Pennmark Resources Co. v. Oklahoma Corp. Commission

2000 OK CIV APP 63, 6 P.3d 1076, 71 O.B.A.J. 1639, 2000 Okla. Civ. App. LEXIS 21, 2000 WL 714433
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 31, 2000
Docket92,559
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 2000 OK CIV APP 63 (Pennmark Resources Co. v. Oklahoma Corp. Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pennmark Resources Co. v. Oklahoma Corp. Commission, 2000 OK CIV APP 63, 6 P.3d 1076, 71 O.B.A.J. 1639, 2000 Okla. Civ. App. LEXIS 21, 2000 WL 714433 (Okla. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

OPINION

ADAMS, Judge:

T1 After Louis Dreyfus Natural Gas Corporation (hereinafter, LDNG) refused to turn over operations of a waterflood unit to Penn-mark Resources Company (Pennmark), Pennmark asked the Oklahoma Corporation Commission (the Commission) to enforce. the provisions of its order creating the Northwest Flats Unit by examining the procedures followed and the results recorded in a 1997 election concerning the unit operator. The validity of that election, and the extent of the Commission's authority concerning it are at the heart of this appeal.

Underlying Events

2 In the late 19703, the original working interest owners (predecessors in interest to some of the parties in this appeal) entered into a contract for management of production from the Morrow "A" Sand common source of supply underlying lands in Morton County, Kansas and Texas County, Oklahoma. The Commission ultimately incorporated this contract into a unitization order. 1 The Unit Operating Agreement (the Unit Agreement) embodied in the Commission's order provided specific procedures for the selection and removal of the unit operator. Those provisions prohibit the current unit operator from voting in elections for the removal and replacement of a unit operator. The unit operator could be removed if 85 percent of the eligible working interest owners vote for replacement.

3 Stonewater Holding, Inc. (Stonewater) was incorporated on October 24, 1996. In early 1997, LDNG transferred 12 per cent of its ownership in the unit (out of the total of 89.18 per cent LDNG then held) to Stonewa-ter. On December 8, 1997, documents were filed with the Oklahoma Secretary of State memorializing that in November of 1997 Stonewater had merged with LDNG Texas Holdings, Inc. (LTH). LTH is a limited partner with LDNG in a limited partnership. Following the merger, LTH, which is licensed to do business in both Oklahoma and Texas, owned interests in 12 flood water units and some 8,523 wells.

€ 4 In December, 1997, Pennmark cireulat-ed ballots to interest owners for an election to determine if LDNG should be removed as operator and Pennmark should be selected as new operator. After the ballots were returned, Pennmark refused to include the ballot from LTH in the vote count, believing it was merely an alter ego of LDNG and could not be treated as a separate entity for voting purposes. When LDNG refused to surrender operations, Pennmark filed this proceeding. Pennmark's application asked the Commission to determine who was entitled under the Unit Agreement to vote on removal of the operator and selection of a new operator. The answer to that question determined who would be the operator of the unit. If LTH's votes should have been counted, then LDNG withstood the removal vote. If not, Penn-mark had sufficient votes to oust LDNG as operator and take over operations.

1 5 Before the Commission, Pennmark contended the assignment from LDNG to Stone-water was improper, and LDNG and LTH could not be treated as separate owners. According to Pennmark, the transfer of ownership interests between LDNG and Stone-water was not at arms length, LTH was an *1079 alter ego of LDNG, and both entities should both fall under the prohibition against a current unit operator voting in elections for removal and replacement of the unit operator.

T 6 In its order denying Pennmark's application, the Commission concluded Pennmark failed to sustain its burden of proof for removal of LDNG as operator. The Commission specifically concluded:

The evidence presented by Pennmark did not éstablish that the parent/subsidiary corporations were so closely linked and so extricably [sic] entwined as to be effectively one entity. The showing of a common board of directors and unity of corporate purpose was insufficient to pierce the corporate veil. Warner v. Hillcrest Medical Center, 942[sic] P.2d 1060 [914 P.2d 1060] (Okl.App.1995). One must remember that the general rule is that a corporation is a distinct legal entity separate and apart from other legal entities or stockholders. Gulf Oil Corp. v. State, 360 P.2d 933 (Okl.1961). Given the fact that Stonewater has interests in 12 other waterfloods and over 3,500 wells both in Oklahoma and Texas, tends to disprove that Stonewater was created so that its existence was a design or scheme to perpetuate fraud or to avoid the terms of the Unitization Order in this particular Unit. Thus, where the presumption is that the subsidiary is not an instrumentality or ad-junet of the parent corporation; Penn-mark has not prevailed.

JURISDICTION

17 Initially in response to Penn-mark's application, LDNG contended the Commission lacked jurisdiction over what it said was a private rights dispute. The Commission rejected this argument, and neither party raised this issue in their briefs. However, because this Court has an obligation to examine its subject matter jurisdiction and the subject matter jurisdiction of the lower tribunal, sua sponte, we directed the parties to address the jurisdictional question. 2

{18 LDNG again argues this was a private rights dispute and that jurisdiction was in the district courts, not at the Commission. According to LDNG, allowing the Commission to determine this controversy violates 52 0.8.1991 § 287.4, which specifies that the Commission shall not designate the unit operator. Pennmark argues the issue is not whether the Commission could select the operator but whether the procedures employed complied with the order of the Commission for the unit. The Commission determined that it had authority to construe and clarify its order and that what was before it was a question involving a clarification of the process used when electing an operator, not the designation of the operator. We agree that clarification of an order was the issue presented and the one that the Commission addressed. *

19 The Commission has authority, which is 'continuous in nature and which flows from entry of the initial order, to clarify its own orders. Nilsen v. Ports of Call Oil Company, 1985 OK 104, 711 P.2d 98; 52 O.S.1991 § 189 and § 287.2. This is precisely the relief requested by Pennmark in its application. 3 The operator must be elected as provided for in the Unit Agreement. To accomplish that end, the parties needed to know who was eligible to vote according to the order of the Commission, and that determination required clarification of an order of the Commission, an action within the power and authority of the Commission.

§10 This matter is distinguishable from the problem posed in Atlantic Richfield Company v. Tomlinson, 1993 OK 106, ¶ 28, 859 P.2d 1088, 1096, wherein the Court noted that "the instant case involves a dispute over oumership of certain oil and gas interests, not a dispute over rights and equities of *1080 interest owners within a drilling and spacing unit," (emphasis in original), and reiterated that where title is at issue, jurisdiction over controversies lies with the district court. While perhaps inartfully stated at times, 4

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Bluebook (online)
2000 OK CIV APP 63, 6 P.3d 1076, 71 O.B.A.J. 1639, 2000 Okla. Civ. App. LEXIS 21, 2000 WL 714433, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pennmark-resources-co-v-oklahoma-corp-commission-oklacivapp-2000.