Murphy Oil Corporation v. Walter J. W. Hickel, Secretary of the Interior

439 F.2d 417, 1971 U.S. App. LEXIS 11492
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedMarch 8, 1971
Docket20202_1
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 439 F.2d 417 (Murphy Oil Corporation v. Walter J. W. Hickel, Secretary of the Interior) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Murphy Oil Corporation v. Walter J. W. Hickel, Secretary of the Interior, 439 F.2d 417, 1971 U.S. App. LEXIS 11492 (8th Cir. 1971).

Opinions

VOGEL, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from the United States District Court for the Western [418]*418District of Arkansas. That court awarded Murphy Oil Company, appellee, a declaratory judgment correcting what it found to be an interpretative error by the Secretary of the Interior under the Mandatory Oil Import Program,1 and a mandatory injunction requiring the Secretary to increase Murphy’s crude and unfinished oil import allocation under that program.2 The Secretary appeals. Jurisdiction of the federal courts is based upon 28 U.S.C.A. § 1331.

A brief review of the purpose and history of the Oil Import Program is essential in order to better comprehend the context in which this case arises and our disposition of the issues.3

Originally, the program to regulate the amount of oil imported into the United States was voluntary and was initiated to alleviate the national security problems arising because of the extensive reliance by American industry on the overseas importation of foreign oil. See Eastern States Petroleum & Chemical Corp. v. Seaton, D.D.C., 1958, 165 F.Supp. 363.

Further study indicated that the voluntary program would not satisfactorily curb the reliance on imported oil and the President ordered a Mandatory Oil Import Program. Proclamation 3279, 73 Stat. c25 (1959). Two geographical areas were established for the program, one east of the Rocky Mountains (Districts I-IV) and the other west of the Rocky Mountains (District V). Generally, persons could not import crude or unfinished oils into these areas without a license and an import allocation which would be provided upon application to the Secretary of the Interior. The Secretary was instructed to issue regulations for the operation of the program which regulations were to provide, in part, for

“ * * * a fair and equitable distribution among persons having refinery capacity in these districts in relation to refinery inputs during an appropriate period or periods selected by the Secretary and may provide for distribution in such manner as to avoid drastic reductions below the last allocations under the Voluntary Oil Import Program.” Proclamation 3279, 73 Stat. c25, 3(b) (1) (1959).

Under the regulations a person entitled to apply for an allocation who has had either refinery capacity in the districts or recent refinery inputs, (32A CFR Chap. X §4(a))

“* * * includes an individual, a corporation, firm, or other business organization or legal entity, and an agency of a State, territorial, or local government, but does not include a department, establishment, or agency of the United States; * * 32A CFR Chap. X § 22(a).

This definition is limited by the important rule of § 4(g):

“A person is not eligible individually for an allocation of imports of crude oil and unfinished oils or finished products if the person is a subsidiary or affiliate owned or controlled, by reason of stock ownership or otherwise, by any other individual, corporation, firm, or other business organization or legal entity. The controlling verson and the subsidiary or affiliate owned or controlled will be regarded as one. Allocations will be [419]*419made to the controlling person on behalf of itself and its subsidiary or affiliate but, upon request, licenses will be issued to the subsidiary or affiliate.” (Emphasis supplied.) 32A CFR Chap. X § 4(g).

The regulations provided that the import allocation would be the larger of 1) a percentage of certain of the applicant’s previous inputs which percentage was to be computed on a scale which decreased the allocation as input volume increased (input basis) or 2) a fixed percentage of the last allocation under the Voluntary Import Program (historical basis). 32A CFR Chap. X § 10.

A subsequent proclamation, Proclamation 3290, 73 Stat. c39 (1959), amended Proclamation 3279 to allow the unrestricted import of oil from Canada by overland means,4 5and also to exclude the Canadian oil from the computation of the input basis. The practice continued of including Canadian crude oil in the computation of the historical basis. Thus, a company with a high Canadian input would generally have a higher import quota on the historical basis than it would have on the input basis.

Proclamation 3279 was amended again to provide for a gradual reduction of allocations made on the historical basis and for a more rapid reduction of the historical basis allocations which reflect imports of Canadian crude. Proclamation 3509, 77 Stat. 963 (1962). Shortly after the Middle East crisis of June 1967, another amendment provided that historical allocations reflecting imports of Canadian crude oil should not be reduced beyond the point which

“ * * * would result in a reduced historical allocation which is smaller than an allocation for the same period would be if computed (for the purposes of comparison only) on the basis of a total of refinery inputs (of the holder of the historical allocation) which includes inputs of crude oil and unfinished oils imported * * * [by overland means from Canada].” Proclamation 3823 subd. 2(b) (1), 82 Stat. 1603, 1604 (1968).

This provision places a floor under and prevents a drastic reduction of the historical allocations of those “Northern Tier” refineries which are refineries located in the northern states (Michigan, Minnesota, Wisconsin) and peculiarly dependent on the import of Canadian oil.3

Basically then the program requires application by a qualified § 4(g) person for an import quota. Upon issuance of a license the company receives the larger of (a) the sliding scale percentage of its input basis or (b) the fixed (but gradually decreasing) percentage of the historical basis which is supported to some extent by a minimum floor provision for the Northern Tier importers.

Murphy Oil Company owns refineries at Superior, Wisconsin (Superior) and at Meraux, Louisiana (Meraux). Both were purchased by Murphy with recognized histories under the voluntary program and Superior is one of the Northern Tier refineries.6 Operating statis[420]*420tics from the Superior and Meraux refineries traditionally were combined to determine Murphy’s proper quota. From the adoption of the mandatory program through 1967 Murphy received eleven allocations based on the historical calculation. For the allocation period 1967 Murphy’s inputs became the basis for its allocations.

With respect to the allocation awarded to Murphy for 1968 which again had been determined on the appropriate percentage of inputs, Murphy filed an appeal with the Oil Import Appeals Board on the grounds that an interpretative error had been made in determining its allocation under the recently revised version of Proclamation 3279.7 Its basic contention there and throughout the ensuing proceedings was that since the minimum floor proviso was designed to benefit Northern Tier producers, and since only one of Murphy’s refineries was in the Northern Tier, its historical allocation must be computed separately or otherwise Murphy will lose the benefit of the floor.

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439 F.2d 417, 1971 U.S. App. LEXIS 11492, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murphy-oil-corporation-v-walter-j-w-hickel-secretary-of-the-interior-ca8-1971.