Department of Energy v. Louisiana

690 F.2d 180, 1982 U.S. App. LEXIS 25557
CourtTemporary Emergency Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 17, 1982
DocketNos. 5-65, 5-66
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 690 F.2d 180 (Department of Energy v. Louisiana) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Temporary Emergency Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Department of Energy v. Louisiana, 690 F.2d 180, 1982 U.S. App. LEXIS 25557 (tecoa 1982).

Opinion

METZNER, Judge.

The Department of Energy (DOE) appeals from two orders of the District Court for the Western District of Louisiana.1 The first order denied DOE’s motions to dismiss the complaint and to vacate intervention orders. The second order granted the summary judgment motion of the State of Louisiana (plaintiff-appellee) and Texaco, Inc. and Louisiana Land and Exploration Company (plaintiffs-intervenors-appellees). The issues raised by DOE on these appeals concern exhaustion of administrative remedies, ripeness, standing, intervention and the propriety of the disposition on the merits by granting summary judgment to the appellees.

The dispute between the parties arises out of a DOE enforcement proceeding in which DOE claims that Texaco improperly sold domestically produced crude oil to its customers as new oil when the oil should have been classified as old oil which has a lower maximum price fixed by the regulations. Texaco is charged with having exceeded the authorized price for the period August 19, 1973 to September 1, 1976, by more than $748,000,000.

The State of Louisiana is involved in this litigation because it has collected severance taxes and royalties on oil rights from lessees of state owned land based on the classification of this oil as new oil. The Louisiana Land and Exploration Company (LL&E) is a private enterprise which has royalty interests and working interests in properties in which Texaco has a working interest.

The litigation commenced in the District Court of Delaware in 1979 when Texaco, as plaintiff, and the State of Louisiana and LL&E as intervenors, sought declaratory relief as to the meaning and validity of certain regulations and rulings of DOE. They also sought injunctive relief as to the aforementioned pending DOE enforcement proceeding against Texaco.

Specifically, plaintiffs sought a determination that multiple producing reservoirs operated by Texaco and LL&E and recognized by the Louisiana Office of Conservation (LOC) as separate producing units be treated as separate properties under DOE regulations for determining old and new oil even though they may be located on a single premises. The court dismissed the complaints of Texaco and LL&E as not ripe for judicial review. Texaco, Inc. v. DOE, 490 F.Supp. 874 (D.Del.1980). Thereafter, Louisiana filed a voluntary dismissal of its action disposing of that case.

[184]*184Louisiana then instituted this action in the Western District of Louisiana where the court granted Texaco and LL&E leave to intervene. The relief sought by the amended complaint in this action is a declaration that reservoir-wide producing units established and recognized by Louisiana (LOC units) are separate properties for the purpose of federal oil and gas pricing regulation. A finding to this effect would classify the oil as new oil, and Texaco would not be liable to a claim for overcharges as to such oil.

I.

REGULATORY BACKGROUND

The Meaning of “Property” under the Federal Price Control System

The two-tier pricing system for crude oil was promulgated by the Cost of Living Council (CLC) on August 17, 1973, under authority of the Economic Stabilization Act of 1970. 38 Fed.Reg. 22536 (August 22, 1973). Congress reaffirmed this authority with the enactment of the Emergency Petroleum Allocation Act (EPAA). Pub.L. 93-159; 15 U.S.C. § 751 et seq.

CLC established two categories of domestically produced crude oil: old oil, which was subject to a price ceiling, and new oil, which could be sold at a higher free market price. For each “property” operated by a given producer, the classification of the oil was calculated monthly. The amount of oil produced from the property in the corresponding month of 1972 was the benchmark for classifying current production. Production less than the benchmark was old oil. Production in excess of the benchmark was new oil.

Because the two-tier system was thus based on a property-by-property comparison of current production with 1972 production, the definition of the term “property” was of fundamental importance. The CLC definition, however, was rudimentary:

“ ‘Property’ is the right which arises from a lease or from a fee interest to produce domestic crude petroleum.”

6 C.F.R. § 150.354, as amended 38 Fed.Reg. at 22538 (1973).

By September 1975, the Federal Energy Administration (FEA) had taken over the administration of the pricing system and issued the first interpretation of the property definition. In Ruling 1975-15 (40 Fed.Reg. 40832 (September 4, 1975)), the FEA addressed the question of how property designations should be made where several geologically distinct producing reservoirs were contained within the boundaries of a single leased tract. The agency stated that for purposes of the price regulations, “the property concept is one that identifies the right to produce crude oil, whether that right arises from a lease or from a fee interest.” Id. Since the “right to produce” was the proper basis for making property designations, geological considerations such as reservoir boundaries were irrelevant.

On December 22, 1975, the Energy Policy and Conservation Act (EPCA) was enacted as an amendment to EPAA. Pub.L. 94— 163. This legislation contemplated revisions to optimize production from domestic properties subject to a statutory maximum weighted average first sale price of $7.66 per barrel. The President had to determine that any departure from the then current controls would be likely to result in greater production from such properties. EPCA § 401, 15 U.S.C. § 757.

On August 20, 1976, FEA amended the property definition as part of an overhaul of the regulations pursuant to the EPCA. The original definition of property was continued with the following addition:

“A producer may treat as a separate property each separate and distinct producing reservoir subject to the same right to produce crude oil, provided that such reservoir is recognized by the appropriate governmental authority as a producing formation that is separate and distinct from, and not in communication with, any other producing formation.”

41 Fed.Reg. 36172, 36184 (August 26, 1976); effective September 1, 1976. The FEA stated that the amended definition of property comports with the objective provided [185]*185in EPCA that producers are provided with an incentive “to develop new deep reservoirs which would result in all new crude oil production.” Moreover, it “removes the disincentive some producers faced with respect to properties where declining production from existing reservoirs offset new production from other reservoirs which would otherwise have qualified for treatment as new crude oil.” Id. at 36179.

In the preamble to this amendment, FEA made it clear that reservoir-by-reservoir property designations would not, in general, be accepted as a basis for calculating quantities of old and new oil produced prior to September 1.

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Bluebook (online)
690 F.2d 180, 1982 U.S. App. LEXIS 25557, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/department-of-energy-v-louisiana-tecoa-1982.