Railroad Commission v. Rio Grande Valley Gas Co.

405 S.W.2d 304
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 27, 1966
DocketA-11029
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 405 S.W.2d 304 (Railroad Commission v. Rio Grande Valley Gas Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Railroad Commission v. Rio Grande Valley Gas Co., 405 S.W.2d 304 (Tex. 1966).

Opinions

NORVELL, Justice.

The question involved upon this appeal is whether a Railroad Commission ratable take order dated March 6, 1965 relating to the West Port Isabel Gas Field, Cameron County, Texas, is authorized by the Texas Common Purchaser Act, Article 6049a, 1. c. §§ 8 and 8a, Vernon’s Ann.Tex.Stats. [306]*306The order required Rio Grande Valley Gas Company to “extend its gathering line to the Russell Maguire Well No. 1, Yturria Lease, and to connect said well and to take gas therefrom without unjust or unreasonable discrimination in favor of its own production or that of any other producer in said field area and without unjust or unreasonable discrimination as between the separate reservoirs making up West Port Isabel Field area so that the said Russell Maguire or any other party owning an interest in the Yturria Lease will be afforded an opportunity to produce and sell his ratable share of the total market outlet for all of said reservoirs making up said field area”.

Rio Grande Valley Gas Company attacked the order of the Commission in the District Court of Travis County, Texas, and by decree dated August 12, 1965, that Court declared that such order was invalid and permanently enjoined the Railroad Commission from enforcing or attempting to enforce the same. The Railroad Commission joined by Russell Maguire prosecuted a direct appeal to this Court.

We reverse the judgment of the District Court and vacate the injunction decree.

The central problem in this case encompasses three questions:

1. Has the Railroad Commission the authority to compel a common purchaser pipeline company to purchase gas produced from a reservoir from which such company is taking no gas? The “West Port Isabel Field” is a multiple reservoir area and Rio Grande is taking from some reservoirs and not from others.

2. Under the circumstances disclosed by the record, does the Common Purchaser Act empower the Commission to order Rio Grande to extend its facilities to connect with the Maguire well?

3. Is the Commission’s order fatally defective because it does not purport to fix the terms upon which Rio Grande is to purchase gas from Maguire No. 1 well in view of the fact that appellant and appellee have not agreed to any terms ?

We will discuss these questions in the order stated. However, in order to make clear our holding with reference thereto it is necessary to state in some detail the physical facts relating to the West Port Isabel Field and the drilling operations had therein. Such field or area embraces seven vertically separated gas reservoirs. Three producing wells have been drilled in the field. The first well was drilled by Texas Gulf Producing Company and is a single completion in the 7300' reservoir. The second well was drilled by Rio Grande and is a quadruple completion in the 7300', 7500', 8350' and 8850' reservoirs. It was originally completed in 1963 as a triple completion in the 6850', 8350' and 8850' reservoirs but in 1964, after the 6850' reservoir had been depleted, the present quadruple completion was made. The third well was drilled by appellant, Russell Ma-guire, and was dually completed in the 7700' and 8100' reservoirs. The acreage of the leaseholds involved is as follows: Texas Gulf: 80 acres; Rio Grande: 845.38 acres; and Maguire: 7189.25 acres.

Rio Grande, in addition to being a producer of gas, owns and operates a wholly intrastate pipeline system in the field area. It purchases, transports and sells gas for domestic use in the Lower Rio Grande Valley of Texas and is designated as a public gas utility in its articles of incorporation.

There are three different sizes of pipeline installations operated by Rio Grande in the field area: (1) a six inch transmission line running east from the City of Port Isabel through the town of Los Fresnos; (2) an eight inch line which runs from the north through a measuring station located on State Highway 100 and continues generally southwest to a point northeast of the Port of Brownsville and thence to the [307]*307City of Brownsville; and (3) a pipeline approximately 6447 feet long made up of three and four inch diameter pipes running from Rio Grande’s well to the Highway 100 Measuring Station. The subjoined plat taken from a brief on file herein shows the location of the Highway 100 Station and the existing three and four inch line running from the Rio Grande well to the measuring station. The double dash line indicates the extension to the Maguire well ordered by the Commission. The single dash line indicates the course a connecting line would take between the Maguire well and the [308]*308station by going around the segment of land referred to as the Garcia tract over which Maguire has been unable to obtain a right of way.

[307]

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Railroad Commission v. Rio Grande Valley Gas Co.
405 S.W.2d 304 (Texas Supreme Court, 1966)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
405 S.W.2d 304, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/railroad-commission-v-rio-grande-valley-gas-co-tex-1966.