Sooner Oil & Gas Corp. v. State
This text of 1981 OK 118 (Sooner Oil & Gas Corp. v. State) 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.
Opinion
The 1980 Legislature created within the State Corporation Commission (Commission) an Administrative Review Panel (Panel). The Panel was authorized to hear such cases and perform such duties as are assigned to it by the Commission or by law.1 On October 20, 1980 the Panel issued an order and on November 19,1980 appellants filed their petition in error in this court challenging such order. Appellees filed a motion to dismiss alleging that appellants had not appealed the Panel’s order to the Commission and without such appeal, the order is not appealable to the Supreme Court.
The issue presented is the appealability of a Panel order to the Supreme Court when such order has not been appealed to, considered, or adopted by the Commission.
Appellants rely upon Rule 26(e) of the Commission’s Rules implementing the 1980 legislative enactment creating an Administrative Review Panel to sustain their contention that the Panel order is appealable to this court. Rule 26(e) provides:
“Within ten days after an Order of the Panel or Deputy is entered, any party may file a Motion for Rehearing by the Panel. If no such Motion is filed, the Order shall be deemed final and shall be adopted as the Order of the Commission. Upon filing such Motion for Rehearing, the Panel’s ruling thereon shall constitute a final Order subject to appeal to the Commission.”
Appellants filed their motion for rehearing by Panel but it was dismissed because it was not filed within ten (10) days after the order was issued. 17 O.S.Supp. 1980, § 222 authorizes an appeal to the Commission but the right of a party to perfect an appeal from a Panel order is conditioned upon his having filed a motion for rehearing by the Panel.3
Appellants contend that since the Panel dismissed their motion for rehearing because it was not timely filed, the dismissal would necessarily be based upon the fact that under Rule 26(e) the October 20 order became final and was adopted as the order of the Commission. Thus, argues appellants, if a party elects not to file a motion for rehearing by the Panel, an order of the Panel becomes a final order of the Commission and is appealable to the Supreme Court.4
As will be shown, we do not have to consider in the case at bar the general proposition that administrative rules which go beyond legislative authorization must yield to the legislative enactment.5
Rule 26(e) authorizes the filing of a motion for rehearing with the Panel and Rule 26(f)6 authorizes an appeal to the Commis[601]*601sion after such motion is adjudicated. Rule 26(f) is consistent with § 23 E7 because under both provisions an appeal will not lie to the Commission unless a motion for rehearing is filed with the Panel and the Panel makes final disposition of the motion. Rule 26(f) and § 22 A8 contain identical language in reference to the Commission voting on the question of hearing an appeal from a Panel order and if the Commission does not hear such appeal, “the decision of the Panel shall be adopted by the Commission at that time and shall be subject to appeal to the Supreme Court as are other final orders of the Commission in such cases.”
Neither our statutes nor the Commission Rules may be construed as authorizing an appeal to the Supreme Court from a Panel order without first appealing to the Commission.
A motion for rehearing by Panel was not timely filed and appellant did not attempt to appeal the Panel order to the Commission. The Commission has not considered the appeal or adopted the panel order by not hearing the appeal. Since the Panel order is not appealable to this court without first appealing to the Commission, the APPEAL IS DISMISSED.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
1981 OK 118, 635 P.2d 599, 71 Oil & Gas Rep. 551, 1981 Okla. LEXIS 285, 1981 WL 610454, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sooner-oil-gas-corp-v-state-okla-1981.