or “underage.” It was contemplated therein that either or both Choctaw’s and Natural’s market for gas might call for a greater volume of gas'tham *803 the aggregate allowable of their wells under said order; and, sec. 7 thereof allowed any well to accumulate overage and underage equal to its largest current monthly allowable during the 12 months period immediately previous thereto. It was further therein provided, however, that when any well exceeded such overage, it should be immediately shut in by the operator, unless given permission by the Commission’s Conservation Director to accumulate an overage of twice that amount. Said section further provided:

“If at any time after the effective date of this order any producer in the field shall file with the Director of Conservation a statement in writing that it as a purchaser is unable to purchase its market demand for gas in this field, because of the operations of the foregoing provisions of Section 7 of this order or if it as a producer is unable to produce or purchase the necessary amount of gas to supply the market demand of its purchaser of gas from this field, then the Director of Conservation may direct that all overages and underages in this field be held in abeyance for a period of not to exceed six months before the expiration of which period the Director of Conservation shall serve notice on all parties concerned, directing them to appear before the Commission and show cause why the Commission should not cancel overages or underages in such manner that the market demand for gas may be supplied from the field, or direct such other action that may be necessary for supplying the market demand in this field.”

Thereafter a situation, such as contemplated in the above-quoted section, arose, when Choctaw’s wells became materially overproduced and it could not, without continuing to overproduce its wells, supply its market demand under a contract it had to furnish Service Company gas. Upon becoming apprised of this situation, the Commission’s Conservation Director directed that all overages and underages in the field be held in abeyance, and took the steps prescribed by sec. 7, supra, including the filing of an application, dated April 2, 1948, to obtain a hearing and a determination by the Commission as to whether the overproduced wells should be shut in until their overproduction could be made up, or whether such overage should be cancelled to enable Choctaw to supply its market demand, or whether some further action should be taken to supply said demand. Appropriate appearances were made by both Natural and Choctaw and the latter filed a response to the Conservation Director’s application alleging, among other things, that its wells’ overages were due to Natural’s decreasing its nominations for “takes” from the field, that Natural was in a position to supply it with sufficient gas, at a reasonable price, to meet its market demand, and that the Commission should order .Natural to sell it gas accordingly, and that, if Natural failed to do so, proration of the field should be terminated. After an extended hearing, the Commission, on September 14, 1948, entered its order No. 21546, requiring Natural to permit Choctaw to connect its line to Natural’s line near a certain well, and then sell Choctaw sufficient gas to supply its needs, at 4½$⅜ per MCF. In Oklahoma Natural Gas Co. v. Choctaw Gas Co., 205 Okl. 255, 236 P.2d 970, 972, this court reversed Order No. 21546, and held that such attempted forcing of Natural to sell its gas to Choctaw was “beyond the Commission’s power as taking one company’s property to give to the other.” (For a more detailed statement of the factual background of this controversy, see the cited opinion). The proceedings, out of which the present appeal has arisen, were in the nature of a new trial had before the Commission after the mandate of the cited opinion was spread of record there. On the theory that our general reversal of said order, and its vacation by the Commission, left undetermined the issues raised and joined by the parties’ pleadings and the Conservation Director’s application previously filed in Cause CD 1729, on April 2, 1948, as aforesaid, Natural thereupon filed a motion in said cause praying the Commission to enter a new order therein which would direct Choctaw’s wells to be shut in until said 'company had conformed with the Commission’s pre- *804 vidus orders] or that the Commission “make such order * , as may otherwise be just and .proper.”./

Thereafter Choctaw filed a ’supplement to its. original response to the Conservation Director’s application, and, in this new pleading alleged in substance, among other things, that as long as the-system of pro-ration in said field prescribed by Order No. 20539, was in forcé and effect Natural could, by continuing its low nominations for’ gas “'takes” from the field, keep the field’s allowable low, which in turn would compel Choctaw to keep overproducing its well9 in order to supply its continued market demand. Chbctaw 'further alleged that by thus being able to control the monthly1 allowable which the Commission fixed for the field, Natural, had the power, within-itself, to prorate the' field. On the basis of these allegations, and others, including the further one'that Natural could not be prevented from exercising such power over the field’s proration as long as Order No.- 20539 remained in effect, • Choctaw prayed that said order be vacated and set aside.

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Bluebook (online)
1956 OK 110, 295 P.2d 800, 5 Oil & Gas Rep. 1226, 13 P.U.R.3d 424, 1956 Okla. LEXIS 426, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/choctaw-gas-company-v-corporation-commission-okla-1956.