Cowling v. Board of Oil, Gas & Mining

830 P.2d 220, 118 Oil & Gas Rep. 582, 177 Utah Adv. Rep. 6, 1991 Utah LEXIS 161
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 31, 1991
DocketNo. 860518
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 830 P.2d 220 (Cowling v. Board of Oil, Gas & Mining) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cowling v. Board of Oil, Gas & Mining, 830 P.2d 220, 118 Oil & Gas Rep. 582, 177 Utah Adv. Rep. 6, 1991 Utah LEXIS 161 (Utah 1991).

Opinion

STEWART, Justice:

Celsius Energy Company is a working interest owner and the operator of the Uco-lo No. 2 well, which was drilled on property leased from Adra Baird and, after her death, from her heirs. Adra Baird executed three leases conveying the mineral interests in her 110.14 acres to Celsius.1 The Baird property is located in the north half of section 10 in a township of San Juan [222]*222County, Utah. Celsius completed the well in the Desert Creek zone on April 19, 1983, but the well was not connected to a production pipeline until November 1983. Also on April 19, 1983, Celsius executed a voluntary declaration of pooling pursuant to the three Baird leases covering the 110.14-acre Baird tract. The leases entitled the Bairds to a ¾⅜ royalty.

Celsius paid 100 percent of landowner’s royalties from the time of first production until the entry of the Board’s pooling order to Adra Baird and, after her death, to her heirs (plaintiffs in the court below and hereinafter collectively referred to as “the Bairds”). Celsius also had an oil and gas lease covering a federally owned tract which constituted the remainder of the north half of section 10 and adjoined the Baird tracts. Since Ucolo No. 2 was the discovery well of the pool it drained, there was no spacing order in effect when the well was completed. In 1983, Celsius petitioned the Board of Oil, Gas and Mining (“the Board”) for a spacing order. Celsius preliminarily indicated that the area drained by Ucolo No. 2 might include part of the federal tract, in addition to the Baird tracts. However, since Celsius had not acquired sufficient data to show the actual area drained, the initial proceeding for a spacing order was dismissed.

In early January 1985, Celsius again applied to the Board for a single-well spacing and drilling unit order for the gas pool drained by Ucolo No. 2. After the Board held evidentiary hearings, the parties agreed to the size and configuration of the pool. On March 28, 1985, the Board issued findings of fact, conclusions of law, and a spacing and pooling order based on the evidence adduced and the parties’ stipulation.

The Board found that Ucolo No. 2 drained a 300.14-acre area, of which the Baird heirs owned 110.14 acres and the Bureau of Land Management (the “BLM”) owned 190 acres. On June 24, 1985, pursuant to a stipulation by the Bairds, Celsius, and the BLM, the Board modified its prior findings and order, finding that the area drained by the well was 200.14 acres, 110.14 acres of which were owned by the Bairds and 90 acres by the BLM. That order required a pooling of the Bairds’ and the BLM’s interests in the 200.14-acre drilling unit. Over the dissent of two Board members, the Board made the pooling order retroactive to the first day of the first month of production, April 1, 1983. The Board also found that Celsius had paid the Bairds $230,000 in royalties from the time of first production to the date of the Board’s pooling order and ruled that the BLM was entitled to a share of those royalties based on the BLM’s percentage of land in the drilling unit drained by Ucolo No. 2.

The Bairds appealed the Board's ruling that the pooling order should be retroactive to the date of first production to the district court. They argued that the Board’s order deprived them of a vested right to all the royalties from Ucolo No. 2 from first production until entry of the spacing and pooling order. The district court ruled that the Board erred in making the pooling order retroactive and that the pooling order should have been made effective as of the time the spacing order was entered. The district court reasoned that the BLM could have protected its interest in the gas drained from its acreage in the north half of section 10 in one of two ways. First, the BLM might have petitioned the Board for an exception to Board Rule C-3(b), a statewide well location rule, and drilled its own well. Second, the BLM could have petitioned for a spacing and a pooling order at an earlier time than Celsius did.

Celsius and the Board appealed from the district court order to this Court. The BLM has not joined in the appeal. Celsius argues three interrelated points in support of its position that the pooling order should be retroactive to the date of first production. First, Celsius argues that this case is governed by Bennion v. Utah State Bd. of Oil, Gas & Mining, 675 P.2d 1135 (Utah 1983), which held that the Board did not err in making a pooling order retroactive to the date of first production to protect an adjoining landowner’s correlative rights. Second, Celsius argues that because the statewide well location rule, Rule C-3(b), prohibited the BLM, as an adjoining land[223]*223owner, from drilling a well on its own tract in section 10, the pooling order had to be retroactive to the date of first production to protect the BLM’s correlative rights. That rule, Celsius argues, in effect nullified the right of the BLM to protect the BLM’s rights under the law of capture by prohibiting it from drilling on its own land. Third, Celsius relies on the authority of Farmer’s Irrigation District v. Schumacher, 187 Neb. 825, 194 N.W.2d 788 (1972), for the proposition that the pooling order must be retroactive in order to protect the correlative rights of the United States.

The Bairds’ position is that correlative rights in oil and gas are dependent on the provisions of the Utah Oil and Gas Conservation Act and are defined by spacing orders. Specifically, the Bairds assert that until the Board enters a spacing order, the correlative rights of adjoining interest owners are neither defined nor definable with any particularity. Since the spacing and pooling orders in this case were entered at the same time, the pooling order could not be retroactive to first production because the BLM had no specifically defined correlative right prior to entry of the spacing order. The Bairds argue that Bennion is distinguishable because first production in that case occurred after entry of the spacing order. Therefore, the pooling order in Bennion was properly retroactive to the date of first production. They also assert that the statewide well location rule does not wholly displace the law of capture, but rather, that their interest in all the landowner’s royalties was protected up to the time of first production by the law of capture.

I. STANDARD OF REVIEW

We turn first to the standard of review to be applied to the decision of a lower court reviewing an order of an administrative agency. When a lower court reviews an order of an administrative agency and we exercise appellate review of the lower court’s judgment, we act as if we were reviewing the administrative agency decision directly. Bennion v. Utah State Bd. of Oil, Gas & Mining Co., 675 P.2d 1135, 1139 (Utah 1983). We do not defer, or accord a presumption of correctness, to the lower court’s decision, since that court’s review of the administrative record is no more advantaged than ours.

The Board and Celsius argue that this Court should defer to the Board’s ruling on the ground that the issue before the Board was a mixed question of fact and law. Specifically, they assert that the issue is whether it was “just and reasonable” within the meaning of Utah Code Ann.

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Cowling v. BOARD OF OIL, GAS AND MIN.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
830 P.2d 220, 118 Oil & Gas Rep. 582, 177 Utah Adv. Rep. 6, 1991 Utah LEXIS 161, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cowling-v-board-of-oil-gas-mining-utah-1991.