Prairie Oil & Gas Co. v. United States

204 F. 798, 1913 U.S. Commerce Ct. LEXIS 10
CourtCommerce Court
DecidedMarch 11, 1913
DocketNos. 75-80
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 204 F. 798 (Prairie Oil & Gas Co. v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commerce Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Prairie Oil & Gas Co. v. United States, 204 F. 798, 1913 U.S. Commerce Ct. LEXIS 10 (Colo. 1913).

Opinions

KNAPP, Presiding Judge.

By an amendment approved June 29, 1906, which took effect 60 days thereafter, the provisions of the act to regulate commerce were extended and made to apply "to any corporation or any person or persons engaged in the transportation of oil or other commodity, except water and, except natural or artificial gas, by means of pipe lines, or partly by pipe lines and partly by railroad, or partly by pipe lines and partly by water, * * * who shall be considered and held to be common carriers within the meaning and purpose of this act. * * * ”

Subsequently, in June, 1911, the Interstate Commerce Commission on its own motion instituted a proceeding, “In the' Matter of Pipe Pines,” No. 4,199, to which numerous companies using pipe lines for the transportation of oil, including the several petitioners above named, were made parties respondent. The stated purpose of this inquiry was to determine whether any of the rates, regulations, or practices of the respondents, or either of them, were unreasonable or discriminatory, or otherwise in violation of the act, and to ascertain the manner and method in which their business was carried on, matters respecting which, as the order recites, complaint had been made to the Commission.

During the following months an extended investigation appears to have been conducted, which presumably disclosed, among other things, the principal facts relating to the location, extent, ownership, and activities of the various pipe lines of the respondent companies. After the taking of testimony was concluded, and in the order or notice fixing May 10, 1912, as the date for final hearing, certain questions of law were propounded by the Commission, and it is assumed that these questions were discussed when the matter was argued and submitted. Afterwards, and on June 3, 1912, the Commission made and filed its report of the proceeding, as required by law, and thereupon entered an order in and by which 13 of the respondents therein specified, including the above-named petitioners, were notified and required “to file with this Commission, on or before the 1st day of September, 1912, schedules of their rates and charges for the transportation of oil, in compliance with the provisions of the act to regulate commerce.” (The effective date was subsequently postponed for a period which has not yet expired.)

Shortly thereafter the above-entitled suits were brought to set aside and annul this order, the several petitioners basing their right to such relief upon grounds which will presently be stated. The United States filed an answer to each suit, but later withdrew its answer in No. 75, the Prairie Oil & Gas Company Case, and substituted a motion to dismiss for want of equity. In No. 77 the Wellsville Refining Company intervened by leave of the court and prayed that the petition be dismissed, and in No. 78 there was a like intervention by the Cornplanter Refining Company. The Interstate Commerce Commission answered at length in each of the cases. Upon the verified petitions filed, by them, respectively, and supporting affidavits the petitioners applied for injunctions pendente lite, and the cases have been argued and submitted on such applications.

[801]*801Whilst each case differs from the others in various particulars, and perhaps in respects which would be important in other connections, the fundamental questions here involved are common to them all and arise out of facts which are practically undisputed. The crude or natural oil produced in the United States is found in various sections of the country, described as “fields,” which are of comparatively limited' area and located at considerable distances from each other. The most important of these appear to be-the Appalachian field, covering parts of the states of New York, Pennsylvania, West Virginia, southeastern Ohio, Kentucky, and Tennessee; the Lima-Indiana and Illinois fields, covering parts of northwestern Ohio, Indiana, and Illinois ; the mid-continent field, covering parts of the states of Kansas and Oklahoma; the Gulf field, covering parts of the states of Louisiana and Texas; the Caddo field in Louisiana and Texas; and other fields in the states of California, Colorado, Wyoming, Michigan, and Missouri. In each of these fields there are hundreds and perhaps thousands of wells from which the crude oil is obtained, and the aggregate output amounts to upward of 200,000,000 barrels per annum.

The oil in its natural state is not well suited to domestic use, and therefore requires a process of refining to prepare it for the needs of consumers. It is inferable from the record that the business of refining crude oil can be profitably conducted only on a large scale and by means of somewhat costly plants, and therefore the number of refineries is comparatively small. These refineries are located for the most part at considerable distances, and sometimes at great distances, from the fields of production, and the customary method of transporting the crude oil to- the refinery is by means of pipe lines. The cost of transporting by this method is said to be not more than 25 to 35 per cent, of the cost by any other agency, and it results that practically all the crude oil produced is moved by pipe lines to the various refineries. There are many thousands of miles of pipe lines now in use, and their operations are correspondingly extensive. Some of these pipe lines, aggregating a large mileage, are admittedly subject to public regulation, because their owners are public service corporations engaged in the business of common carriers; but many of them belong to private companies, which use them only in the conduct of their private business. The private lines in most instances are owned or controlled by the refineries to which they transport crude oil and which they exclusively serve.

The construction of pipe lines, such as are owned by these petitioners, involves a large outlay of capital, and few producers of the crude article are able to provide themselves with such a facility for marketing their output. Consequently, and because the cost of railroad transportation is prohibitive, the great majority of oil producers find it to their interest to sell at the wells to the owners of pipe lines, and, as a practical matter, may have no other alternative. For this reason it comes to pass that these private pipe line companies transport not only the oil supplied by their own wells, but also the much greater amount purchased by them from other producers. In the view we take of the questions involved in this controversy, and the [802]*802grounds upon which we rest our decision, it is deemed unnecessary to describe the pipe line industry in greater detail or to add anything more in this connection than a brief statement respecting the several petitioners.

The Prairie Oil & Gas Company is a corporation organized in 1900 under the laws of the state of Kansas. It owns and operates a system of pipe lines consisting of gathering lines in the mid-continent field, in the states of Kansas and Oklahoma, a trunk line from that field to Griffith in the state of Indiana, where it connects with the Indiana pipe line, and a trunk line in the state of Arkansas, connecting the Oklahoma pipe line with the pipe line of the Standard Oil Company of Louisiana. This company has no refinery, and its business, is confined to producing, purchasing, and selling crude oil, which it delivers to its customers by means of the pipe lines, described. Its own wells yield only about 12,000 barrels per day, and it purchases approximately 70,000 barrels per day-on the average.

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Related

United States v. Champlin Refining Co.
341 U.S. 290 (Supreme Court, 1951)

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Bluebook (online)
204 F. 798, 1913 U.S. Commerce Ct. LEXIS 10, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/prairie-oil-gas-co-v-united-states-com-1913.