El Paso Natural Gas Co. v. Oil Conservation Commission

414 P.2d 496, 76 N.M. 268
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedMay 16, 1966
Docket7727
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 414 P.2d 496 (El Paso Natural Gas Co. v. Oil Conservation Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
El Paso Natural Gas Co. v. Oil Conservation Commission, 414 P.2d 496, 76 N.M. 268 (N.M. 1966).

Opinion

NOBLE, Justice.

Consolidated Oil & Gas, Inc. requested a change in the proration formula in the Basin-Dakota gas pool from the existing “25-75” formula (25% acreage plus 75% acreage, times deliverability) to a “60-40” formula. The Oil Conservation Commission originally denied the change, but on rehearing, limited to the question of recoverable reserves in the pool, reversed its decision, ordered the change, and adopted the “60-40” formula. The Commission then denied a requested rehearing. The Commission’s order was reviewed and affirmed by the district court of San Juan County. This appeal is from the judgment of the district court.

The district court reveiwed only the record of the administrative hearing and concluded as a matter of law that the Commission’s order was substantially supported by the evidence and by applicable law. This court, in reviewing the judgment, in the first instance, makes the same review of the Commission’s action as did the district court. Reynolds v. Wiggins, 74 N.M. 670, 397 P.2d 469; Kelley v. Carlsbad Irrigation District, 71 N.M. 464, 379 P.2d 763.

As in Continental Oil Co. v. Oil Conservation Com’n, 70 N.M. 310, 373 P.2d 809, the Commission was concerned with a formula allocating production among the various producers from the gas pool — allocation of the correlative rights. It is agreed that the duty of the Commission in this case is identical with that in Continental, but the parties are not in complete agreement as to what Continental requires. Its proper interpretation requires us to again consider the statutes with which we were concerned in that case and which are controlling here. Since the pertinent statutory provisions were quoted at length in Continental Oil Co. v. Oil Conservation Com’n, supra, we shall not restate them in detail.

Recognizing the need and right of the state, in the interest of the public welfare, to prevent waste of an irreplaceable natural resource, the legislature enacted those laws authorizing the Commission to exercise control over oil and gas wells by limiting the total production in the pool, and making it the duty of the Commission to protect the correlative rights of all producers so far as it can be accomplished without waste to the pool. Sections 65-3-1 to 65-3-29, 'N.M. S.A.1953. A review of the history of our oil and gas legislation reveals the primary concern in eliminating and preventing waste in the pool so far as it can practicably be done, and next the protection of the correlative rights of the producers from the pool. The legislature spelled out the duty of the Commission to limit production in such manner as to prevent waste, while affording :

“ * * * to the owner of each property in the pool the opportunity to produce his just and equitable share of the * * gas * * * in the pool, being an amount, * * * so far as such can be practicably obtained without waste, substantially in the proportion that the quantity of the recoverable * * * gas * * * under such property bears to the total recoverable * * * gas * * * in the pool, * * *” (§ 65-3-14(a), N.M.S.A.1953) (Emphasis added).

Continental Oil Co. v. Oil Conservation Commission, supra, made clear those purposes and requirements.

The disagreement in this case arises from a difference of opinion as to the proper construction of language in Continental, saying that the statute requires the Commission to determine certain foundationary matters without which the correlative rights of the various owners cannot be fixed, and, specifically, respecting those foundationary matters :

“ * * * Therefore, the commission, by ‘basic conclusions of fact’ (or what might be termed ‘findings’), must determine, insofar as practicable, (1) the amount of recoverable gas under each producer’s tract; (2) the total amount of recoverable gas in the pool; (3) the proportion that (1) bears to (2) ; and (4) what portion of the arrived at proportion can be recovered without waste. * * * "

The appellants argue that those four findings are jurisdictional in the sense that absent any one of them, the Commission lacked authority to consider or change any production formula. While the parties agree that the first three “basic” facts were specifically found, the appellees assert and appellants deny that a percentage determination was made of “what portion of the arrived at proportion” can be recovered without waste. Thus, the main thrust of appellants’ argument is directed to the contention that the Commission lacked jurisdiction to change the allocation formula.

We did not, in Continental, say that the four basic findings must be determined in advance of testing the result under an existing or proposed allocation formula. Actually, what we said was:

“ * * * That the extent of the correlative rights must be determined before the commission can act to protect them is manifest.”

In addition, however, Continental observed that the Commission should so far as practicable prevent drainage between tracts which is not equalized by counter-drainage and to so regulate as to permit owners to utilize their share of pool energy. While Continental stated the four basic findings which the Commission must make before it can change a production formula, we were not concerned with the language in which the findings must be couched. What we said is that a proposed new formula must be shown to have been “based on the amounts of recoverable gas in the pool and under the tracts, insofar as those amounts can be practicably determined and obtained without waste.” We then, in effect, said that such findings need not be in the language of the opinion but that they or their equivalents are necessary requisites to the validity of an order replacing a formula in current use. It is, accordingly, apparent that we must consider the Commission’s findings to determine whether findings in the language of Continental or their equivalent were adopted. We think they were.

The statute, in requiring the allocation order to afford each owner the opportunity to produce his just and equitable share of the recoverable gas in the pool, “so far as such can be practicably obtained without waste,” of course, requires the adoption of an allocation formula which will permit the owners to produce as nearly as possible their percentage of the recoverable gas in the pool, with as little waste as can practicably be accomplished. It is obvious to us that each different allocation formula will allow the tract owners to produce a different percentage of the total gas in the pool. Having determined (1) the amount of recoverable gas Under each tract, and (2) the total amount of recoverable gas in the pool, the ideal formula would be one that would permit each' owner 'to recover all of that proportion which "the gas underlying his tract bears to the total in the pool.

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Bluebook (online)
414 P.2d 496, 76 N.M. 268, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/el-paso-natural-gas-co-v-oil-conservation-commission-nm-1966.