Corporation Commission v. Phillips Petroleum Co.

1975 OK 11, 536 P.2d 1284
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 28, 1975
Docket46473
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 1975 OK 11 (Corporation Commission v. Phillips Petroleum Co.) 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
Corporation Commission v. Phillips Petroleum Co., 1975 OK 11, 536 P.2d 1284 (Okla. 1975).

Opinion

LAVENDER, Justice:

In 1965, upon application of Phillips Petroleum Co., the Corporation Commission entered Order No. 58465. That order was not appealed and became final. Its effect was to establish the entire Morrow formation in the South Guymon Area as a common source of supply. That order provided for 640 acre spacing. It approved field rules including a formula as to production allowables. The controlling element in that formula was the individual well’s pressure cubed (raised to the third power).

Prior to the 1965 order, No. 58465, and in 1960 the Commission by Order No. 41483 originally spaced a portion of this South Guymon area as the Morrow formation. Later that year the area was extended. In May, 1963, Order No. 51679 established two separate common sources of supply, an Upper Morrow and a Lower Morrow, for part of this area. The 1965 order removed this two source of supply determination.

Subsequent to the 1965 order, two other attempts were made to delete parts of the area from that order’s purview. In February, 1966, upon the application of Yingling, the Commission modified its 1965 order so as to again separate the Upper Morrow and the Lower Morrow as separate sources of supply by some 12 sections in the northern portion of the area. On appeal, this court vacated that order. Phillips Petroleum Co. v. Corporation Commission, Okl., 461 P.2d 597 (1969). That same year, 1966, upon application of CRA (now Terra Resources, Inc., applicant on order now on appeal, and appellee) the Commission by Order No. 62317 allowed two sections containing two wells, the Van Tine and the Kaser, to be removed from operations of the 1965 order. That order likewise separated the Upper and Lower Morrow. On appeal, this court vacated that order. Phillips Petroleum Co. v. Corporation Commission, Okl., 482 P.2d 607 (1971). As to both appeals, this court determined there was not substantial evidence to sustain a finding of substantial change of conditions or substantial change in knowledge of conditions existing in the area since the prior 1965 order was entered.

The present application by Terra Resources, Inc. (Terra) (same as CRA) seeks to delete some five wells or sections (possibly six) from the purview of the 1965 order No. 58465. The application includes the same area as the prior CRA application and involves the Van Tine and Kaser wells. This again is based on the establishment of two common sources of supply; (1) the Upper Morrow, consisting of the Morrow “A” and Morrow “C” and (2) the Lower Morrow. Terra argues the presenting of new knowledge of condition allowing the determination of two common sources of supply. Its proof is bottomed on a series of maps drawn by a computer program. The raw data consists primarily of annual readings of well pressure of *1287 over 70 wells in the area for the years 1966, 1968, and 1970. The maps for the early year hints at the Upper Morrow (“A” and “C”) as a separate common source of supply. Maps for the later years definitely confirm that indication. During some of these years, while the 1966 Order No. 62317 was on appeal and not superseded, the Van Tine and Kaser wells were allowed by that order to produce without the allowable restrictions under the field orders as found in the 1965 order.

Both wells greatly overproduced their al-lowables as determined by that 1965 order. Despite this heavy production from the Upper Morrow, the pressure of the wells producing from the Morrow “A” and “C” remained higher and without as much drop as compared with those producing from the rest of the area and generally from the Lower Morrow. Terra contends this production history and new data, not in existence and not available in 1965, establishes a substantial change in knowledge of conditions existing in the area to support a modification of the 1965 order to establish two common sources of supply and allow the deleting of the Upper Morrow from the effect of the 1965 order.

The opponents to the application argue the pressure reduction was predictable and therefore available at the hearings resulting in the 1965 order. They contend the computer maps only confirm the geological evidence before the Commission upon which the 1965 order is based. They believe there has been no acquisition of additional or new data upon which to base a modification or change of the 1965 order.

The Commission in its Order No. 96408, dated March 9, 1973, refused to delete the Upper Morrow from its determination of one common source of supply as the “Morrow Formation.” This retained the allowable formula found in the field rules as to all wells. The order did grant a retroactive adjusting allowable equal to the amount of accumulated over-production as calculated by the field rules for Terra’s Van Tine well and Phillips’ Kaser well. It also permitted the Phillips Princess well to produce 25% of its open flow potential for four years as an exception to the field rules. The opponents to Terra’s application, Phillips Petroleum Company (operator of approximately 60 wells or some %rds of the wells in the area), Skelly Oil Company, Cities Service Oil Company, and Panhandle Eastern Pipeline Company (appellants) appealed as to that part of the order allowing the retroactive adjusting al-lowables. Terra (appellee) appealed that part of the order refusing to delete the requested sections and Upper Morrow formation from the purview of the 1965 order, No. 58465.

In its March 9, 1973, order, No. 96408, here appealed the Commission made certain findings:

(1) Its 1965 order, No. 58465, as to reclassifying of the Morrow to one common source of supply, was “based upon a finding of the Commission that although the Upper Morrow and the Lower Morrow formations were geologically separate sources of supply initially, they had, for all practical purposes, become one common source of supply by reason of a commingling of the Upper and Lower Morrow formations in the well bore of several wells.”
(2) “There is little or no dispute that the Upper Morrow and the Lower Morrow are separate accumulations of hydrocarbons in this general area, being separated vertically by several hundred feet.” (Approximately 350 ft.)
(3) The Upper Morrow contains at least two individual members, called the Upper Morrow “A” and the Upper Morrow “C”. The Upper Morrow “A” is productive only in the Terra Van Tine well and the Phillips Kaser well. The Upper Morrow “C” is produced in the Phillips’ Virgil well, Puckett well, and Princess well. The Princess well also produces from the Lower Morrow, with the production from the two zones commingled.
*1288 (4) The Upper Morrow “A” and the Upper Morrow “C” join together at some point so they comprise a single interconnected accumulation of hydrocarbons. Due to the substantial vertical separation between the Upper Morrow and the Lower Morrow in this area, the only possible pressure connection between those two formations is by means of the single open bore hole in the Princess commingled well.
(5) The most that applicant’s evidence can prove is that the Upper Morrow is a separate accumulation of hydrocarbons, unconnected with other portions of the Morrow. The new evidence produced from subsequent production figures, and computer analysis of production data, served only to confirm what was already established in the earlier case.

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Bluebook (online)
1975 OK 11, 536 P.2d 1284, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/corporation-commission-v-phillips-petroleum-co-okla-1975.