Lear Petroleum Corp. v. Seneca Oil Co.

1979 OK 15, 590 P.2d 670, 62 Oil & Gas Rep. 383, 1979 Okla. LEXIS 221, 1979 WL 396338
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 6, 1979
Docket49754
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 1979 OK 15 (Lear Petroleum Corp. v. Seneca Oil Co.) 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
Lear Petroleum Corp. v. Seneca Oil Co., 1979 OK 15, 590 P.2d 670, 62 Oil & Gas Rep. 383, 1979 Okla. LEXIS 221, 1979 WL 396338 (Okla. 1979).

Opinion

WILLIAMS, Justice.

This is an appeal from an order (No. 121482) of the Corporation Commission determining the proper and reasonable costs of drilling an oil and gas well (dry hole) entered after hearing upon the application of Lear Petroleum Corporation, pursuant to 52 O.S.1971, Sec. 87.1(d), on May 19, 1976.

A prior application by Lear, made after the well had been drilled to a depth of 7400 feet, had resulted in a forced pooling order (No. 114434) as to some of the common sources of supply underlying certain lands in Roger Mills County, Oklahoma. The pooling order, entered on July 30, 1975, designated Lear as the operator of the unit, approved the prospective costs as estimated by Lear, and provided three options for the other mineral interest owners: (1) to participate in the drilling of the well and pay their proportionate shares of the costs; (2) to accept a bonus of $75 per acre; or (3) to accept an overriding royalty of ½6 of ⅞ for oil and Vs of ⅝ for gas. It further required such owners to make an election within 10 days from the date of the order as to which option to accept and provided that any dispute as to the reasonable and proper costs of drilling and production would be determined by the Commission after notice and hearing, as provided in Sec. 87.1(d).

No appeal was taken from the forced pooling order, and appellants herein, three of the other mineral interest owners, all filed written elections to participate in the drilling, as set out in (1) above, within the ten day period.

However, Lear did not require them to pay their shares of the estimated costs in cash, or to furnish security therefor, as it might have done under Sec. 87.1(d) and the Commission’s order. Instead, at their request it billed them on a monthly basis for their shares of the costs.

Thereafter a dispute arose as to the proper and reasonable costs of drilling, no doubt due in part to the fact that the actual costs substantially exceeded the cost estimate made by Lear at the time of the forced pooling order, with appellants refusing to pay their proportionate shares of the disputed costs. On January 26, 1976, Lear filed an application with the Commission asking that the proper and reasonable costs be determined and the rights of the parties adjudicated.

After statutory notice was given, a hearing was held on April 20, 1976. At that *672 time, the well had been completed and abandoned as a dry hole.

At the hearing, Lear and the appellants, the protesting mineral interest owners, presented expert testimony of a highly technical nature. It appears that appellants’ principal objection arose because Lear had contracted with its own wholly owned subsidiary, Trinity Drilling Company, for the drilling of the well, and that no competitive bids from other drilling companies had been received. However, there was undisputed testimony that at the time Lear undertook the project it had a farm-out arrangement as to a part of the acreage concerned with Kerr-McGee Corporation, and that the primary term of the Kerr-McGee leases would expire within 12 days if no well had been begun. There was also testimony that before contracting with Trinity, Lear contacted four other drilling companies and was informed that in view of the limited time, no other drilling rigs were available in the vicinity. It thus appears that the Trinity drilling rig was the only one available for the Lear project. About 30 days before, it had completed a drilling project in the same county of Mustang Production Company, and there was documentary evidence that under its contract with Mustang, Trinity was paid $50 per day more for “day work” than under its contract with Lear.

The evidence presented by the protesting mineral interest owners consisted largely of the testimony of witnesses who qualified as experts, who testified that in their view, the charges listed by Lear were too high. However, their testimony did not take into consideration the fact that because of the limited time involved (12 days), the Trinity drilling rig was the only one available. There was also testimony questioning the propriety of several specific items included on Lear’s proposed charges.

On May 19,1976, the Commission entered its Order No. 121482. In that order the Commission disapproved of three specific items included in Lear’s list as not properly chargeable, and ordered them deleted. It further found that the balance of the charges were reasonable and proper, and the last paragraph of the order was as follows:

“That said parties have deemed to elect and to participate in the drilling of said well and that said parties should pay their proportionate part of the costs thereof and that Lear Petroleum Corporation should send a billing with the reductions as set out above to said parties and that said parties should have ten (10) days in which to pay their proportionate part of the cost of drilling of said well.”

Since a portion of the costs previously charged by Lear had been disapproved, it was necessary for Lear to re-compute the charges and send a new billing to the other owners, as provided in the quoted paragraph.

From the order, the protesting mineral interest owners appealed.

In their brief in this Court, the appellants argue, in their first proposition, that the order must be construed as a money judgment against appellants, and that the Commission is without jurisdiction to enter such a judgment, or to order it paid.

It may be conceded that the Commission is not a court of general jurisdiction, and may not enter a money judgment against appellants, and for this reason it is not necessary to discuss the cases cited in the appellants’ brief on this point. However, we do not agree that appellants have properly construed the Commission’s order. It is not in form or substance a money judgment; as appellants themselves point out in their brief, no specific amount is levied against any appellant.

Under 52 O.S.1971, Sec. 87.1(d), it is specifically provided that “In the event of any dispute relative to such costs, the Commission shall determine the proper costs after due notice to interested parties and a hearing thereon”. Other portions of that section require the Commission to make definite provisions for the payment of costs in any forced pooling order, and provide that the operator of the unit shall have a lien for unpaid costs upon the mineral lease *673 hold estate and production therefrom. 1 In view of these provisions and the fact that the definite provisions as to costs in the prior forced pooling order had in effect been rendered indefinite by the subsequent dispute as to costs, it was proper for the Commission to add the ten day provision in the quoted paragraph of the subject order.

The sense of the statute is that in the event of a dispute between the “owner drilling or paying for the drilling of a well for the benefit of all” and other owners as to amounts due from the other owners to the owner doing or having the drilling etc. done, the Commission has the lawful authority to “determine the proper costs” that are due, “make definite provisions for the payment of cost of development and operation,” for which “the operator of such unit .

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Bluebook (online)
1979 OK 15, 590 P.2d 670, 62 Oil & Gas Rep. 383, 1979 Okla. LEXIS 221, 1979 WL 396338, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lear-petroleum-corp-v-seneca-oil-co-okla-1979.