Mobil Exploration & Producing U.S. Inc. v. State Corp. Commission

908 P.2d 1276, 258 Kan. 796, 1995 Kan. LEXIS 166
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedDecember 15, 1995
Docket72,895
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 908 P.2d 1276 (Mobil Exploration & Producing U.S. Inc. v. State Corp. Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mobil Exploration & Producing U.S. Inc. v. State Corp. Commission, 908 P.2d 1276, 258 Kan. 796, 1995 Kan. LEXIS 166 (kan 1995).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Davis, J.:

This is a consolidated appeal from the district court’s opinion affirming the Kansas Corporation Commission’s (KCC) amendments to the Basic Proration Order (BPO) controlling the Hugoton Gas Field in Kansas. The parties, procedural development, and issues raised on appeal are set forth below. Our standard of review is governed by K.S.A. 77-621 of the Act for Judicial Review and Civil Enforcement of Agency Actions.

BRIEF HISTORY AND BACKGROUND

The Hugoton Natural Gas Field was discovered in the 1920’s. The first gas well was drilled in 1927, four miles southwest of Hugoton, in Stevens County. At present, the gas field is 160 miles long and varies from 40 to 72 miles in width. There are 5,854 wells that cover portions of 11 counties in the southwest comer of Kansas. The field extends across the Oklahoma panhandle and into portions of several counties in northern Texas. Existing wells have drained *800 approximately 20 trillion cubic feet (Tcf) of the 30 Tcf of recoverable reserves in the reservoir. Production from the field in the year 1993 was approximately 400 billion cubic feet (Bcf) of gas. See Lipman, Hugoton Gas Field: The Ongoing Battle Over Allowables, Underage, and Infill Wells, 33 Washburn L.J. 852 (1994).

The gas in the Hugoton Field comes from a common pool. In the absence of any statutory regulation, the common-law rule of capture applies to a common pool. At common law, the owner of a tract of land acquired title to the oil and gas which the owner produced from wells drilled thereon even though it could have been proved that part of such oil or gas migrated from adjoining lands. The rule promotes excessive drilling and production, resulting in economic waste and damage to reservoirs. Kansas enacted the Natural Gas Conservation Act in 1935 to prevent such waste and to protect the rights of adjoining owners. G.S. 1935, 55-701 et seq.

The statutes governing the production and conservation of natural gas in Kansas empower the KCC to prevent waste, avoid uncompensated drainage, and assure orderly development and production of natural gas in Kansas. Along with the prevention of waste, the KCC is directed to prevent the unfair or inequitable taking of natural gas from a common source of supply. This concept of equitable recovery of a common pool is known as correlative rights. Correlative rights means that each owner or producer in a common source of supply is privileged to produce that source only in a manner or amount that will not (a) injure the reservoir to the detriment of others, (b) take an undue proportion.of the obtainable oil or gas, or (c) cause undue drainage between developed leases. K.A.R. 82-3-101(17) (1992).

On March 21, 1944, the KCC issued its BPO, which forms the basis of the proration order currently in effect for the Hugoton Field. A proration order, attempts to ensure that each owner will recover, without waste, the amount of gas underlying his or her land. The 1944 BPO, therefore, prescribed a formula to be used in fixing quotas for each well so that each developed lease would be able to currently produce its daily quota, called an allowable. The 1944 BPO has been amended over time either as the result *801 of an application filed by one of the producers in the Hugoton Field or as the result of an order to show cause issued by the KCC. Any modifications have alwáys been effected only after extensive hearings before the KCC- This case is no- exception.

The major points addressed in this appeal involve basic and significant amendments to the BPO. As noted by the district court, the KCC conducted evidentiary hearings on proposed amendments to the BPO between August 17, 1992, and July 24, 1993. During the course of those hearings, 29 qualified expert witnesses gave detailed technical testimony on behalf of 26 parties. The hearings resulted in a transcript of over 10,000 pages and over 500 exhibits containing conflicting and contradictory expert testimony.

On February 2, 1994, the KCC issued its order amending the BPO. Nine parties filed petitions for reconsideration before the KCC. The KCC made several modifications and clarifications to the February 2, 1994, order but denied reconsideration in all other respects. The KCC 1994 amendments were affirmed on appeal by the district court.

ADDITIONAL BACKGROUND RELATING TO AMENDMENTS.

The 1944 BPO set a production quota for each well in the field which was identified as an “allowable.” The allowable for each well, the amount the well will be able to produce in a 1-month period, is arrived at through the use of a formula which takes into account surface acreage and the ability of a well to produce. Both of these factors were changed by the 1994 amendments.

One of the principal components of the formula to determine a well’s allowable is the surface acreage. Since 1936, practically all drilling in the Hugoton Field has occurred upon 640-acre tracts with one well per tract. The 1944 BPO adopted 640 acres as the acreage unit to be. used in' the proration formula. In 1986, after extensive hearings, the KCC concluded that one well per 640 acres could not effectively and efficiently drain the 640 acres without causing waste. The KCC therefore modified the BPO to allow each operator, at its option, to drill an additional or infill well on any tract of land over 480 acres. The acreage factor in the basic pro- *802 ration formula is calculated by dividing the acreage attributed to the well by 640. The acreage factor of a lease with one well is 1.0, or 640 divided by 640. For those units with an infill well in addition to the original well, the acreage factor, consistent with the 1986 KCC amendment, was determined by assigning both the original and the infill well an acreage factor of 0.5 times the total acreage of the unit divided by 640. Thus, the acreage factor for the original well on a 640 acre tract would be 0.5 and the acreage factor for the infill well would also be 0.5. The KCC, by its 1994 amendment, adjusted the acreage factor of those units with infill wells, increasing it from 0.5 for the original well and 0.5 for the infill well to .65 for the original well and .65 for the infill well.

The two other major factors involved in the formula to determine a well’s allowable are the deliverability factor of a well and market demand. Market demand is determined from two market demand hearings conducted by the KCC in March and September each year wherein the producers submit their estimates of market demand for their gas for the 6-month period. Based upon these estimates, the KCC determines the market demand. However, market demand is not directly involved in this appeal.

The deliverability factor, which is an important consideration in this appeal and which is discussed at length below, is the ability of the well to produce against a standard pressure. This factor takes into account the pressure of the well, the open-flow from the well, and the porosity and thickness of the gas-bearing rock. The 1994 amendment changed the effect of the deliverability factor on the assignment of allowables.

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Bluebook (online)
908 P.2d 1276, 258 Kan. 796, 1995 Kan. LEXIS 166, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mobil-exploration-producing-us-inc-v-state-corp-commission-kan-1995.