Oklahoma Natural Gas v. State Ex Rel. West, Att'y.

1915 OK 471, 150 P. 475, 47 Okla. 601, 1915 Okla. LEXIS 198
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 15, 1915
Docket6764
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1915 OK 471 (Oklahoma Natural Gas v. State Ex Rel. West, Att'y.) 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
Oklahoma Natural Gas v. State Ex Rel. West, Att'y., 1915 OK 471, 150 P. 475, 47 Okla. 601, 1915 Okla. LEXIS 198 (Okla. 1915).

Opinion

TURNER, J.

From an order of the district court of Oklahoma county rendered and entered March 7, 1914, granting a peremptory writ of mandamus commanding the Oklahoma Natural Gas Company to file in the office of the Corporation Commission “proper and explicit authorized acceptance-of the provisions of the act entitled ‘An act to regulate corporations, associations, and persons engaged in this state, in the business of carrying natural gas through pipe lines,’ ” etc. (approved March 26, 1913, Sess. Laws 1913, p. 166), and, among other things, “to purchase *603 ratably without discrimination, of each owner or producer of natural gas from the common source of supply in all gas fields where said defendant at the time is taking or producing from said common source of supply in all cases where the owner or purchaser shall properly offer the same for purchase at the common point of intake herein ordered to be established by defendant, and according to any rules or regulations that the Corporation Commission of this state may from time to time establish to govern such purchase;” and “* * * to transport and carry as a common carrier, ratably, natural gas, without discrimination, when delivered to it at the common delivery points herein ordered to be established by the defendant in each of the fields from which at the time it shall be transporting gas, in all cases where at the time it is transporting gas at a common carrier, and under such reasonable rules and regulations as the Corporation Commission of the state may from time to time prescribe for the conduct of such business,” and in all things comply . with the provisions of said act — Oklahoma Natural Gas Company, plaintiff in error, defendant below, brings the case here, and says the court erred in letting the writ go, because, among other things, it says, mandamus will not lie.

Pertinent to the inquiry of whether mandamus will or will not lie, the record discloses that the motion for the writ was filed June 4, 1913. At that time defendant was and still is a corporation, duly organized under the laws of the territory of Oklahoma as a gas purchasing, producing, transporting, and delivering company, and was and is engaged in the business -of producing and transporting its production of natural gas through a system of pipe lines to certain cities in the state from its fields acquired, in what was then Indian Territory, by and with the approval of the United States, prior to the erection of the state. Since that time it has acquired other gas lands *604 and bought other gas production, and is the owner of many wells throughout the state, and, as such, was and'is engaged in producing, transporting, and delivering gas to the limits of those cities at the end of its pipe lines, which it sells to domestic corporations in which it owns no interest, and over which it has no control. The gas is found in porous strata at great depths underground. It is reached by drilling wells into the stratum through which the gas reaches the surface by natural pressure. The wells in the several fields belonging to defendant all draw from the same source of supply as do wells in the same fields owned and operated by other producers, and by so much as one takes, the supply is diminished, and when reducea to possession it is of such a nature that its storage is “commercially impossible.”

The record further discloses that while so operating the Legislature passed the act in question. Both sides agree that the act is leveled at corporations engaged, as is and was defendant, in the business of purchasing, producing, transporting, and delivering natural gas through pipe lines within the state. Section 1 of the act provides that every corporation exercising .or claiming the right to carry natural gas through pipe lines for hire or otherwise, or exercising or claiming the right to engage in the business of producing, piping, or transporting, or engaged in the business of buying or selling the same within the limits of the state, shall not thereafter possess the right so to do except as authorized by and subject to the provisions of the act. Section 3 provides that every such corporation, “within the limits of this state, is allowed by, and upon compliance with the requirements of this act, as owner, lessee, * * * which is now engaged or hereafter shall engage in the business of purchasing natural gas, shall be a common purchaser thereof, and shall purchase all the natural gas in the vicinity of, or which may be reasonably *605 reached by its pipe lines, or gathering branches, without discrimination in favor of one producer or one person as against another, and shall fully perform all the duties of a common purchaser,” and, further, that if it shall be unable to perform the same or be legally excused from purchasing and transporting all the natural gas produced or offered, then it shall purchase and transport gas from each producer ratably and in proportion to the average production, and it is prohibited from discriminating in price in favor of its own production, etc. Section 4, after reasserting certain of the foregoing provisions, makes certain exceptions from the operation of the act. Section 5 makes it unlawful for such corporation to continue to engage in the business of carrying and transporting natural gas for hire, or otherwise, without becoming a common carrier as defined by, and accepting the provisions of, the act, (or) within the limits of the act (state), to own or operate any gas well or wells, gas leases, or other such holdings oí interests in this state after six months after the approval of the act, and requires that thereafter they shall divest themselves of all legal right of ownership, interest, or control, directly or indirectly, in any gas well, gas lease, gas Holdings, or interests in this state.

Section 6 provides:

“Before any corporation, * * * partnership or other person shall have * * * or exercise the right of eminent domain, right of way, right to locate, maintain or operate pipe lines, fixtures or equipment thereunto belonging, or used in connection therewith, as authorized by the provisions of this act, or shall have, possess, enjoy or exercise any right * * * conferred by this act, every such corporation, * * * partnership or other person, shall file in the office of said Corporation Commission proper and explicit authorized acceptance of the provisions of this act and the Constitution of this state, [and] in cases of pipe lines a plat showing in detail the points within this state between which, and the route along which *606 the trunk lines are proposed to be constructed, the intended size * * * thereof, and the location and capacity of all pumping stations. * * *”

Section 7 authorizes every domestic pipe line company in this state to build, lay, construct, and maintain gas pipe lines over, under, across, and through all highways in the state or any public place, under the supervision of the Corporation Commission as to where and how it shall be done, provided, etc., and, among other things, extends to foreign corporations organized under the laws of any state ' or territory of the United States, and doing or proposing to do business in this state, and which shall have become' bodies corporate pursuant' to its laws, and which shall have registered their acceptance of the terms of the act, the right to receive all the benefits by the act provided.

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Halton v. State Ex Rel. Lasley
1924 OK 501 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1924)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1915 OK 471, 150 P. 475, 47 Okla. 601, 1915 Okla. LEXIS 198, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oklahoma-natural-gas-v-state-ex-rel-west-atty-okla-1915.