Miller v. Corporation Commission

635 P.2d 1006
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 5, 1981
Docket53240
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 635 P.2d 1006 (Miller 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
Miller v. Corporation Commission, 635 P.2d 1006 (Okla. 1981).

Opinions

OPALA, Justice.

The sole issue presented is whether the Corporation Commission’s [Commission] decision — establishing, in a forced pooling order, that a bonus of $75 per acre and a ⅛ royalty interest be paid mineral owners in lieu of participation — rests on substantial evidence. We answer in the affirmative.

The dispute arose in a proceeding on an application to pool the interests and adjudicate the rights of certain Ellis County mineral owners. The applicant, Kennedy and Mitchell, Inc. [operator], who sought the appointment as unit operator, requested that the Commission establish the bonus and royalty value of unleased mineral interests in the unit. Operator then held mineral leases on all tracts in the unit except the one owned by appellants [owners].

Testimony showed that the highest price paid for leases of privately-owned mineral interests in the unit was $75 per acre in bonus and ⅛ in royalty. According to the operator’s witness, a landman, this represented the fair market level of value. It was brought out on cross-examination that the operator had paid a bonus of $101.81 and a royalty of -⅛ for a mineral lease of an 80-acre state-owned tract located in the same unit. This interest had been bought from the Commissioners of the Land Office through a sealed-bid process required by statute. 64 O.S. 1971 § 281.

The Commission granted the operator’s application and set the bonus and royalty at the rate tendered by the operator. The owners appeal from that part of the order.

When necessary to prevent waste and to protect the correlative rights of mineral owners, the Commission may use its statutory authority to force mineral owners to pool their interests. 52 O.S.Supp.1977 § 87.1. The cited statute is regarded as valid exercise of state police power in conserving natural resources.1 The Commission has broad discretion in performing its statutory duties2 and in determining what constitutes a just and reasonable compensation to the owners.

This court’s review of the Commission’s findings of fact is restricted by the standard of substantial evidence.3 Substantial evidence is that which possesses substance and relevance and will induce a conviction that the order made was proper. The prescribed standard may be met even though reasonable men could differ with respect to the result reached.4

As the record reveals a different price was paid for the mineral interest held by the state from that paid to private owners, [1008]*1008our task here is simply to determine if the undisputed fair market value of privately-owned mineral leases will satisfy the substantial evidence test.

The measure of compensation for forcibly pooled minerals is their “fair market value”5 — the level at which this interest can be sold, on open-market negotiations, by an owner willing, but not obliged, to sell to a buyer willing, but not obliged, to buy.6 Evidence of comparable terms and prices previously paid for leases in the same area is relevant to, but not always conclusive of, the fair market value. Other factors may command or merit additional consideration. The difference in lease terms, the distance from other leaseholds subject to forced pooling and the nature of formations within different leaseholds — to name but a few variants — may be of great moment.7

The value to be arrived at is that paid for comparable leases in the unit. It is best extracted from transactions under usual and ordinary circumstances which occurred in a free and open market.8 The price levels reached under free and open market conditions are deemed to be barren of the distortive elements which are generally present in panic, auction or speculative sales. The latter so often reflect either depressed or inflated prices.9 An open market transaction contemplates face-to-face negotiations between two or more parties, dealing at arm’s length, for the purpose of arriving at an agreed level.10

The fair market value is one which can neither be inflated nor deflated by reference to special types of sales. The latter are not reflective of open-market conditions. A compulsory sale of an owner’s interest in realty, when taken by eminent domain, is the most common example of a sale not made in the open market. It is said to be affected by special circumstances which do not exist in open market transactions.11

By its very nature, the sealed-bid process is incompatible with an open market sale.12 Sealed bidding reflects the seller’s [1009]*1009unwillingness to bargain openly in, and yield to the forces of, the open market place. Confrontational interaction of the buyer with the seller is thus avoided. The value obtained for property sold by this process cannot be said to represent the very same price as that which the property would bring if it were sold under the usual and ordinary circumstances. This is so because the sealed-bid process obviously operates to alter those “economic forces” at play which shape the fair market value. In short, the method by which the state is required by statute to exact a price for its leases is not per se co-incidental with the market process in action.

Evidence of the sale price of land may be proof of its economic value but it is not, under all circumstances, the sole criterion in ascertaining its fair market value. Special circumstances may be present which tend to indicate a value greater or less than the price paid.13

The statutorily mandated sealed-bid procedures for leasing state-owned minerals do not represent a sale in the open market. The price secured through that process, though not per se indicative of fair market value, may nonetheless be of relevance when it is coupled with some showing that it is co-extensive or co-incidental with fair market value. The record before us does not demonstrate any nexus between the sealed-bid price and a fair market value. The proof adduced simply fails to unveil any such connection. Moreover, the sealed-bid price was not offered below as primary evidence probative of fair market value. Rather, it was elicited on cross-examination in the hope of casting a cloud on the direct testimony of an adverse witness.

The Commission was free to weigh all the proof adduced and to find from it — as it doubtless did — that the price exacted by the state was not shown to affect the issuable fact — the fair market value of the owners’ lease qua pooled mineral owners. The order is free from error and rests on substantial evidence.

Affirmed.

IRWIN, C. J., and WILLIAMS, LAVENDER, HARGRAVE and HODGES, JJ. concur. BARNES, V.C.J., and SIMMS and DOO-LIN, JJ., dissent.

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Miller v. Corporation Commission
635 P.2d 1006 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1981)

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Bluebook (online)
635 P.2d 1006, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-corporation-commission-okla-1981.