Kuykendall v. Corporation Commission

1981 OK 105, 634 P.2d 711, 71 Oil & Gas Rep. 364, 1981 Okla. LEXIS 278
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 22, 1981
Docket52877
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 1981 OK 105 (Kuykendall v. Corporation Commission) 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
Kuykendall v. Corporation Commission, 1981 OK 105, 634 P.2d 711, 71 Oil & Gas Rep. 364, 1981 Okla. LEXIS 278 (Okla. 1981).

Opinion

LAVENDER, Justice:

This is an appeal from an order of the Corporation Commission of the State of Oklahoma denying appellants’ (applicants before the Corporation Commission) application to delete certain sections of land in Roger Mills and Beckham Counties in Oklahoma from the provisions of a previous order of the Commission as extended which created 1440-acre drilling and spacing units *713 for production from the Mississippi, Morrow-Springer and Hunton formations, the application being to establish 640-acre drilling and spacing units from the common sources of supply. The Commission entered its order on September 19, 1978, granting the application as to the other formations, but denying the application insofar as the Hunton formation was concerned, from which order this appeal is taken.

The issues presented on appeal are whether a change in economic conditions relating to the development and production of a drilling and spacing unit established by a final order of the Corporation Commission under 52 O.S.1971, § 87.1 may be one of the bases for the Commission’s modifying said order without said order of modification thereby being a collateral attack upon the Commission’s final order as prohibited by 52 O.S.1971 § 111, and whether there was substantial evidence before the Commission that there was no change of knowledge pertaining to the drilling and spacing units previously established by a final order of the Commission which would require modification of the previous final order.

The parameters for judicial review of an order of the Commission determining whether a prior order establishing drilling and spacing units shall be modified are well established.

The pertinent provisions of 52 O.S.1971 § 111 are as follows:

“No collateral attack shall be allowed upon orders, rules and regulations of the Commission made hereunder, but the sole method of reviewing such orders and inquiring into and determining their validity, justness, reasonableness or correctness shall be by appeal from such orders, rules or regulations to the Supreme Court. On appeal every such order, rule or regulation shall be regarded as prima facie, valid, reasonable and just. * *

Statutory authority under which the Commission may exercise jurisdiction to increase or decrease the size of established well spacing units or to permit additional wells to be drilled within the established units lies in the provisions of 52 O.S.1980 Supp. § 87.1 which provides, insofar as it is applicable here:

“(d) The Commission shall have jurisdiction upon the filing of a proper application therefor, and upon notice given as provided in subsection (a) above, to decrease the size of the well spacing units or to permit additional wells to be drilled within the established units, upon proper proof at such hearing that such modification or extension of the order establishing drilling or spacing units will prevent or assist in preventing the various types of wastes prohibited by statute, or any of said wastes, or will protect or assist in protecting the correlative rights of persons interested in said common source of supply, or upon the filing of a proper application therefor to enlarge the area covered by the spacing order, if such proof discloses that the development or the trend of development indicates that such common source of supply underlies an area not covered by the spacing order and such proof discloses that the applicant is an owner within the area covered by the application. * *

To escape the prohibition against collateral attack upon a final order of the Commission establishing drilling and spacing units upon a common source, the applicant before the Commission must establish that there has been “a change of conditions, or a change in knowledge of conditions” which will “prevent or assist in preventing the various types of waste prohibited by statute, or any of said wastes, or will protect or assist in protecting the correlative rights of persons interested in said common source of supply.” 1

The Commission’s Order No. 90490 made significant findings, a part of which were based upon economic considerations. The *714 Commission found that the Bruner No. 1 well was completed into the Hunton formations at 24,548 feet at a cost of $5,500,000 exclusive of acreage cost; that mechanical difficulties were encountered by reason of which electric logs could not be run; that the top of the Hunton was penetrated at approximately 24,060 feet; that a total of 466 feet of Hunton was penetrated by the Bruner No. 1; that studies of samples, drilling time, mud logs and lost circulation zones indicated 39 feet of net porosity that should average six per cent with thirty per cent average water saturation; that a substantial and infinite type reservoir has been found in each of said common sources of supply underlying the area involved; that the anticipated cost of a Hunton well is $3,170,000 and that the total investment in the well over its anticipated life of 20 years would be $4,190,000; that the anticipated revenue from a well located on a 1,000-acre unit is $7,042,578 with an anticipated return on investment of 3.9%, that the anticipated revenue from a well on a 1,280-acre unit is $9,014,599 with an anticipated return of 6.6% and that the anticipated revenue from a well located on a 1,440-acre unit is $10,-141,312 with an anticipated return of 8.142%; that a 1,440-acre drilling and spacing unit is the minimum size to prevent economic waste, encourage orderly development of the common sources of supply and protect the correlative rights of all mineral owners in the area; that one well will adequately and efficiently drain the economic recoverable natural gas and gas condensate in each of said common sources of supply. The Commission further found that the Bruner No. 1 encountered a large reservoir in a common source of supply which underlies substantially all of the area involved and the creation of a 1440-acre drilling and spacing unit is reasonably necessary to future expeditious and orderly development of the common source of supply in order to effectuate an orderly and equitable distribution of the hydrocarbons to be produced from the common source and to an equitable distribution of the risk and burdens inherent in the drilling of a well to said common source. The Commission concluded by finding in the interest of securing the greatest ultimate recovery of gas, the prevention of waste and the protection of correlative rights, the application should be granted, as to the other formations, but denied as to the Hunton.

The order of the Commission (Order No. 145,162) relating to the application of appellants to delete certain sections of land in Roger Mills and Beckham Counties, Oklahoma from the provisions of the Commission’s Order No. 90490, as last extended by Order No. 97552, creating 1440-acre drilling and spacing units for production from the Hun-ton formations, and to create 640-acre drilling and spacing units, is as follows: (The order first recites the evidence presented by the applicant.)

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Bluebook (online)
1981 OK 105, 634 P.2d 711, 71 Oil & Gas Rep. 364, 1981 Okla. LEXIS 278, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kuykendall-v-corporation-commission-okla-1981.