Shaffer Oil & Refining Co. v. Creek County Gas Co.

1926 OK 25, 246 P. 630, 114 Okla. 258, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 1014
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 12, 1926
Docket15144
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 1926 OK 25 (Shaffer Oil & Refining Co. v. Creek County Gas Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shaffer Oil & Refining Co. v. Creek County Gas Co., 1926 OK 25, 246 P. 630, 114 Okla. 258, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 1014 (Okla. 1926).

Opinion

BRANDON, Y. C. J.

The Shaffer Oil & Refining- Company, a Delaware corporation, paid the Creek County Gas Company, a corporation, 20 cents; per thousand cubic feet for natural gas, covering a certain period of time; 17 cents per thousand cubic feet for a certain other period of time, and 15 cents per thousand for another period of time. -Said varying rates covered part of the year 1920, the year 1921, and part of 1922. The former corporation will be referred to herein as the complainant, and the latter as the respondent. The complainant at all times herein mentioned owned .a large oil refinery located at Cushing, Olcla. In the operation of this refinery natural gas was the most desirable fuel, if obtainable on a basis sufficiently economical to justify its uses, instead of fuel oil, customarily used in such refineries. The respondent was a public utility within the meaning of the statutes of Oklahoma defining the same.„ It was financially capable of operating only in a limited territory, and on. a small scale. Its operations were confined almost exclusively to taking the gas from territory or leases owned by the complainant, near Cush-ing, paying the complainant a well rate therefor, and furnishing the, same through its pipe lines to certain industries, to wit, oil refineries, located either at or near the said town of Cushing. The gas so conveyed to the complainant was for its consumption in its said refinery. It furnished gas also *260 to a refinery owned by the Sinclair Company and one owned by the Pure Oil Company.

The complainant filed its complaint with the Corporation Commission, and in substance set out that the de.endant was a utility engaged in the business of transporting, selling, and distributing natural gas to certain oil refineries located in or near Cushing, to wit, those mentioned above, and that the complainant was “by far the largest consumer supplied by and through said respondent.” Further, the complainant pleaded that the respondent had been charging for natural gas furnished to it 7 cents per thousand over and above the amount paid by it at the producing wells, whereas it had been furnishing gas to the said other refineries at a considerably less rate. That by so doing, the respondent unjustly and illegally discriminated against the complainant, and that it had never complied with the rules and regulations of the Corporation Commissi' n, and that the rates and' prices charged by said respondent for the gas consumed and service rendered complainant have been and are arbitrary rates established and charged by the said respondent. That the said rates were unreasonable and excessive.

Upon these summarized allegations the complainant prayed, first, that the Commission make an order “granting this complainant the same rate for future consumption of gas in its refinery at Cushing as the most favored customer of the said respondent now enjoys for the same service in or near the said city of Cushing; and—

“Second, that an order be made fixing the excess 'amounts paid by your complainant in the past to the respondent, because of the illegal discrimination practiced against your complainant as hereinbefore specified, and ordering said respondent to immediately refund the amount of said excess payments.”

The charge was excessive, as complainant contended, in so far as the rate charged it was above the rate charged the other industries mentioned in its complaint. After hearing duly had, in which the evidence was reduced to a transcript, the Corporation Commission made its findings, on which it based a judgment denying the rebate prayed, and it is this order the Shaffer Oil & Refining Company seeks to* have reversed.

There is little dispute in the record as to the controlling facts. The complainant paid on the receipt of monthly bills, the rates varying, as set out, supra. This was by reason of a contract entered into by the complainant, through its duly jiuthorized officers, with the respondent, effective as oí October 1, 1920, and supplemented by a contract entered into by its officers duly authorized, sometime the' latter part of 1921, This contract resulted from a series of negotiations carried on between the duly constituted representatives of the complainant and the officers of the respondent, covering a period of some five months or more, antedating the said date of the original contract. The negotiations so carried on, which moved the contract in question and constituted a vital part consideration therefor, are made clear by the record, to wit: Said complainant owning, as set out in its pleadings above, by far the largest industry in the vicinity served by this utility, was more than zealous to be reasonably assured of an adequate supply of gas for its refinery for a period of five years or longer. The respondent would have furnished all the gas which it was able to furnish from the gas territory to which its pipe lines were at the time of the negotiations connected, or which the utility had accessible, at the same rate the) said utility was furnishing the other industries mentioned under short-term arrangements. The -complainant was .offered gas by another utility in the same, vicinity, known as the Home Gas Company, at a much less rate than that alleged to have been paid to the respondent, but, on account (f the supply accessible to the said Home Gas Company, its offer was rejected. The officers and experts of the complainant, after an investigation and negotiations, covering a period of time as above set out, reached the conclusion that it was to its best business interest that the respondent extend its pipe lines to a certain newly discovered gaa field, which from investigation would furnish a supply adequate for all consumption for a period of at least five years, and possibly many years longer. This supply was located in Pawnee county, and it required an extension of respondent’s pipe lines a distance of 12 miles or more to reach this field, which was known as the Josey field. The gas in this field was being produced in large quantities. It had a large open flow, and a high rock pressure, but the same could not be purchased by the utility at less than 11 cents at the wells, the utility guaranteeing to take 25 per cent, of the open flow. To reach this field, the officers of the complainant knew, would require an expenditure on the part of the respondent of approximately $150,000. The utility was not financially able to do this for the price which it had been receiving for gas taken from gas wells to which its pipe lines were already connected. The evidence discloses that, to induce the utility to expend the *261 above-mentioned sum ot money to reach, the said Josey gas field, the contract was executed. Among its various terms was an agreement that the complainant would pay 20 cents per thousand. Later this was supplemented by an agreement to pay 7 cents in addition to the well rate paid by the utility, and that the utility should guarantee an adequate supply to the complainant for a period of five years. The respondent extended its pipe line to the said Josey field in Pawnee county, a distance as aforesaid at the approximate cost aforesaid, entering Into an agreement with the owners of such wells to pay the price at the wells above set out, and to take 25 per cent, of the open flow.

The record does not disclose that the conduct of the representatives of the complainant herein was other than that of astute business men, possessed of great foresight and acumen.

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1926 OK 25, 246 P. 630, 114 Okla. 258, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 1014, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shaffer-oil-refining-co-v-creek-county-gas-co-okla-1926.