Pacific Gas & Electric Co. v. Zuckerman

189 Cal. App. 3d 1113, 234 Cal. Rptr. 630, 1987 Cal. App. LEXIS 1265
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 13, 1987
DocketC000138
StatusPublished
Cited by131 cases

This text of 189 Cal. App. 3d 1113 (Pacific Gas & Electric Co. v. Zuckerman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pacific Gas & Electric Co. v. Zuckerman, 189 Cal. App. 3d 1113, 234 Cal. Rptr. 630, 1987 Cal. App. LEXIS 1265 (Cal. Ct. App. 1987).

Opinion

Opinion

SPARKS, J.

—In this appeal we are called upon to determine a variation on the theme of the “rule of capture” as it applies to recovered gas. Plaintiff *1121 Pacific Gas and Electric Company (PGandE) acquired storage rights to an exhausted gas reservoir on an island in the San Joaquin delta. It also entered into an oil and gas agreement with the owners of the island to operate a nearby well on a parcel adjacent to the reservoir and to pay royalties for gas extracted from the well. PGandE then purchased gas from suppliers in Texas and Canada and injected it into the reservoir for use in periods of high demand. Meantime, it operated the nearby well. As fate would have it, the injected gas migrated to the adjacent parcel and PGandE found itself paying royalties on its own gas. This inevitable lawsuit eventually followed. The trial court entered a judgment requiring PGandE to pay over $6.5 million in royalties on its own gas. One of the questions on appeal is whether the owner loses its ownership of recovered gas when it injects that gas into a natural reservoir and the gas migrates. We hold that once gas has been reduced to personal possession, the owner is not thereafter divested of ownership simply because it stores the gas underground and that gas migrates. Consequently, the stored gas was not subject to capture by others and PGandE was not required to pay royalties on its own gas. In addition to this question, we also consider the valuation of storage and mineral rights and the application of the parol evidence rule to an oil and gas agreement.

This litigation commenced when PGandE filed an action in eminent domain to acquire the right to inject, store and withdraw gas from beneath 472 acres on the adjacent parcel belonging to the defendants. Additionally PGandE sought to quiet title to gas which had migrated under defendants’ land after its injection into the underground storage facility. PGandE also sought a refund of excess royalty payments it had made to defendants. Defendants cross-complained for what they termed declaratory relief, inverse condemnation, trespass, nuisance, breach of lease, and estoppel. After a court trial, judgment was entered granting PGandE’s request for condemnation of the property interest it sought, and awarding defendants damages in the amount of $13,793,155, together with prejudgment interest. The court entered a subsequent order granting litigation expenses to defendants in the sum of $169,011.69, but denying their request for attorneys’ fees. PGandE appeals from the judgment awarding defendants nearly $14 million and defendants appeal from the denial of attorneys’ fees. Additionally, defendants have filed a motion for sanctions against PGandE for prosecuting a frivolous appeal. For reasons we shall explain, we have concluded that the judgment must be reversed. Needless to say, the request for sanctions must be denied as well.

Facts and Procedural History

Recently in Lynch v. State Bd. of Equalization (1985) 164 Cal.App.3d 94 [210 Cal.Rptr. 335], we were confronted with questions concerning the valuation of oil and gas producing properties for property tax purposes. In this *1122 case we are again confronted with questions concerning valuation, but here the date of valuation arises at a time after the life of the oil and gas producing property has expired. As we noted in Lynch, oil and gas exists in the interstices of rock occupying certain strata. (Id., at p. 99.) When these deposits are located, the oil and gas can be extracted, initially by the use of the reserve’s natural pressure (called reservoir energy) and later through secondary methods of extraction. (Id., at pp. 99, 101.) Although not all the oil and gas can be extracted from a deposit, eventually a field will be depleted to the extent that it is no longer useful as a producing property. (Ibid.) When this occurs some gas fields, due to their geological and geographical characteristics and their large capacity, can be economically used for storage purposes. In this process the user of the field (typically, but not invariably a public utility) purchases gas from other sources during periods of low demand, and injects it into the now depleted reservoir. During periods of high demand this foreign gas can be withdrawn from the reservoir and sold to customers. This case concerns such a property, known as the McDonald Island gas field.

The McDonald Island gas field was originally discovered in June 1936 by the Standard Oil Company of California. The reservoir, called the McDonald sands, lies approximately 5,200 to 5,300 feet below sea level. 1 Standard operated the property as a gas producing property until 1958. Beginning in 1947, as the McDonald Island field was nearing the end of its productive life, Standard acquired the right to store gas in the lands in which it had previously only held oil and gas leases. In 1958 PGandE and Standard agreed to an exchange of properties. It appears that PGandE then held an oil and gas interest in a producing gas field in Rio Vista which it used to trade for the McDonald Island interests of Standard. The parties placed a value on the trade of $7,391,597, which was approved by the Public Utilities Commission. PGandE sought and obtained approval of the Public Utilities Commission to use the McDonald Island property as a storage project.

Defendants are the landowners of McDonald Island. They have acted through John Zuckerman, who was appointed as agent for all the landowners. By 1962 Zuckerman had come to the conclusion that the existing agreements were inequitable and so he sought to renegotiate them. Among other things, he objected that the agreements did not require exploratory drilling on land not occupied by the storage reservoir. 2 He stated that if the agreements were not changed then “we were going to court and ask that they be changed on *1123 the basis of inequity.” The parties renegotiated and in 1963 a new agreement was executed. It is that agreement which is in dispute here.

In the 1963 agreement McDonald Island was divided into three parcels, which may be illustrated with the following diagram:

[[Image here]]

In the diagram, the cross-hatched area in the center of parcel I represents the area the parties then believed to be occupied by the storage reservoir. Parcel I included the storage reservoir and in that parcel PGandE owned storage rights and all the mineral rights. In parcel II PGandE retained the storage rights and the gas rights and defendants retained the oil rights. For this purpose, “oil” was defined as hydrocarbons recovered in paying quantities as a liquid and which remained as a liquid under atmospheric pressure and temperature, and “gas” included all other hydrocarbons but did not include asphaltum. Under the agreement PGandE leased the oil rights from defendants in parcel II, but was not required to explore for oil while it operated the storage reservoir. Parcel III included the property to the west of parcel I, and additionally included the mineral rights below parcels I and II at a depth greater than 6,835 subsea. 3

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
189 Cal. App. 3d 1113, 234 Cal. Rptr. 630, 1987 Cal. App. LEXIS 1265, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pacific-gas-electric-co-v-zuckerman-calctapp-1987.