Silver Pine Oil Company v. Reconstruction Finance Corporation

222 F.2d 721, 1955 U.S. App. LEXIS 4890
CourtEmergency Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 16, 1955
Docket660
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 222 F.2d 721 (Silver Pine Oil Company v. Reconstruction Finance Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Emergency Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Silver Pine Oil Company v. Reconstruction Finance Corporation, 222 F.2d 721, 1955 U.S. App. LEXIS 4890 (eca 1955).

Opinion

222 F.2d 721

SILVER PINE OIL COMPANY, Complainant,
v.
RECONSTRUCTION FINANCE CORPORATION, Respondent.

No. 660.

United States Emergency Court of Appeals.

Heard at Tyler, Texas, November 20, 1954.

Decided May 16, 1955.

J. Donald Guinn, Tyler, Tex., with whom Spruiell, Lowry, Potter & Lasater, Tyler, Tex., on the brief, for complainant.

Maurice S. Meyer, Attorney, Department of Justice, Washington, D. C., with whom Warren E. Burger, Asst. Atty. Gen., and Marvin C. Taylor, Attorney, Department of Justice, Washington, D. C., on the brief, for respondent.

Before MARIS, Chief Judge, and McALLISTER, and LINDLEY, Judges.

McALLISTER, Judge.

The Silver Pine Oil Company, complainant herein, was paid certain government subsidies for purchases of oil during 1945 and 1946, under the subsidy program of the Emergency Price Control Act, 50 U.S.C.A.Appendix, § 901 et seq. On the claim of the government that the subsidies had been overpaid, the Reconstruction Finance Corporation, acting as the government agent, entered an order invalidating the subsidies, and upon the company's refusal to refund the amount claimed, brought suit in the District Court for the Eastern District of Texas, and secured a judgment against the company in the full amount of its claim. Thereafter, upon the application of complainant, the district court granted a stay of execution and leave to the company to file complaint in the Emergency Court of Appeals to set aside the order of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation invalidating the subsidies. That complaint was dismissed by this court for want of jurisdiction. Silver Pine Oil Co. v. Reconstruction Finance Corp., Em.App., 1953, 205 F.2d 835.

Thereafter, the Silver Pine Oil Company, by promptly filing a protest against the order of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation invalidating the subsidies, secured an order from the district court staying execution of the judgment theretofore entered in the cause between the parties, pending termination of the protest proceeding. The company's protest, which was based upon the ground that the order of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation invalidating the subsidies was arbitrary, capricious, unlawful, and unsupported by substantial evidence, was denied by the Reconstruction Finance Corporation; and a judicial determination of the validity of that order is now sought on review in this court under the provisions of the Emergency Price Control Act. Such a determination that the order of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation is invalid would entitle the company to have the judgment of the district court vacated, in accordance with the provisions of the Act. See Silver Pine Oil Co. v. Reconstruction Finance Corp., supra.

The background of the case is as follows: In two counties of East Central Texas, Freestone County and Limestone County, there exists what has been described by the parties to this suit as an old, shallow, oil-producing field known as the Wortham Field. Between 1941 and 1946, certain persons, at considerable expense, drilled oil wells between the old, used, and nonproducing wells and brought in so-called stripper wells, from which they secured quantities of oil. The only oil and refining company in this region to which the oil so produced could be sold was the Humble Oil and Refining Company that maintained what is designated as the Simmons Storage Tank, twelve miles distant from the oil wells in the Wortham Field.

The owners of the oil lands, as well as the lessees of the oil rights in the Wortham Field, were unable to induce any purchaser of oil or any pipeline company to lay a pipeline to their leases. In order to sell the oil accumulated in the Wortham Field to the Humble Oil and Refining Company, the lease owners constructed a twelve-mile pipeline from the Wortham Field to the Simmons Storage Tank which was owned by Humble. There, the oil, after being transported through the pipeline, was sold to Humble at Humble's highest posted purchase price for the Wortham pool.

The oil and gas leases in the Wortham Field, relevant to this case, were owned and operated by the following parties in the stated proportions of ownership:

  Barney Carter       85%
  D. D. Alexander     10%
  Dr. C. L. Tubbs      2½%
  Gus Allen Estate     2½%

These parties will hereafter be referred to as the lease owners; and the owners of the one-eighth royalty interest reserved from the above leases by the landowners, will be referred to as the royalty owners.

The lease owners, who found that it was necessary to build the pipeline as a gathering system from the Wortham Field to the Simmons Storage Tank, owned the pipeline in the same proportional interests as they owned the leases, as above set forth.

Upon the completion of the pipeline, a corporation, the Silver Pine Oil Company, was formed. This company was owned entirely by Barney Carter, the largest proportional owner of the oil leases and the pipeline.

The Silver Pine Oil Company was formed to purchase the oil produced at the Wortham Field and to sell it to the Humble Company at the Simmons Storage Tank.

The Silver Pine Oil Company purchased the oil from the royalty owners and the lease owners of the Wortham Field, and paid them for it; and sold the oil to the Humble Oil Company. The Silver Pine Oil Company received $1.27 a barrel from the Humble Company. It paid everything it received for the oil to the royalty owners and the lease owners.

The Silver Pine Oil Company made claim for the subsidies in this case, as the purchaser of the oil at the highest posted purchase price for the pool; it received the subsidies from the government; it insists that it is entitled to them; and it contends that the order of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation invalidating them and requiring them to be refunded is arbitrary, capricious, and unlawful.

The claim of the Silver Pine Oil Company to the subsidies is based upon the Emergency Price Control Act and the regulations issued thereunder. These regulations provided for the payment of the subsidies "to reimburse purchasers for amounts expended for crude oil, the maximum price for which is increased pursuant to this Directive, in excess of amounts that such purchasers would have been permitted to pay on the basis of maximum prices as they existed prior to the increases herein authorized."

The formula for determining the maximum prices for crude oil, insofar as pertinent to this case, was as follows: Where, on October 1, 1941, there was no posted purchase price for any given area or pool, or where there was more than one posted purchase price, the maximum price for a particular operator at the receiving tank for crude petroleum from any such pool, was the price paid for crude petroleum at any receiving tank of the same operator, as of October 1, 1941 — unless this price was below the highest of the posted purchase prices, if any; and in that case, the maximum price would be the highest posted purchase price.

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254 F.2d 930 (Ninth Circuit, 1958)

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Bluebook (online)
222 F.2d 721, 1955 U.S. App. LEXIS 4890, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/silver-pine-oil-company-v-reconstruction-finance-corporation-eca-1955.