People v. Associated Oil Co.

294 P. 717, 211 Cal. 93, 1930 Cal. LEXIS 309
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 3, 1930
DocketDocket No. L.A. 12311.
StatusPublished
Cited by67 cases

This text of 294 P. 717 (People v. Associated Oil Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Associated Oil Co., 294 P. 717, 211 Cal. 93, 1930 Cal. LEXIS 309 (Cal. 1930).

Opinion

SHENK, J.

This is a petition for a writ of supersedeas to stay the effect of a preliminary injunction pending an appeal therefrom by the petitioners herein.

The action was commenced in the county of Los Angeles on September 11, 1929, and in the name of the People on the Relation of Fred G. Stevenot, Director of Natural Resources of the State of California against some forty-three defendants who are oil producers owning oil-wells and leases in the Santa Fe oil-field in said county. The purpose of the action is to restrain the alleged unreasonable waste of natural gas from the wells of the defendants. In response to the order to show cause the defendants appeared and after an extended hearing the superior court granted a temporary injunction, the terms of which were complied with except by the defendants Twin Bell Syndicate, Second Twin Bell Syndicate and Star Petroleum. Company, who have taken an appeal from the order granting the temporary injunction and who are the petitioners herein.

, On the hearing it appeared from the allegations of the complaint and the. affidavits and other evidence, both oral and documentary, in support thereof, that during the year 1928, 77,000,000,000 cubic feet of natural gas were wasted into the air from the subsurface oil and gas zones in the state of California through the operation of oil-wells; that because of the increase in the production of oil since that ' time a proportional increase in the wastage of natural gas is taking place, and that in the Santa Fe Springs oil-field alone there was at the time of the commencement of the action a wastage of natural gas to the extent of approxL mately 50.0,000,000- cubic feet of gas per day. This wastage"! was alleged to be unreasonable and unlawful under the j terms of the so-called Oil and Gas Conservation Act. | (Stats. 1915, p. 1404, as amended by Stats. 1929, p. 923.) In granting the preliminary injunction the court found that no sufficient cause had been shown why a preliminary injunction should not be issued as prayed for in the complaint; that the equities of all parties might be fairly con *96 served by a preliminary injunction which would limit the waste of gas by restricting the production thereof to a quantity reasonably in excess of the present outlets for the beneficial use above ground; that the total gas escapage from outlets for all uses, with a reasonable tolerance to take care of fluctuating demands and the necessary waste, would be fixed at 285,000,000 cubic feet of gas per day in said field, and the estimated potential production of oil taken at 237,576 barrels per day distributed among lessees and other operating property units as shown by a schedule set out in the order. It was then provided in the order that the defendants be enjoined until the further order of the court: “1. Prom blowing, releasing, or permitting any natural gas to escape into the air from any well or wells in the Santa Pe Springs oil field before the removal of the gasoline from such natural gas. 2. Prom operating any well producing natural gas in the Santa Pe Springs oil field except while exercising a high degree of care in the selection and adjustment of appliances and in the use thereof for the purpose of keeping each producing well in its ‘ optimum gas-oil ratio’—the term ‘optimum gas-oil ratio’ being defined as the smallest number of cubic feet of gas which can be produced with each barrel of oil from the same well at the same time. 3. Prom producing more net formation gas on the average day of each seven (7) day period from any lease or other property unit than' is set forth in the ‘Allowed Gas Production’ column following:” The name of each operator and of each well operated is then set out in detail and opposite thereto the estimated potential in barrels of oil per day and the allowed gas production in daily average as to each well is stated. The term “Gas-oil ratio”, as used in the order, is declared to be “the proportion which the total number of cubic feet of formation gas bears to the total number of barrels of net oil produced from the same well at the same time, exclusive of the quantity of gas inserted in the well for the purpose of lifting the oil”. The preliminary injunction contains other provisions not necessary to be noticed, except that the court retained jurisdiction to vacate or modify the same on five days’ notice. The order was dated March 19, 1930, and to be effective two days later. On March 28, 1930, the court modified its order as to allowable gas production applicable to certain wells *97 and certain defendants operating the same, including the petitioners herein, and in such a way that instead of a gas allowance of 1200 cubic feet to a potential barrel of oil established by the original order, the petitioners were allowed approximately 2,000 cubic feet of gas to a potential barrel of oil. The oil cut in the field was fifty per cent of the potential, consequently the petitioners were allowed a potential ratio of 4,000 cubic feet of gas to a barrel of oil. Prom the order granting the temporary injunction the petitioners herein .have taken an appeal.

The authority for the action in which the temporary in- j junction was issued is found in section 14b of the Oil and Gas Conservation Act (Stats. 1915, p. 1404, as amended, Stats. 1929, p. 923). The purpose of the act is stated inj its amended title, which recites in part: “An act to protect the natural resources of petroleum and gas from waste and destruction. ’ ’ Section 8b of the amended act reads: “The unreasonable waste of natural gas by the act, omis- i | sion, sufferance or insistence of the lessor, lessee or opera- \| tor of any land containing oil or gas, or both, whether be- l Í fore or after the removal of gasoline from such natural v gas, is hereby declared to be opposed to the public interest and is hereby prohibited and declared to be unlawful. The blowing, release or escape of natural gas into the air , shall be prima facie evidence of unreasonable waste.” Sec- ( tion 14b of the act provides in part: “Whenever it appears to the director of the department of natural resources that the owners, lessors, lessees or operators of any well or wells producing oil and gas or oil or gas are causing or permitting an unreasonable waste._ of _ gas, he may institute, or have proceedings instituted, in the name of the people of the state of California, to enjoin such unreasonable waste of gas. . . . Such proceedings shall be instituted in the Superior Court for the county in which the well or wells from which the unreasonable waste of gas is occurring or any thereof are situated. The owners, lessors, lessees or operators causing or permitting an unreasonable waste of gas in the same oil or gas field, although their properties and interests may be separately owned and their unreasonable waste separate and distinct, may be made parties to said action. In such suits no restraining order shall be issued ex parte, but otherwise the procedure shall be gov *98 erned by the provisions of chapter three, title seven, part two of the Code of Civil Procedure of the state of California and no temporary or permanent injunction issued in such proceedings shall be refused or dissolved or stayed pending appeal upon the giving of any bond or undertaking, or otherwise.”

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Bluebook (online)
294 P. 717, 211 Cal. 93, 1930 Cal. LEXIS 309, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-associated-oil-co-cal-1930.