Columbian Fuel Corp. v. Panhandle Eastern Pipe Line Co.

271 P.2d 773, 176 Kan. 433, 3 Oil & Gas Rep. 1667, 5 P.U.R.3d 386, 1954 Kan. LEXIS 322
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJune 12, 1954
Docket39,334
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 271 P.2d 773 (Columbian Fuel Corp. v. Panhandle Eastern Pipe Line Co.) 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
Columbian Fuel Corp. v. Panhandle Eastern Pipe Line Co., 271 P.2d 773, 176 Kan. 433, 3 Oil & Gas Rep. 1667, 5 P.U.R.3d 386, 1954 Kan. LEXIS 322 (kan 1954).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Wedell, J.:

The plaintiff, Columbian Fuel Corporation, a producer of natural gas in the Kansas portion of the Hugoton gas field, sought recovery of a money judgment from the defendant, Panhandle Eastern Pipe Line Company, a corporation, a purchaser of gas.

The action has not been tried. The district court conducted a pretrial conference pursuant to G. S. 1949, 60-2705 and 60-2902 in order to determine questions of law based on issues joined by the pleadings, which included numerous exhibits, and stipulations of fact.

The second amended petition comprised four causes of action. The parties had executed two contracts for the sale and purchase of gas, one in 1937 and the other in 1946. The first two causes of action involved those contracts and the impact thereon by orders of the Kansas Corporation Commission. The general nature of those two causes of action is the same. Both involve the same principal question, namely, whether plaintiff is entitled to receive payment from defendant for the cost of gathering the gas from plaintiff’s wells in the field and for its delivery to defendant’s pipe, line at a point designated in the contracts. Plaintiff claimed one cent per thousand cubic feet (MFC) of gas was a fair and reasonable price for the cost of gathering and delivering the gas. It also claimed interest thereon at the rate of six percent per annum from the respective monthly dates on which payment for the sale of gas was due under the contracts. Plaintiff alleged such interest should be paid from March 1, 1949, the effective date of the commission’s interim order dated February 18, 1949, under which the value of gas was fixed at a minimum of not less than eight cents at the wellhead, contrary to the price designated in the contracts. Defendant contended plaintiff was not entitled to recover anything under either of those two causes of action. The court ruled in favor of plaintiff on each of them, except as to the interest claimed.

In the third and fourth causes of action plaintiff sought recovery of interest on sums of money claimed, which sums were the difference between the price, under the two contracts, and the increased *435 price fixed by the interim order of the commission. Payment of the increased amounts were withheld by permission of the commission pursuant to defendant’s filing a bond which the commission approved. On those two causes of action the court concluded defendant should prevail.

Each party has appealed from portions of the judgment adverse to it.

In order to avoid confusion and in the interest of brevity we shall refer to plaintiff as the seller and to defendant as {he buyer. Those terms harmonize with the terms employed in the contracts to which we shall later refer. We shall continue to refer to the Kansas Corporation Commission as the commission.

The pleadings, admissions and the exhibits are voluminous. We shall presently refer only to portions thereof which are of general importance and shall later refer, where necessary, to other provisions relied upon by the parties. .

The 1937 contract fixed the price at four cents per MCF of gas. It stated the point at which the seller was to deliver the gas into the buyer’s fine, where the buyer was required to install a meter at its expense. That point was the northeast corner of section twenty-four (24), township twenty-nine (29), range thirty-six (36), Grant county. It required the seller, at its own cost and expense, to lay and maintain the necessary gathering lines in the field and also the delivery line to the meter. It provided the point of delivery into the buyer’s line should be the point at which the gas was to be sold and delivered. It also provided:

“This contract is expressly made subject to present and future valid statutes, orders, rules, and regulations of duly constituted authorities having jurisdiction over either or both Seller and Buyer . . .”

The 1946 contract fixed the price at five cents per MCF. In all other respects it contained the same material provisions as those found in the 1937 contract.

The commission’s basic proration order for the Hugoton gas field promulgated under date of March 21, 1944, contained the following provision:

“i. That the producers in the field have been required, by custom, to lay gathering lines from their wells to the pipe lines of the purchasers. A lease is, therefore, undeveloped until a gas-producing well has been completed thereon and the owner or operator thereof has tendered gas to a purchaser at the purchaser’s pipe line. Before a well is entitled to an allowable, the *436 owner or operator thereof should either tender the gas for sale at the prevailing price being paid in the field to a pipeline company or others who are purchasing in the field in which such a well is located, or demonstrate that he will and can produce the gas allowed such a well for lawful purposes.”

On February 18,1949, the commission, upon application of certain royalty owners in the Hugoton gas field, and others, made an interim order in which it fixed the value of gas at the wellhead in that field. The instant buyer, together with others, intervened. That hearing was given Docket No. 35,154-C (C-1868). In the course of the hearing the commission concluded the proceeding did not ■ fully explore all the factors which the commission deemed necessary to consider in arriving at a final determination.as to the value of gas at the wellhead in such field or as to what minimum wellhead price should be fixed for the sale of natural gas. It, therefore, entered an order instituting a further investigation under Docket No. C-164. It did, however, conclude that under the undisputed evidence adduced it was established that in order to give effect to all the intents and purposes of the statutes relating to production and conservation of natural gas it was necessary and appropriate to determine, pending completion of the investigation, what the fair and reasonable value of natural gas at the wellhead was in the Hugoton field. It, therefore, ordered:

“1. No person, firm or corporation taking gas from the Hugoton Field shall take or cause such gas to be taken out of the producing structures or formations thereof without attributing thereto for purposes of payment to the producers, landowners, leaseowners and royalty owners a fair and reasonable value at the wellhead of not less than eight cents per thousand cubic feet.”

The foregoing order was made effective from and after March 1, 1949, and until further order. The commission stated its determination of the value of gas might be modified as a result of further investigation. It, however, provided that pending completion of its investigation payment of fire difference between the contract price of gas and that presently fixed by the commission should be made as follows:

“(a) Make actual payments of such differences at the usual time payments are made to the producers, leaseholders, landowners and royalty owners entitled thereto, or
“(b)

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Bluebook (online)
271 P.2d 773, 176 Kan. 433, 3 Oil & Gas Rep. 1667, 5 P.U.R.3d 386, 1954 Kan. LEXIS 322, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/columbian-fuel-corp-v-panhandle-eastern-pipe-line-co-kan-1954.