Energy Reserves Group, Inc. v. Department of Energy

520 F. Supp. 1232, 1981 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9935
CourtDistrict Court, D. Kansas
DecidedJuly 14, 1981
DocketCiv. A. Nos. 77-1146, 77-1087, 76-429-C6, 78-1070, 78-1176, 78-1230, 79-1387, 78-1410, 78-1513, 77-1456, 78-1235, 78-1509, 79-1204, 79-1258, 79-1318, 79-1319, 79-1320, 79-1321, 79-1322, 79-1325, 79-1384, 79-1385, 79-1386, 79-1388, 79-1389 and 79-1416. MDL No. 378
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 520 F. Supp. 1232 (Energy Reserves Group, Inc. v. Department of Energy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Energy Reserves Group, Inc. v. Department of Energy, 520 F. Supp. 1232, 1981 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9935 (D. Kan. 1981).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

THEIS, Chief Judge.

These multidistrict litigation (MDL) cases now come on for final decision of the Court. Trial of these cases, after extensive pretrial proceedings and litigation involving two appeals by the defendants to the Temporary Emergency Court of Appeals (TECA), was finally held to this Court from January 19, to February 6, 1981. After considering the evidence presented at trial, and after studying the briefs of the parties, and reviewing the appellate decisions in the consolidated cases, the Court enters this opinion.

A brief review of the pretrial proceedings may be illuminating and certainly, in this Court’s opinion, accounts for the singularly bellicose and adamant efforts of the Government, through their various counsel, to resist trial on the merits of the issue of law common to all of these cases. Originating as a single case to enjoin as illegal the governmental enforcement of the regulations of the then Federal Energy Adminis *1241 tration (FEA), now Department of Energy (DOE), prohibiting those plaintiff oil companies from including fluid injection wells in a well count to establish pricing levels for crude oil produced from stripper wells on plaintiffs’ leases, under a stripper well exemption in the legislative act, other cases were soon filed which were consolidated into one action. These cases were ruled on by this Court in its decision reported in Energy Reserves Group, Inc. v. Federal Energy Administration, 447 F.Supp. 1135 (D.Kan.1978), which held FEA Ruling 1974-29, excluding the count of injection wells, was legislative in nature rather than interpretive of the regulation, and therefore void. This decision was appealed to the Temporary Emergency Court of Appeals, resulting in a reversal of the Court’s decision in a 2 to 1 decision of the three learned judges of TECA, in which each judge rendered a separate opinion. This decision is reported as Energy Reserves Group, Inc. v. Department of Energy, 589 F.2d 1082 (TECA 1978). In short summary, the TECA majority held valid Ruling 1974-29 as a reasonable interpretation of the regulation implementing the statutory stripper well exemption, and remanded for trial the issue of whether the regulation was valid under the intent of Congress as expressed in the statute and its legislative history, and whether the regulation was arbitrarily and capriciously adopted by the administrative agency. By this time case litigation was burgeoning on the identical issues in many other federal court districts and forwarded to this district and combined for disposition of this Court as multidistrict litigation under order of the Judicial Panel of Multidistrict Litigation in June, 1979, reported as In re Dept. of Energy Stripper Well Exemption Litigation, 472 F.Supp. 1282 (1979). Governmental resistance to this Court’s efforts to get the case ready for trial and its unilateral insistence that the litigation had been terminated by TECA in the 1978 appeal, resulted in yet another appeal to mandamus this Court, reported as Duncan, Sec’y. of Energy v. Theis, Chief Judge, 613 F.2d 305 (Em.App.1979). TECA rejected the government counsels’ contention that TECA had decided this case in its prior opinion, and that there was no subject matter for litigation and decision. After continued resistance by the government at every stage of the pretrial discovery proceedings, trial finally began on January 19, 1981.

The government’s theory of absolutism in the rightness of its conduct, its refusal to recognize the adversarial aspect of our legal system, and general truculence, are aptly illustrated by an early assertion in its Post-Trial Brief, wherein it is stated: “Although the trial held in this matter was extremely improper and unnecessary ...”

Generally, the whole history of this litigation has been the government’s premise that its administrative decisions are judicially unreviewable, and the minds and actions of the administrative decision-makers may not be probed to determine the basis for such action. This position has been vigorously and adversarily disputed by an array of competent counsel from some of the leading law firms around this nation. As a result of an earlier injunction order in this case there has been accumulated in trust under court supervision a fund approximating one billion dollars, which awaits judicial distribution upon the termination of this litigation.

The issues now before the Court in the trial and for decision are: (1) whether the regulation itself, interpreted by TECA as excluding injection wells from the well count, was reasonable and valid within congressional intent of the statutory exemption; and (2) whether the promulgation of the regulation (C.F.R. 154(s)), was arbitrary and capricious. Since the inception of this litigation these two issues have always been the principal underlying legal points for ultimate decision.

To better understand the parameters of this dispute the Court considered engineering facts underlying crude oil production generally and secondary recovery in particular, various state procedures governing secondary recovery, and the treatment of injection wells in secondary recovery projects under certain federal programs. *1242 The Court’s conclusions with respect to these matters constitute the first portion of this opinion.

The Court then sets out the controlling statutes, regulations and ruling. This section is followed by the holding of this Court that Congress intended injection wells to be included in the well count, and a lengthy explanation as to how the Court reached this conclusion and why the DOE’s contrary position is not binding on the Court.

The Court then concludes that even if the statute did not mandate including injection wells, the manner in which the Department excluded the wells from the well count was arbitrary and capricious.

For those reasons, the Court has found that the stripper well exemption regulation, as interpreted by Ruling 1974-29, is invalid and must be struck down. The Court, in this opinion, has also ruled on certain post-trial motions, and these rulings are contained in part V of this opinion and order.

I. FACTUAL AND REGULATORY BACKGROUND

The organic theory of the origin of oil is accepted by 99.9% of engineers. (Whiting, T. 132033.) 1 This theory holds that oil came from organisms that lived in and adjacent to inland seas during geologic times. Plant and animal residues were deposited in these inland seas and over time were covered with sediment and subjected to great heat and pressure. (Whiting, T. 139.) This heat and pressure “destructively distilled” those organisms and generated petroleum. (Id.) This petroleum then is believed to have migrated from the place it originated, the source beds, through very small pores in the underground rock until it was caught in some kind of geologic “trap” which prevented further migration. Three of these geological traps are illustrated in P.X. 1-14 through P.X. 1-17. Oil caught in such a trap constitutes an oil reservoir.

The rock formations which contain this oil must possess two characteristics to allow the oil to move within the reservoir. The rock must have “porosity” and “permeability.” Porosity is an indication of the storage capacity of a rock. (Whiting, T.

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520 F. Supp. 1232, 1981 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9935, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/energy-reserves-group-inc-v-department-of-energy-ksd-1981.