Raymond v. Union Texas Petroleum Corp.

697 F. Supp. 270, 101 Oil & Gas Rep. 267, 1988 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11228, 1988 WL 108938
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Louisiana
DecidedSeptember 30, 1988
DocketCiv. A. 87-517
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 697 F. Supp. 270 (Raymond v. Union Texas Petroleum Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Raymond v. Union Texas Petroleum Corp., 697 F. Supp. 270, 101 Oil & Gas Rep. 267, 1988 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11228, 1988 WL 108938 (E.D. La. 1988).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

MENTZ, District Judge.

Lubin Raymond, Sr. and other owners of land in Lafourche Parish, Louisiana filed this diversity suit against defendants, Union Texas Petroleum Corporation (UTP) and Enstar Corporation (Enstar) claiming *271 that defendants are using the plaintiffs’ land for salt water disposal without compensating plaintiffs for that right. Plaintiffs’ complaint alleges that defendants injected salt water into a disposal well on neighboring property which migrated and unlawfully invaded the subsurface of plaintiffs’ property. Plaintiffs claim lost revenues and permanent damage to their property as a result of the salt water disposal. Upon agreement of the parties, the case was submitted upon the briefs, documents, and deposition testimony without a trial.

Plaintiffs own three tracts of land in an area known as Cut Off Field. A large portion of these three tracts was included in the UL-2 Reservoir B Sand Unit A (UL-2 RB SUA) established by the Louisiana Commissioner of Conservation in Order No. 600-L dated July 12, 1979, and effective June 26,1979. 1 Order No. 600-L force pooled the separately owned properties within the unit for production from the sand encountered between the depths of 13,828 feet and 13,898 feet in the McA'les-ter Fuel Company Braud No. 1 S/T Well. Other portions of plaintiffs’ property were similarly included in the Tex W-7 RA SUA, Tex W-8 RA SUA, and Tex W-7 RB SUA, also established by the Commissioner of Conservation.

'Exhibit A was not suitable for publication. It was important to this decision only insofar as it showed the location of the plaintiffs’ tracts in relation to the various units in the Cut-Off Field.
B. Oil, Gas and Mineral Lease dated November 2, 1976, between Lubin Raymond, lessor, and Dave J. Robichaux, lessee.
C. Oil, Gas and Mineral Lease dated October 2, 1979, between Aura P. Raymond, Estelle Raymond Williams, Vivian Raymond Schouest, Lu-bin Raymond, Florine Raymond Cheramie, Theresa Raymond Duet, and Alice Raymond Ledet, lessors, and Dave J. Robichaux, lessee.

Belton Badeaux, a non-party, owns a tract of land adjoining the northern boundary of one of the three tracts owned by plaintiffs. 2 The remaining tracts held by plaintiffs are separated from Badeaux’s property by another tract approximately fifty feet wide. Badeaux’s property is unitized with plaintiffs’ property in the UL-2 RB SUA.

Defendants’ predecessor in interest executed standard oil, gas, and mineral leases with plaintiffs on each of their three tracts 3 and with Belton Badeaux. 4 The oil, gas, and mineral leases are identical in all material respects. 5 In 1979, defendants drilled and completed the Minóla P. Ba-deaux Well No. 1 on the tract owned by Belton Badeaux and utilized with plaintiffs’ land. The well was drilled to a depth of approximately 14,000 feet and then plugged when it did not produce oil or gas.

In 1981, defendants applied for and received a permit from the Commissioner of *272 Conservation to recomplete the Badeaux well as a salt water disposal well for salt water produced in the Cut Off Field. In order to make the conversion to a salt water disposal well, perforations were made in the well casing at a depth of approximately 2650 feet. This is not the stratum unitized as the UL-2 RB SUA, which is located at 13,828 to 13,898 feet beneath the surface. Salt water is transported to the well by truck and pipeline and then injected at pressures averaging 450 psi to 600 psi into the well to a subsurface stratum found between 2628 feet and 2651 feet beneath the surface. The formation into which the salt water is injected contained salt water in its natural state before the injection began. The nature of the formation confines the salt water to that stratum.

The Badeaux well has been used for salt water disposal since 1981. In April 1984, Belton Badeaux granted defendants a salt water disposal lease. 6 The annual disposal rates have exceeded the 10-12 barrels of salt water per day anticipated by defendants in their permit application;

1982: 56,925 barrels
1983: 131,632 barrels
1984: 63,063 barrels
1985: 66,601 barrels

However, the permit does not limit the amount of salt water that may be injected in the well. The salt water disposal reports indicate that all of the salt water injected into the Badeaux well is produced from the Cut Off Field. Sixty percent of that salt water is produced from units other than UL-2 RB SUA, namely: Tex W-8 RA SUA; UL-2 RA SUA; 10900 RK SUA; and Tex W-7 RA SUA.

Plaintiffs contend that the oil, gas and mineral leases give defendants the right to use their property for discovery, production, salt water disposal, and other purposes when such results from production on their land or land pooled therewith, but not when it results from production on land not pooled with plaintiffs’. 7 Thus, plain *273 tiffs contend that defendants are unlawfully using plaintiffs’ subsurface property for disposal of salt water to the extent that the salt water was produced from lands neither owned by plaintiffs nor pooled therewith. In support of their argument, plaintiffs point to the separate salt water disposal lease defendants executed with Belton Ba-deaux granting the “right to dispose of salt water from any source, whether or not produced from the Property or property unitized therewith ...” as evidence that defendants themselves consider their right to salt water disposal under the oil, gas, and mineral leases as limited to plaintiffs’ land or acreage pooled therewith.

Plaintiffs are not attacking the Commissioner of Conservation’s order permitting the Badeaux well as a salt water disposal well for the Cut Off Field; nor are they seeking to enjoin the defendants’ activities. The crux of plaintiffs’ suit is that they want to be paid rentals for the disposal of salt water under their lands, just as their neighbor, Belton Badeaux, has been paid.

Plaintiffs’ complaint asserts a trespass. Trespass is defined as the unlawful physical invasion of the property or possession of another. Bell v. Sediment Removers, Inc., 479 So.2d 1078, 1081 (La.App. 3d Cir.1985), writ denied, 481 So.2d 1350 (La.1986). After carefully reviewing this case and the applicable law, the Court finds that there is no legally actionable trespass.

Without drilling a well, no one can determine absolutely that salt water is invading plaintiffs’ property. Plaintiffs’ expert petroleum geologist testified that it is “most likely” that the injected fluid is invading plaintiffs’ property. This testimony was uncontradicted.

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697 F. Supp. 270, 101 Oil & Gas Rep. 267, 1988 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11228, 1988 WL 108938, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/raymond-v-union-texas-petroleum-corp-laed-1988.