Harry R. Carlile Trust v. Cotton Petroleum Corp.

732 P.2d 438
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 5, 1986
Docket61112
StatusPublished
Cited by100 cases

This text of 732 P.2d 438 (Harry R. Carlile Trust v. Cotton Petroleum Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harry R. Carlile Trust v. Cotton Petroleum Corp., 732 P.2d 438 (Okla. 1986).

Opinions

OPALA, Justice.

This appeal presents for our decision four questions dealing with the standards of adequate notice for Corporation Commission spacing proceedings: [1] Is the Corporation Commission called upon to act in an adjudicative capacity when its statutory power is invoked to establish a drilling and spacing unit? [2] In Corporation Commission proceedings to establish a drilling and spacing unit, is notice to interested persons subject to the minimum standards of fairness exacted by the Due Process Clause? [3] Do the standards of due process, announced by this court in Cravens v. Corporation Commission,1 govern when non-producing mineral interests alone are sought to be embraced within a spacing unit? [4] Should the teaching of Cravens be applied retroactively to include only Carlile (the victorious quiet-title plaintiff below), or purely prospectively to affect those spacing units comprised of non-producing leaseholds which will be formed by orders promulgated after the effective date of today’s pronouncement? While we an[440]*440swer the first three questions in the affirmative, in response to the fourth question we hold that (a) today’s pronouncement is to apply prospectively to spacing units which will be formed by Commission orders made after the effective date of this opinion, (b) all spacing orders made by the Commission prior to this opinion’s effective date herein shall be left unaffected by the notice standards pronounced today, but (c) orders yet to be made in proceedings presently pending before the Commission and those in cases now on direct appeal, in which areas under production are sought to be, or were, comprised within a spacing unit, shall be regarded as governed by notice standards of Cravens and (d) the district courts may treat as facially invalid all agency spacing and drilling orders issued after the effective date of this opinion which do not comply with the notice standards pronounced herein.

In 1974 a party not involved in this lawsuit brought an application to the Corporation Commission [Commission] to create several 640-acre drilling and spacing units for gas and gas condensate produced from formations underlying various sections of land in Caddo County. The property here in contention was included within one of the new units to be formed. It consisted of a tract of land then owned in fee simple by the predecessors in title of the plaintiffs, Harry R. Carlile Trust by Zelda Arthurs, trustee [Carlile].

In compliance with the legislative requirements then in force 2 and pursuant to its own statute-implementing rule,3 the Commission gave notice of hearing on the spacing application solely by publication in Oklahoma and Caddo counties. No other notice relative to the hearing was ever sent to, or received by, Carlile’s predecessors in title. The Commission heard the application and issued its order creating a 640-acre drilling and spacing unit which included the Carlile tract. According to the record, no oil and gas was being produced from this section of land immediately before and at the time the Commission hearing was commenced.

In 1978 Carlile’s predecessors in title4 executed an oil-and-gas lease that was subsequently assigned to Cotton Petroleum Corporation [Cotton]. All bonus and delay rentals due under this lease were timely paid. Cotton commenced drilling operations on the unit created by the spacing order and completed the well within the primary term of the lease. Its location was outside the area included in the lease but within the spacing unit established by the 1974 order.

Some eight years after formation of the spacing unit, Carlile brought in 1982 this quiet-title suit against Cotton. The 1978 lease constituted the only interest Cotton claimed in the Carlile property and the sole cloud Carlile sought to remove from its title. By stipulation of the parties the complete record of the spacing proceedings was incorporated into the evidentiary material tendered with the motion for summary judgment. This record clearly confirms [441]*441that the Commission attempted no service other than by publication. Because no actual notice had been given to its predecessors in title, Carlile claimed the 1974 order was facially invalid. Based on the due process notice standards announced in Cravens, 5 the trial court declared that, because publication notice alone was insufficient to invest the Commission with adjudicative cognizance, the 1974 spacing order was facially ineffective. After Carlile had recovered summary judgment, Cotton appealed and Carlile moved here for an order requiring Cotton to post an undertaking in the form of a “supersedeas bond.” The motion met with this court’s adverse disposition.6

I

THE DISTRICT COURT MAY WITHHOLD LEGAL RECOGNITION FROM A COMMISSION ORDER THAT IS FACIALLY INVALID

By its collateral attack Carlile attempted to avoid the legal effect of the 1974 spacing order. A collateral attack may not be launched on a Commission order that is facially invulnerable.7 The district court’s power to inquire into the validity of Commission orders is legally limited to ascertaining, from an inspection of the face of the proceedings,8 if the Commission had jurisdiction to issue the order.9 A Commission order is deemed facially invalid only when the face of the record reveals the absence of at least one of these three requisite elements of agency jurisdiction— i.e., (1) jurisdiction over the parties, (2) jurisdiction over the subject matter, or (3) jurisdictional power to issue the specific order in question.10

II

THE STATUTORY AUTHORITY OF THE COMMISSION TO ESTABLISH DRILLING AND SPACING UNITS IS ADJUDICATIVE IN NATURE AND IT IS SUBJECT TO FEDERAL AND STATE STANDARDS OF DUE PROCESS GOVERNING THE ADEQUACY OF NOTICE TO CONFER JUDICIAL JURISDICTION

The applicability of due process standards of notice to proceedings for the formation of drilling and spacing units turns on whether the Commission’s authority to space calls for an exercise of its adjudicative or rulemaking function. An agency’s authority to make rules is clearly distinguishable from that of adjudication. Rulemaking includes the power to adopt rules and regulations of general application — both substantive and procedural— which are legislative in nature, operate prospectively and have general application.11 [442]*442Orders of an administrative body are adjudicative in character. They apply to named persons or specific situations and have immediate rather than future operation.12

The Commission acts in a legislative capacity when it exercises its rulemaking powers to prevent waste and to protect correlative rights, but not when it attempts to apply these rules. The application of rules to the facts found constitutes an exercise of an adjudicative function.13 When acting in its legislative capacity, the Commission may always amend its rules and regulations to prevent waste and to protect rights of mineral owners.14

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
732 P.2d 438, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harry-r-carlile-trust-v-cotton-petroleum-corp-okla-1986.