Mobil Oil Corporation v. Gill
This text of 194 So. 2d 351 (Mobil Oil Corporation v. Gill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
MOBIL OIL CORPORATION
v.
James H. GILL, Commissioner of Conservation of the State of Louisiana (J. M. Menefee, Commissioner of Conservation, Substituted Party Defendant).
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.
*352 Dixon Carroll of Simon, Carroll, Fitzgerald & Fraser, Shreveport, Roy M. Talley, Baton Rouge, R. T. Wilkinson, Jr., Roy L. Merrill, Houston, Tex., for appellant.
Rolfe H. McCollister, Baton Rouge, Robert Roberts, III, of Blanchard, Walker, O'Quin & Roberts, Shreveport, for appellee.
Before LANDRY, BAILES, and ELLIS, JJ.
ELLIS, Judge:
Plaintiff Mobil Oil Company brought this suit to have declared null and void certain portions of Department of Conservation Orders 397-B-10-a, 397-B-10-b, and 397-B-10-c, which relate to the allocation and distribution of the production from the Cadeville Sand of the Calhoun field. That portion of the orders complained of provides that 60% of the production or the proceeds thereof be distributed on the basis of the volume of productive sand underlying each tract, and 40% on the basis of the productive surface area overlying the sand. The order further designates a certain isopachous map, attached thereto as exhibit "B", as the basis for determining productive volume expressed in acre-feet, as well as productive surface acreage.
The original defendant in the case was James H. Gill, then Commissioner of Conservation, whose successor in office, J. M. Menefee, was later substituted as party defendant. Arkansas-Louisiana Gas Company intervened in support of the Commissioner.
After a full trial on the merits, judgment was rendered rejecting the demands of plaintiff. From that judgment, plaintiff prosecutes this appeal.
The Cadeville Sand underlies over 8000 acres of land in Ouachita, Lincoln and Jackson parishes. It is a lensatic type of structure, unbroken by faults, permitting free movement of gas and other hydrocarbons throughout the entire structure. The reservoir pressure was substantially equal throughout the sand, and the experts who testified felt that it could eventually be drained by only one well.
The field was discovered in 1959, and thereafter, twenty-five producing wells, in units of 320 acres per well, were drilled. Subsequently it was determined that normal production operations were causing a rapid drop in reservoir pressure, which, if allowed to go below a certain point, would cause retrograde condensation of the liquid hydrocarbons in the sand, making them unrecoverable. In February, 1962, the Commission of Conservation, under the emergency authority, ordered the wells producing from the Cadeville Sand shut-in in order to forestall any further pressure drop. Following a hearing held on March 14, 1962, order No. 397-B-10 was entered, which continued the shut-in status of the wells and ordered the operators to institute a program of cycling and pressure maintenance.
A cycling program consists in injecting dry gas into the formation through certain wells, which would have the effect of maintaining the formation pressure at a desirable level while wet gas was being extracted through certain other wells.
Such a program was instituted, and the Cadeville Sand was established as a single unit for cycling and pressure maintenance. Since, in such a program, some wells are used for injection, some for production and some are shut-in, the Commissioner has the authority and duty to establish the participation of the various owners and producers in the production from the reservoir.
*353 In this case, the Commissioner determined that the participation should be computed 60% on the basis of the productive acre-feet of sand underlying each unit, and 40% on the basis of productive surface acreage, and found that that formula "should establish an equitable distribution of the hydrocarbon production of the Cadeville Sand reservoir".
The foregoing is incorporated in findings 10 and 11 of Order 397-B-10-a, effective December 1, 1962. Finding 8 of the same order is to the effect that a certain isopachous map had been agreed on by the plaintiff herein, and a majority of the owners of interest in the reservoir as a reasonable representation of the productive area and geography of the Cadeville Sand. Finding 11(a) requires that it be used to determine the productive area and productive acre feet in the sand.
An isopachous map is one which represents the thickness of a formation by means of lines, similar to contour lines, drawn through points of equal thickness. Acre feet is a measure of volume of a stratum underlying a particular surface area arrived at by multiplying the area in acres by the thickness of the stratum in feet.
R.S. 30:9(D), which is conceded to be the basis for the Commissioner's allocation of proceeds in such a situation as this, reads as follows:
"Subject to the reasonable necessities for the prevention of waste, and to reasonable adjustment because of structural position, a producer's just and equitable share of the oil and gas in the pool, also referred to as a tract's just and equitable share, is that part of the authorized production of the pool, whether it be the total which could be produced without any restriction on the amount of production, or whether it be an amount less than that which the pool could produce if no restriction on amount were imposed, which is substantially in the proportion that the quantity of recoverable oil and gas in the developed area of his tract or tracts in the pool bears to the recoverable oil and gas in the total developed area of the pool, in so far as these amounts can be practically ascertained. To that end, the rules, regulations, and orders of the commissioner shall be such as will prevent or minimize reasonably avoidable net drainage from each developed area, that is, drainage not equalized by counter drainage, and will give to each producer the opportunity to use his just and equitable share of the reservoir energy. In determining each producer's just and equitable share of the production authorized for the pool, the commissioner is authorized to give due consideration to the productivity of the well or wells located thereon, as determined by flow tests, bottom hole pressure tests, or any practical method of testing wells and producing structures, and to consider other factors and geological and engineering tests and data as may be determined by the commissioner to be pertinent or relevant to ascertaining each producer's just and equitable share of the production and reservoir energy of the field or pool."
Appellants take the position that the only criterion that the Commissioner can legally use in establishing allocation of proceeds in the light of his findings and the language of R.S. 30:9(D) is the productive acre feet under the various units.
They base this contention on the testimony of the expert witnesses who stated that over 90% of the hydrocarbons in place in the formation could be recovered in a proper cycling program. It is argued that the recovery of this high percentage is to take place independent of any variations in such factors as well productivity, porosity, permeability and the presence of connate water in the formation.
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194 So. 2d 351, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mobil-oil-corporation-v-gill-lactapp-1967.