Exxon Corp. v. Railroad Commission

571 S.W.2d 497
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 25, 1978
DocketB-7288
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 571 S.W.2d 497 (Exxon Corp. v. Railroad Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Exxon Corp. v. Railroad Commission, 571 S.W.2d 497 (Tex. 1978).

Opinion

GREENHILL, Chief Justice.

This is a direct appeal involving a Railroad Commission order which grants appel-lee BTA Oil Producers a permit to drill at a requested location under the Commission’s Statewide Spacing Rule 37. The central issue in the case is whether BTA Oil Producers was entitled to a permit under the Rule 37 waste exception, taking into consideration economic factors arising from the presence of an existing well bore at the *498 requested location. On appeal of the Commission’s order, the district court held that BTA Oil Producers was so entitled, and we agree. The judgment of the district court upholding the Commission’s order is affirmed.

BTA Oil Producers [hereinafter BTA] is the owner of a lease on a 673 acre tract in the Beall (Devonian) Field, Ward County, Texas. The Devonian Field has been classified by the Railroad Commission as an oil field with an associated gas cap. The field contains an upper gas producing zone and a lower oil producing zone. Under the Railroad Commission rules which govern the allowables for associated fields, wells in such fields may be allowed to produce both oil and gas; the amount of allowable gas production is controlled in direct relation to the amount of oil production. 1 Whether a well is classified as an oil well or as a gas well depends on the ratio of gas production in cubic feet to oil production in barrels. 2

Under the applicable field rules, spacing for the Devonian Field is governed by the Railroad Commission’s Statewide Spacing Rule 37. That rule provides as follows:

(A) (1) No well for oil or gas shall hereafter be drilled nearer than twelve hundred (1200) feet to any well completed in or drilling to the same horizon on the same tract or farm, and no well shall be drilled nearer than four hundred sixty-seven (467) feet to any property line, lease line, or subdivision line; provided that the Commission, in order to° prevent waste or to prevent the confiscation of property, may grant exceptions to permit drilling within shorter distances than above prescribed when the Commission shall determine that such exceptions are necessary either to prevent waste or to prevent the confiscation of property.

The present suit arises from an application filed by BTA to obtain an exception under this rule. Exxon contested the application as an offset operator.

At the time of the proceedings in question, the Devonian Field contained four wells classified as oil wells and two wells classified as gas wells. The gas wells are the Exxon Herd Gas Unit No. 1 and the BTA Wedge Gas Unit No. 1. On the same tract as its Wedge Gas Unit No. 1, BTA has a well known as the Wedge No. 2. This well was originally drilled as a test well to the Ellenberger Formation, which lies considerably deeper than the Devonian Field. 3 Upon discovering the Ellenberger to be non-productive, BTA completed the Wedge No. 2 in the Montoya Reservoir, which is between the Ellenberger and the Devonian. The Wedge No. 2 was a commercial producer of gas in the Montoya Reservoir; but, according to the testimony in the present case, the Montoya reserves are nearing depletion. BTA therefore applied to the Commission for a permit to plug back and re-complete the Wedge No. 2 in the Devonian Field. Such recompletion required a Rule 37 exception because, at Devonian depth, BTA’s Wedge No. 2 and BTA’s Wedge No. 1 are only 265 feet apart, rather than the 1,200 feet required by the Rule for a “regular” location. There is no dispute that the Wedge No. 2 well is an acceptable distance from Exxon’s Herd No. 1 well and from all relevant property lines. 4 There is also no dispute that, because of the size of the tract, BTA is entitled to sixteen wells on its Wedge lease.

BTA sought a Rule 37 exception on both of the grounds described in Rule 37: to prevent waste and to prevent confiscation. BTA’s confiscation claim related to confiscation of BTA’s share of the gas production from the Devonian Field. The Commission, *499 however, based its order solely on BTA’s waste argument; and that argument was related to waste of oil.

At the hearing before the Railroad Commission, BTA produced evidence designed to show that recompletion of the Wedge No. 2 well in the Devonian Field was necessary to prevent waste of oil from the field. BTA’s evidence indicated that, at least in the Wedge No. 2 well bore, the lower oil productive strata (Lower Devonian) was completely separate from the upper gas productive strata. Because BTA’s tests showed the Lower Devonian pressure to approximate the original reservoir pressure in the area, BTA concluded that none of the four oil wells presently existing in the Devonian Field were able to recover oil in the vicinity of the Wedge No. 2 well bore; BTA’s expert witness testified there was a possibility that BTA’s Lower Devonian oil reserves were contained in a reservoir separate from all other wells in the field. BTA has admitted, however, that these reserves could probably be recovered at a regular location on BTA’s tract. At this stage, BTA’s economic arguments come into play.

The evidence produced at the hearing demonstrated that BTA’s only existing Devonian well, the Wedge No. 1, is plugged back with concrete above the oil productive portion of the field and is therefore incapable of producing the Lower Devonian oil. BTA’s expert witness testified that, although the oil could be recovered by drilling a completely new well at a regular location, BTA could not economically justify such drilling. Thus, BTA’s position was that the Rule 37 exception was economically necessary to prevent waste of the Lower Devonian oil. BTA’s witness testified that, because the economics would not justify the drilling of a new well, the oil reserves were only recoverable through use of the existing Wedge No. 2 well bore.

The Railroad Commission, in adopting the Findings of Fact and Conclusion of Law found in the Hearing Examiner’s Proposal for Decision, agreed with BTA’s position. Among the Commission’s relevant findings are the following:

6. There is no effective communication between the Upper Devonian gas cap and the Lower Devonian oil zone in the Wedge No. 2 well.
8. BTA’s Wedge No. 1 well did not penetrate the Lower Devonian oil zone and cannot be feasibly completed in such zone.
13. The Wedge No. 2 well will recover reserves in the Lower Devonian oil column which cannot be produced by any existing well.
14. A regular location 1200 feet or more from the BTA Wedge No. 1 well should encounter approximately the same thickness of Devonian reservoir as the Wedge No. 2 well.
15. The Lower Devonian oil reservoir and the gas cap of the Beall Devonian Field [is] recognized as one field by the Railroad Commission.

In Findings of Fact 9 and 10, the Commission also found that BTA was entitled to a second Devonian well on the Wedge lease and that completion of such a well would not increase the lease’s allowable.

The significant Conclusions of Law adopted in the Commission’s order are as follows:

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571 S.W.2d 497, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/exxon-corp-v-railroad-commission-tex-1978.