Railroad Commission of Texas v. Texas Company

298 S.W.2d 666, 7 Oil & Gas Rep. 1096, 1957 Tex. App. LEXIS 2360
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 2, 1957
Docket10442
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 298 S.W.2d 666 (Railroad Commission of Texas v. Texas Company) 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. Texas Company, 298 S.W.2d 666, 7 Oil & Gas Rep. 1096, 1957 Tex. App. LEXIS 2360 (Tex. Ct. App. 1957).

Opinions

HUGHES, Justice.

This is a Rule 37 case in which the Railroad Commission of Texas is appellant and The Texas Company is appellee.

The Texas Company sought an exception to the spacing rules in order to drill Well No. 24 on its 182.8 acre lease in the Mc-Elroy field in Crane and Upton Counties. The exception sought was denied by the Commission and granted by the Court below. Confiscation only, and not waste, is involved.

In 1929 The Texas Company purchased from W. A. Landreth an oil and gas lease covering 182.8 acres in the McElroy field. This lease is in the shape of a long, narrow strip, running east and west, approximately 3.77 miles long and 400 feet wide. Then on the lease were 16 producing wells. The Texas Company plugged one of these wells and drilled 7 more. All of the wells on the lease are located on its west 133 acres and all of such wells were drilled under exceptions to the spacing rules for the McElroy field1 the orders granting the exceptions reciting that they were granted “to prevent confiscation of property.”

Prior to 1955 The Texas Company believed that only the west 133 acres of its lease were productive. It acted on such belief by failing to drill the east 50 acres and by failing to include such acreage in any proration unit which if included would have had the effect of enhancing its well allowables since they are partly based upon acreage.

In August 1955, on an adjoining lease, a well was completed at a point 467 feet from the southeast corner of The Texas Company lease and in September, on another adjoining lease, a well was completed at a point 330 feet south of the most easterly portion of the south line of its lease. Each of these wells had a daily potential in excess of 1000 barrels and prove the productivity of the east 50 acres of The Texas Company lease.

The nearest well on The Texas Company lease to the two wells described in the preceding paragraph is located more than a mile from such wells and has a daily potential of 3.2 barrels.

The two neighboring wells offsetting the most easterly portion of the lease of The Texas Company have a total allowable of 342 barrels per calendar day. The total similar allowable of all Texas Company wells is 261 barrels.

If the 50 east acres of The Texas Company lease were properly shaped 5 additional wells could be drilled on it without the necessity of seeking an exception. They would fall within the “10 acre spacing rule.”

Mr. L. W. Folmar, a petroleum engineer and an employee of The Texas Company testified that the wells producing from his employer’s lease will lade 216,000 barrels of producing the oil under such lease at the time of the hearing on the exception here sought. He further testified that the present wells on such lease will drain little if any of the oil under its east 50 acres but that the two neighboring wells, above mentioned, will drain large quantities of oil from beneath such 50 acres.

The testimony of Mr. Folmar as to these matters is undisputed.

[668]*668These facts showing uncompensated drainage prove confiscation as a matter of law. 31-A Tex.Jur. p. 700. We must now appraise the following facts developed by the Commission.

The Texas Company lease has already produced in excess of the oil which originally underlay it.

The Texas Company strip is drilled to a density of one well to 8.3 acres. The average density of adjoining production units and leases is one well to 15.97 acres.

For the month of October 1955, The Texas Company recovered 40.8 barrels of oil per lease acre while the average per acre recovery for adjoining leases was 27.2 barrels.

The 1951 density order2 for the McElroy field allowed one well to 10 acres and since its adoption no exceptions to it have been granted. The well in suit, if granted, will give The Texas Company one well to 7.9 acres.

That The Texas Company lease has already produced in excess of the amount of oil originally beneath it is inadmissible to defeat the right to this well for two reasons: (1) “* * * The Commission, in administering the conservation laws, deals with situations as they exist at the time its orders are made; and such orders are prospective and not retrospective in opera-ation. * * * ” Sun Oil Company v. Potter, Tex.Civ.App. Austin, 182 S.W.2d 923, 928, reversed 144 Tex. 151, 189 S.W.2d 482, but affirming the principle which we have quoted from the opinion of the Court of Civil Appeals. (2) “Beginning with the earliest cases the courts have uniformly held that a leaseholder or owner is entitled to drill for and produce the equivalent of the recoverable oil under his land, and this rule applies to oil which originally lay beneath the land as well as to oil which migrates to the land as the result of physical conditions and natural laws relating to the fugacious nature of oil.” Railroad Commission v. Magnolia Petroleum Company, Tex.Civ.App. Austin, 169 S.W.2d 253, 255.

To say that the drilling of this well should be denied because it will violate the density rule is to ignore the rule that exceptions will be allowed to prevent confiscation. Under this record the well sought comes clearly within the exception.

By way of further comment we wish to emphasize the absence of protest by any neighboring operator or royalty owner and to direct attention to the past action of the Commission which shows it granted The Texas Company 7 additional wells on the west 133 acres of the lease as exceptions in order to prevent confiscation even though such acreage had 15 producing wells before the first exception was granted.

We do not question the propriety of any of those exceptions granted by the Commission but when they are compared with the failure of the Commission to grant the drilling of one well on the east 50 acres which if properly shaped would be entitled to 5 wells without an exception and which had never until recently been considered productive and which had never been dedicated or assigned to any proration unit we are assured that the action of the Trial Court, which we affirm, comports not only with reason but with the previous policy of the Commission.

The foregoing portion of our opinion disposes of the first two points made by the Commission which were to the effect that the order appealed from was supported by substantial evidence and that the court below has disregarded the policy of the Commission in the McElroy field.

The third point is that the court below erred in holding that the Relinquishment Act, Arts. 5369, 5370, V.A.C.S., justified and required its judgment.

[669]*669The Texas Company did plead and prove that its lease was subject to the Relinquishment Act hut the Trial Court made no specific ruling in this respect and The Texas Company does not brief the question here. We, therefore, refrain from discussing it except to say that it does not enter into our disposition of this case.

The last two points are directed to that portion of the judgment which gave The Texas Company the right to drill its well at a precise location and directed the Commission to issue such permits, orders etc.

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Railroad Commission of Texas v. Texas Company
298 S.W.2d 666 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1957)

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298 S.W.2d 666, 7 Oil & Gas Rep. 1096, 1957 Tex. App. LEXIS 2360, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/railroad-commission-of-texas-v-texas-company-texapp-1957.