Southern Oklahoma Royalty Owners Ass'n v. Stanolind Oil & Gas Co.

1954 OK 36, 266 P.2d 633, 3 Oil & Gas Rep. 1407, 1954 Okla. LEXIS 426
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 2, 1954
Docket35737-35739
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 1954 OK 36 (Southern Oklahoma Royalty Owners Ass'n v. Stanolind Oil & 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
Southern Oklahoma Royalty Owners Ass'n v. Stanolind Oil & Gas Co., 1954 OK 36, 266 P.2d 633, 3 Oil & Gas Rep. 1407, 1954 Okla. LEXIS 426 (Okla. 1954).

Opinion

ARNOLD, Justice.

Three appeals by Southern Oklahoma Royalty Owners Association from orders of the Corporation Commission granting Stan-olind Oil and Gas Company location exceptions and permission to complete certain wells for the production of oil from two separate sands in the Southwest Sholem Alechem Field, Carter County, are here consolidated.

The record before us shows that:

Three producing formations, each with a common source of supply, underlie this field. The first is the Humphreys sand, the most productive of the three, which is encountered at 5,400 to 6,400 feet from the surface; the next is the Sims, which lies from 300 to 400 feet below the Humphreys; and the last is the Goodwin, lying some 700 to 1,000 feet below the Sims and the least productive of the three. On January 5, 1952, Stanolind Oil and Gas Company filed with the Commission three applications, similar in content, asking that orders be made fixing spacing and drilling units for each of these three formations, and alleging that a number of wells had been drilled or were being drilled within the area and such wells should be determined to be the well for the drilling and spacing unit in which such well is located. Protests were filed by plaintiffs in error; after hearings and on April 30, 1952, the Commission entered its order on each application, fixing the drilling and spacing units for these three formations as follows: for the Humphreys, 20-acre spacing and drilling units, the wells to be located in the center of the northwest and. southeast 10 acres of each quarter quarter section"; for the- Sims, 40 acre drilling and spacing units, the wells to be located in the center of the northeast 10 acres of each quarter quarter section; for the Goodwin, 40 - acre drilling and spacing units,, the wells to be located in the center *635 of the southwest 10 acres of each quarter quarter section. Each of these orders granted exceptions to certain specifically named wells, drilled or drilling at the time of this order, among these being the McDaniel No. 1, located in the center of the SE^ NE14 NE}4 of Section 9, Township 2 South, Range 3 West (which under the pattern established should 'have been a Humphreys well) which was established as the Goodwin well for that particular 40-acre space of which it was a part, and the Sid Spears No. 1 well located in the center of the northeast 10 acres of the SE54 of the SW14 of Section 29 (which under the established pattern should have been a Sims location) was established as a Humphreys well. These orders were unappealed from and became final.

On June 26, 1952, Stanolind filed three applications with the Commission. In the first application, No. CD 3887, it stated that it had drilled the C. E. Kidd No. 1 well in the southeast 10 acres of the NW}4 SE14 Section 10, the H. A. Brady No. 1 in the southeast 10 acres of NW{4 NE}4 Section 9, and the L. E. Redmond No. 1 in the southeast 10 acres of SE}4 SEJ4 Section 4 (all of which are Humphrey locations and that to prevent waste and protect the correlative rights of the owners and others interested therein it desired to dually complete each of said wells and produce them, together with the McDaniel No. 1 well (which as heretofore stated was on Hum-phreys location but had been granted an exception as a Goodwin well), from both the Goodwin and the Humphreys sands, and prayed for an order permitting completion of the three Humphrey wells to the Goodwin sand and the dual production of all four wells from the two sands.

In. the second application, No. CD 3988, Stanolind alleged that prior to the entry of the spacing order it had drilled the C. Johnson A-l well, located in the southeast 10 acres of the NWJ4 of Section 4 and the C. Johnson B-l located in the southeast 10 acres of SE14 NE14 Section 4 (which were Humphreys locations) and asked permission to complete the said wells in the Sims sand. . .

In the third application, No. CD 3999, it alleged that prior to the entry of the spacing order it had drilled the Sid Spears' No. 1 well located in the center of the northeast 10 acres of the quarter quarter section (this was the well which was on a Sims location but which the spacing order established as a Humphreys well for that quarter quarter -section) and asked permission to complete said well to the Goodwin sand and dually produce same from both the Humphreys and Goodwin sands. In each of the applications requesting permission to produce wells dually it was ■ alleged that one sand would be produced through the tubing and the other sand through the annulus between the casing and the tubing, thus keeping the production of each common source of supply separate.

To each of these applications plaintiffs in error filed protest and objections alleging that the Commission was without jurisdiction to grant the location exceptions applied for because said applications alleged no grounds for such exceptions, that the applications constituted a collateral attack upon the spacing orders of April 30, 1952, and that the granting of the applications would establish irregular and nonuniform drilling and spacing units in violation of the statutes, and that the spacing and drilling unit orders of April 30, 1952, are res adjudicata of all matters set out in said applications.

The three applications and protests thereto, were consolidated for hearing before the Commission. In support of- its applications Stanolind introduced testimony by a geologist and a petroleum engineer to the effect that there are three productive common sources of supply in this field, known as the Humphreys, the Sims, and the Goodwin sands; that all three sands underlie each of the 40-acre spacing units here involved ;. that Stanolind would obtain no structural advantage were the exceptions allowed; that there would be very little, if any, difference in drainage or in the production from the sand involved by reason of such change in location from the prescribed drilling pattern; that the same number of wells drilled into the common source of supply should produce the same *636 amount of oil, regardless of the .

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Bluebook (online)
1954 OK 36, 266 P.2d 633, 3 Oil & Gas Rep. 1407, 1954 Okla. LEXIS 426, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-oklahoma-royalty-owners-assn-v-stanolind-oil-gas-co-okla-1954.