Cities Service Gas Co. v. State Corporation Commission

416 P.2d 736, 197 Kan. 338, 25 Oil & Gas Rep. 646, 1966 Kan. LEXIS 389
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJuly 14, 1966
Docket44,526
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 416 P.2d 736 (Cities Service Gas Co. v. State Corporation Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cities Service Gas Co. v. State Corporation Commission, 416 P.2d 736, 197 Kan. 338, 25 Oil & Gas Rep. 646, 1966 Kan. LEXIS 389 (kan 1966).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Habman, C.:

Appellant Cities Service Gas Company brings for review here a judgment rendered by the district court of Anderson County, Kansas, on appellant’s petition for judicial review of orders of the state corporation commission pursuant to K. S. A. 55-606. Such orders grant to the Woodson Pipe Line and Producing Company permission to waterflood an oil and gas lease in Anderson County under the provisions of K. S. A. 55-133; 55-134; and 55-135 and pertinent rules and regulations of the commission.

The background of the controversy may be stated thus: The Woodson Pipe Line and Producing Company, hereinafter called Woodson, owns the right to produce oil from a formation called the Squirrel sand underlying certain land covered by what is known as the Buchanan lease. In 1936 Cities Service Gas Company, hereinafter called Cities, purchased from Woodson certain mineral rights to the Colony sand formation which is situated below the Squirrel sand under the Buchanan lease and other lands in the same vicinity. The two sand formations are physically separated from each other by a shale barrier. Cities has utilized the Colony sand as an underground storage reservoir for gas as a part of its integrated interstate gas pipe line system for the transportation of gas in interstate commerce. In 1936 at the time Cities acquired their initial gas storage rights from Woodson the two companies entered into an operating agreement concerning the operation of their respective interests and subsequent supplemental agreements have been made.

In 1960 Woodson filed its application with the commission for a permit to waterflood the Squirrel sand as a method of secondary oil recovery therefrom. Cities was notified by the commission of the application and it filed its objections thereto along with its petition to intervene in the proceedings. The petition to intervene was sus *340 tained. The objections were based primarily on Cities’ contention that Woodson’s proposed repressuring operations would cause a break or fracture in the shale formation separating Cities’ storage reservoir from the area of Woodson’s oil operations and thus permit an escape of their storage gas. Woodson filed its response to the objections and extensive hearings were had by the commission on the issues thus joined and eventually the commission made its formal order granting the waterflood permit with certain restrictions. The commission retained jurisdiction of the subject matter for the purpose of entering any further orders deemed necessary. At the same time the commission attached to its formal order, incorporating it therein by specific reference, what is designated as a memorandum opinion of the commission. Thereupon Cities sought a judicial review by the district court of Anderson County, Kansas, of the entire order, which attempted review action, for purported procedural defects, was dismissed by that court thereby becoming the subject of an appeal to this court. Suffice it to say for our purposes here, this court reversed the order of dismissal of the review action (Cities Service Gas Co. v. State Corporation Commission, 192 Kan. 707, 391 P. 2d 74). That review on the merits has now been had.

The district court, with certain refinements to be hereinafter more specifically mentioned, approved the commission’s order granting Woodson the waterflood permit and it also approved the memorandum opinion as a part of said order, and it is from this district court order of approval that this appeal is taken. Appellant Cities emphasizes it does not now contest the formal order granting the waterflood permit but it does challenge the commission’s authority or jurisdiction to consider and adjudicate certain purported issues raised in the proceedings before it as set forth in the memorandum opinion.

At the hearing before the commission evidence pro and con was produced as to the thickness of the shale barrier separating the two formations, the nature and structure of the barrier, its permeability, the likelihood of fracturing from the proposed waterflooding, and the possible direction — vertically or horizontally — of any such fracturing. Evidence was also introduced as to the history of the entire oil and gas operation on the lease, the presence at various times of non-native or storage gas in the Squirrel sand which had necessarily come from the Colony sand, possible avenues of communication between the two sand strata and possible reasons or explanations therefor. This all becomes meaningful when it is *341 realized that the two formations were, in the language of the commission, “initially separate common sources of supply and not in communication with each other” and that one possible explanation for the escape of the storage gas from the Colony to the Squirrel formation could be the prior operations of Woodson.

In its comprehensive memorandum opinion, which is really the target of this appeal, the commission first stated:

“6. The protestant herein, Cities Service, has actively opposed this application and during the seven days required to hear this matter it raised numerous issues which will be discussed below.”

We do not deem it necessary to set forth the lengthy memorandum but in it the commission then discussed the foregoing matters concerning which evidence was produced, and commented thereon. Simply stated, the commission heard Cities’ objections and decided they were insufficient to deny Woodson the waterflood permit.

At the review hearing Cities sought diligently to have the memorandum part of the order deleted. The district court considered this request at three hearings and finally declined to do so, but it did attempt to clarify the matter, its final conclusions of law thereon being as follows:

“Conclusions of Law
“3. In affirming the order and decision of the Commission this court need not incorporate as its own findings of fact those specific findings made by the Commission in its order. What facts were to be considered and the relative weight to be accorded them are matters properly left to the Commission s discretion. The question here is the power or authority of the Commission to make the order, not its wisdom, propriety or expediency in having made it.
“4. The district court’s responsibility is to determine whether the findings, order and decision of the Commission are lawful, reasonable and supported by substantial competent evidence. In so doing it considers the evidence solely for the purpose of determining whether such order is reasonable and lawful and only when the order of the Commission is found to be unlawful or unreasonable is the court authorized to vacate or set aside, in whole or in part, said order.
“5. The Commission, upon granting Cities’ application to intervene as an interested party, properly considered the issues raised by Cities’ objection to Woodson’s Application. Upon determining that the objections raised by Cities to the application of Woodson for permission to inject water under pressure for the purpose of recovering oil under the Buchanan lease were not valid reasons for denying the same, the objections were properly dismissed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
416 P.2d 736, 197 Kan. 338, 25 Oil & Gas Rep. 646, 1966 Kan. LEXIS 389, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cities-service-gas-co-v-state-corporation-commission-kan-1966.