Love v. Boyle

1919 OK 53, 180 P. 705, 72 Okla. 300, 1919 Okla. LEXIS 382
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 18, 1919
Docket9858
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 1919 OK 53 (Love v. Boyle) 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
Love v. Boyle, 1919 OK 53, 180 P. 705, 72 Okla. 300, 1919 Okla. LEXIS 382 (Okla. 1919).

Opinions

The questions that require our consideration and determination in this case are whether the authority and duties in reference to the inspection of oils and liquid products of petroleum, manufactured or offered for sale in this state, for illuminating, heating, and power purposes, the conservation of oil and gas, drilling and operating oil and gas wells, and plugging abandoned wells, appertain to the oil and gas department created, and inspectors appointed, pursuant to chapter 207, Session Laws 1917, under the jurisdiction and supervision of the Corporation Commission, or to the office of chief inspector of mines, oil and gas, created by the Constitution (section 25, art. 6, Williams', § 174), the incumbent of which is known as chief mine inspector.

Asserting that such authority and jurisdiction belong to and the duties thereof devolve solely upon his office, the defendant in error, being the duly elected and qualified chief mine inspector, as plaintiff below, brought this action, alleging that the plaintiffs in error, defendants below, who were respectively the duly elected, qualified, and acting Corporation Commissioners, and the duly appointed, acting, and qualified chief oil and gas conservation agent, in charge of the oil and gas department of the commission, together with their numerous servants, agents, assistants, and employes, whose names were to him unknown, were unlawfully assuming to exercise jurisdiction and authority in the premises, and performing duties in relation thereto, and collecting fees prescribed by law, and interfering with and hindering the plaintiff and his deputies and assistants in the discharge of their duties, and prayed that the defendants and their said agents, servants and employes be enjoined and restrained from so doing. The defendants demurred to the petition, the demurrer was overruled, and, the defendants declining to plead further, a final judgment was rendered against them, from which they have appealed to this court.

The death of plaintiff in error J.E. Love having been suggested, and the appointment of plaintiff in error A.L. Walker as his successor, and of a successor to A.L. Walker as chief oil and gas conservation agent having been made known to the court, by agreement an order has been made for the substitution of parties.

The matter of conservation of oil and gas, drilling and operating oil and gas wells, plugging abandoned wells, the inspection of oils and other liquid products of petroleum, etc., and the fees therefor, and the duties of various officers in relation thereto, are regulated by several statutes of the state enacted from time to time by the Legislature.

In the order of enactment, the first of these acts is that of the legislative assembly of the territory of Oklahoma, being chapter 17, Session Laws 1903, pp. 180 to 195, entitled, "An act to provide for the inspection of oils, the appointment and compensation of inspectors, and for other purposes." This act as amended by article 20, § 2, Williams', § 345, of the Constitution, was by virtue of the Schedule to the Constitution (article 25, § 2, Williams', § 366) brought over and extended in force in the state. The office of territorial inspector of oils provided for in that act was not continued after statehood, and the duties imposed on that officer were, by virtue of the Schedule to the Constitution (article 25, § 13, Williams, § 377) to be performed by the chief mine inspector until otherwise provided by law. A revision of this act was incorporated in the Revised Laws of 1910 as chapter 53, art. 4, §§ 4332 to 4359 thereof. Certain sections of the statute were amended by chapter 96, Session Laws 1915, pp. 149 to 152. The revised statute as amended provides that all oil and liquid products of petroleum known as burning oil or kerosene and gasoline, by whatever name called, which may be or can be used for illuminating, heating, or power purposes, manufactured in this state, or brought into it, shall be inspected by an authorized inspector of this state before the same are consumed, used, or sold, or offered to be sold or disposed of to merchants, consumers, or other persons within the state. The state mine inspector was made the exofficio *Page 302 gauger of liquids used for illuminating, heating, or power purposes, and authorized to appoint and assign for duty deputy oil inspectors at any point where there are located tank stations or refineries. The law further provides the manner of testing oils and other of said liquids, for the approval or condemnation thereof after test, for branding the result of the actual test on the package, barrel, or casks containing the same, and of such as are found to be unsafe and rejected. The act prohibits the sale of uninspected or condemned oils, prescribes penalties for hindering inspection, prescribes the fees to be charged for inspection and the amount thereof to be retained by the deputy inspector; provides for records to be kept by the inspectors and reports thereof to be made to the chief mine inspector, and for annual reports by the chief mine inspector to the Governor; and provides penalties for misconduct of inspectors and for making false tests.

The next act is chapter 26, art. 2, § 431, Session Laws 1909, which was slightly revised, and incorporated in the Revised. Laws of 1910, as chapter 53, art. 3, §§ 4319 to 4331. The original was entitled, "An act to regulate the use and preservation of oil and gas and providing penalties for the violation thereof, providing for an inspector, his duties, compensation and appropriation therefor and declaring an emergency." The act as revised provides, in substance, that any well producing natural gas, in order to prevent the said gas from wasting by escape, shall immediately, after penetrating the gas-bearing rock, be shut in and confined in the well until and during such time as the gas therein shall be utilized for lights, fuel, or power purposes. The act contains other provisions designed to prevent the unnecessary use and waste of natural gas and the pollution of stock water with oil and the refuse from tanks and wells. The act further provides that all dry and abandoned oil and gas wells, in which oil or gas-bearing stratum has been found, shall be plugged in the manner therein prescribed under the supervision of the oil and gas inspector therein provided for. The chief mine inspector was authorized to appoint such deputies, possessing certain qualifications as necessary for performance of the duties required by law. It was made the duty of the chief mine inspector and his deputies to personally supervise the using and operating of natural gas and the proper observance of the laws of the state dealing with the drilling and production of oil and gas or the piping or storage or purchase or use thereof within the state. A record is required to be kept of all oil and gas wells and dry holes plugged in accordance with the provisions of the act, containing certain information to be supplied by the lessee or operator at the time the well was plugged.

The next act is chapter 25, Session Laws 1915, p. 35, entitled, "An act defining and prohibiting the waste of crude oil or petroleum, providing for the equitable taking of the same from the ground and conferring authority on the Corporation Commission, prescribing the penalty for the violation of this act and declaring an emergency." This act prohibits the production of crude oil under such conditions as to constitute waste, defines waste, and authorizes the Corporation Commission to regulate the taking of crude oil from any common source of supply, so as to prevent the inequitable or unfair taking thereof, and to prevent discrimination in favor of one common source of supplies as against another.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1919 OK 53, 180 P. 705, 72 Okla. 300, 1919 Okla. LEXIS 382, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/love-v-boyle-okla-1919.