Railroad Commission of Texas v. Bishop Petroleum, Inc.

736 S.W.2d 720
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 28, 1987
DocketNo. 10-86-140-CV
StatusPublished

This text of 736 S.W.2d 720 (Railroad Commission of Texas v. Bishop Petroleum, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Railroad Commission of Texas v. Bishop Petroleum, Inc., 736 S.W.2d 720 (Tex. Ct. App. 1987).

Opinion

OPINION

THOMAS, Justice.

The principal question in this appeal is whether the Mineral Interest Pooling Act authorizes the Texas Railroad Commission to forcibly pool two tracts which are under-laid by deposits of oil or gas that do not fit within the definition of a “common reservoir” in section 86.002(4) of the Texas Natural Resources Code. See Tex.Nat.Res. Code Ann. § 86.002(4) (Vernon 1978). The holding is that the Commission’s pooling authority is limited by that definition and that it can only pool tracts which are embraced in a reservoir whose deposits, if separated, are in natural communication.

Wiggins Brothers, Inc. filed an application with the Commission to pool its working interest in a 69.629-acre tract with an adjacent 634.371-acre tract in which the working interest was owned by Bishop Petroleum, Inc. The two tracts are located in the Donie (Pettit) Field which, all parties agree, contains multiple stratas and lenti-cular reservoirs of oil and gas.1 The Commission ordered the tracts pooled over Bishop Petroleum’s opposition and required Wiggins Brothers to pay Bishop Petroleum a 50% “risk penalty” plus a proportionate share of the costs incurred by Bishop Petroleum in drilling the Eppes No. 1 Well located on the larger tract.2 Bishop Petroleum appealed the pooling order to the district court in Freestone County where the tracts are located. The Commission and Wiggins Brothers appeal from the judgment of the district court which reversed the pooling order and remanded the cause to the Commission with an instruction that it dismiss the proceeding for want of jurisdiction. The judgment will be reversed and a judgment rendered affirming the pooling order.

The Mineral Interest Pooling Act, originally adopted in 1965 as article 6008c, now appears in the Texas Natural Resources Code. See Tex.Nat.Res.Code Ann. §§ 102.-001-.112 (Vernon 1978 and Vernon Supp. 1987). Section 102.011 of the Act provides:

When two or more separately owned tracts of land are embraced in a common reservoir of oil or gas for which the [Texas Railroad Commission] has established the size and shape of proration units, whether by temporary or permanent field rules, and where there are separately owned interests in oil and gas within an existing or proposed proration unit in the common reservoir and the owners have not agreed to pool their interests, and where at least one of the owners of the right to drill has drilled or has proposed to drill a well on the existing or proposed proration unit to the common reservoir, the [Texas Railroad [726]*726Commission], on the application of an owner specified in Section 102.012 of this code and for the purpose of avoiding the drilling of unnecessary wells, protecting correlative rights, or preventing waste, shall establish a unit and pool all of the interests in the unit within an area containing the approximate acreage of the proration unit, which unit shall in no event exceed 160 acres for an oil well or 640 acres for a gas well plus 10 percent tolerance.

Id. at § 102.011 (Vernon 1978) (emphasis added). Although the legislature did not define “common reservoir” in the Act, it had previously defined that term in section 2(c) of article 6008. See Tex.Rev.Civ.Stat. Ann. art. 6008, § 2(c) (Vernon 1962).

The initial question is whether the legislature intended, when it adopted the Mineral Interest Pooling Act, to give the term “common reservoir” the same meaning as the statutory definition. When the legislature has clearly defined a term in a statute and then subsequently uses that same term in a similar statute, without indicating that a different meaning is intended, a presumption arises that it intended the term to have the same meaning as the definition in the prior statute. See Brown v. Darden, 121 Tex. 495, 50 S.W.2d 261, 263 (1932). The sequence of events supports a logical presumption that the legislature intended the term “common reservoir”, as used in the Mineral Interest Pooling Act, to have the same meaning as the statutory definition.

That definition is now contained in section 86.002(4) of the Natural Resources Code:

“Common reservoir” means all or part of any oil or gas field or oil and gas field that comprises and includes any area that is underlaid or that, from geological or other scientific data or experiments or from drilling operations or other evidence, appears to be underlaid by a common pool or accumulation of oil or gas or oil and gas.

Tex.Nat.Res.Code Ann. § 86.002(4) (Vernon 1978) (emphasis added). Court decisions have elaborated on the meaning of this definition and the type of deposits that fit within it. See Gage v. Railroad Commission, 582 S.W.2d 410, 413 (Tex.1979); Railroad Com’n v. Graford Oil Corp., 557 S.W.2d 946, 950 (Tex.1977). “Common pool,” “common source of supply,” and “common reservoir” are synonymous terms. Gage, 582 S.W.2d at 413 (citing Tex.Nat.Res.Code Ann. § 85.001(2) (Vernon 1978)). Because the legislature wrote the definition in terms of natural communication, separated pools of oil and gas must be in natural communication with each other before they qualify as a “common reservoir”. See id. at 414. This is true even though the separated pools are in pressure communication through wellbores and underlie a single gas-producing area or field. Id. Thus, lenticular reservoirs, which are often separated, do not fall within the definition unless they communicate naturally. See id. Considering the clear meaning of the definition, the legislature must have intended, when it used the term “common reservoir” in the Mineral Interest Pooling Act, to limit the Commission’s pooling authority to deposits in natural and not man-made communication. That legislative intent, having been ascertained, must be honored until it is changed by amendment. See Manry v. Robison, 122 Tex. 213, 56 S.W.2d 438, 447 (1932).

The Commission and Wiggins Brothers contend that the agency’s pooling authority was broadened to include all separated deposits, regardless of whether they are in communication, by the 1979 and 1981 amendments to sections 85.046, 85.053, 85.-055, 86.012 and 86.081 of the Natural Resources Code. See Tex.Nat.Res.Code Ann. §§ 85.046(b), 85.053(b), 85.055(d), 86.012(b), 86.081(b) (Vernon Supp.1987). These sections, which are often referred to as the “commingling statutes”, authorize the Commission to commingle, prorate and regulate production from multiple stratigraphic or lenticular deposits when necessary to prevent waste, promote conservation or protect correlative rights. See Railroad Com’n of Texas v. Mote Resources, 645 S.W.2d 639, 644 (Tex.App. — Austin 1983, no writ). The Commission and Wiggins Broth[727]

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