Hufo Oils v. Railroad Commission

717 S.W.2d 405, 100 Oil & Gas Rep. 187, 1986 Tex. App. LEXIS 8735
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 13, 1986
Docket14603
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 717 S.W.2d 405 (Hufo Oils v. Railroad Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hufo Oils v. Railroad Commission, 717 S.W.2d 405, 100 Oil & Gas Rep. 187, 1986 Tex. App. LEXIS 8735 (Tex. Ct. App. 1986).

Opinion

SHANNON, Chief Justice.

Appellant Hufo Oil Co. and other oil producers seek to set aside the judgment of the Travis County district court which affirmed, in the main, an order of the Railroad Commission of Texas prohibiting the counting of natural gasoline as crude oil for well-classification purposes. Phillips Petroleum Company, other gas producers, and the Railroad Commission of Texas are appellees.

This appeal is the culmination of a long-festering dispute between oil and gas producers in the Panhandle as to whether so-called “white oil” can be counted as oil for well-classification purposes. White oil is casinghead gas reduced to a liquid state (natural gasoline) by a LTX unit (low temperature extraction unit) located at the well site. Whether white oil may be regarded as oil for well-classification purposes has important ramifications for both gas and oil producers in the Panhandle and elsewhere.

*407 Most wells produce both oil and gas in varying proportions. The Commission classifies these wells as either oil wells or gas wells, depending on the oil-to-gas ratio of the well. A well which produces less than one barrel of oil per 100,000 cubic feet of gas is a gas well. Tex.Nat.Res.Code § 86.002(5)(B) (1978). On the other hand, a well which produces one or more barrels of oil per 100,000 cubic feet of gas is an oil well. Id. at § 86.002(6) (1978).

The classification of a well as an oil well or a gas well has profound economic consequences for several reasons: 1) Spacing requirements are different for oil wells and gas wells. In the Panhandle, the spacing rule for gas wells is one well for each 640 acres, whereas oil wells may be spaced as close as one well for each ten acres. Accordingly, up to sixty-four oil wells may be drilled on the acreage required for one gas well. 2) Casinghead gas (the main product of many white oil wells) is given priority by gas pipeline companies, which means that it is purchased at off-peak times while gas from gas wells remains unsold. 3) In the Panhandle, ownership of oil and ownership of gas are often severed so that the owner of the oil rights does not own the gas rights and vice versa. 4) The gas-to-oil ratio of a well may increase with continued production, forcing an oil well to be reclassified as a gas well. These factors make it advantageous to have, and maintain, an “oil well” classification for a well in the Panhandle field.

The effort to maintain “oil well” classifications for wells prompted the increased use of LTX units in recent years to produce white oil which then is counted as oil to maintain the required ratio. The increased creation of white oil has been regarded with growing concern by the gas producers, one of whom in 1981 initiated this proceeding to eliminate the white oil practice.

In September 1981, Phillips Petroleum Co. filed an application for an amendment to the special field rules for the Panhandle field. The proposed field rule would have altered the reporting requirements for oil well operators in the Panhandle field by compelling them to report white oil separately from black oil. The purpose of the proposed rule was to prevent the counting of white oil as oil for well-classification purposes.

In February 1982, an organization of oil producers, PIPG, filed an alternative rule which would permit the counting of white oil as oil for well-classification purposes. The Commission consolidated this application with Phillips’ application.

After extensive discovery and many pre-hearing conferences, the hearing commenced in Austin in September 1983, continued in Amarillo, and terminated finally in Austin. In May 1985, the Commission handed down its final order which concluded that existing statutes and agency rules prohibited the counting of white oil as oil for well-classification purposes. Accordingly, the Commission rejected Phillips’ proposed rule as unnecessary.

The oil producers filed motions for rehearing raising, for the first time, the contention that the Commission should have proceeded by rulemaking rather than by contested case procedures. The Commission overruled the motions for rehearing.

The oil producers then filed an administrative appeal in the district court of Travis County. Phillips and other gas producers intervened in the suit in support of the Commission order. Four oil producers or owners, not parties in the agency proceedings, intervened in the suit in opposition to the Commission’s order. These intervenors requested, as well, a declaratory judgment as to the validity and applicability of the Commission’s rules. The district court overruled the Commission’s and the gas producers’ motions to strike the intervention of the four oil producer intervenors.

After hearing, the district court rendered judgment sustaining that part of the agency order construing substantive law to prohibit the counting of white oil as oil for well-classification purposes. The district court concluded, however, that the Commission erred in conducting its hearing as a *408 contested case rather than as a rulemaking proceeding.

Hufo and the other oil producers challenge the district court’s affirmance of the agency order which concluded that existing law prohibits the counting of white oil (natural gasoline) as oil for well-classification purposes. More specifically, the Commission concluded that Nat.Res.Code § 86.002 is not ambiguous and does not permit the reporting of natural gasoline as crude oil in determining the gas-oil ratio of a well for purposes of well classification.

The statutory provisions affecting well-classification are the definitions in Chapters 85 and 86 of the Natural Resources Code.

§ 85.001(b): “Oil” means crude petroleum oil, crude petroleum, and crude oil, and “gas” means natural gas....
§ 86.002: In this chapter:
(1) “Oil” means crude petroleum oil.
(2) “Gas” means natural gas.
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(5) “Gas well” means a well that:
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(B) produces more than 100,000 cubic feet of gas to each barrel of oil from the same producing horizon; ...
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(6) “Oil well” means any well that produces one barrel or more of oil to each 100,000 cubic feet of gas.
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(10) “Casinghead gas” means any gas or vapor indigenous to an oil stratum and produced from the stratum with oil.
(11) “Natural gasoline” means gasoline manufactured from casinghead gas or from any gas.

Railroad Commission Statewide Rule 79(7) clarifies the definition of gas well: Gas Well:

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Bluebook (online)
717 S.W.2d 405, 100 Oil & Gas Rep. 187, 1986 Tex. App. LEXIS 8735, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hufo-oils-v-railroad-commission-texapp-1986.